Thursday, February 18, 3:30 p.m.
2015 McPherson Laboratory
Dark matter and baryons in dwarf spheroidal galaxies
Rosemary Wyse
Johns Hopkins University
The physical properties of dark matter particles should have
observable effects on the scales of galaxies like the Milky Way
and their satellites. The kinematics of member stars reveal that
the lowest luminosity galaxies in the Local Group are the most
dark-matter dominated systems. New large datasets allow one to go
further, and determine systematic properties of their dark matter
haloes, including the mass density profile. Spectroscopy provides
also chemical abundances, and insight into star formation and
associated 'feedback' at early epochs. I will summarise recent
results, using new modeling techniques and unprecedented large
samples of stars, emphasizing the critical role of the dwarf
spheroidal galaxies in understanding both dark matter and the
baryonic processes that shape galaxy evolution.