20-24 March 2023
Haus H, Telegrafenberg
Europe/Berlin timezone

Wide binaries in dwarf galaxies as probes of dark matter

20 Mar 2023, 15:00
25m
Haus H, Telegrafenberg

Haus H, Telegrafenberg

Potsdam, Germany
Invited topical talk SESSION 1: From ground and space: motions, distances, chemistry and star formation measurements SESSION 1: From ground and space: motions, distances, chemistry and star formation measurements

Speaker

Christopher Kervick (Carnegie Mellon University)

Description

Very wide stellar binaries, with semi-major axes of hundreds of AU and larger, constitute sensitive probes of the underlying gravitational potential in which they live, having provided some of the first experimental constraints on the nature of dark matter in the Milky Way halo.  As such, the detection and characterization of populations of wide binaries in nearby old dwarf galaxies could provide us with a completely new window onto the properties of dark matter on the smallest scales. We have designed a new method, geometric in its essence, for deriving the density and projected semimajor-axis distribution of a population of binary systems that does not resort to standard estimators of the two-point correlation function, and will present results of applying it to our Hubble Space Telescope survey of the Ursa Minor dwarf spheroidal galaxy.  We will discuss the competing effects of the survey's depth, coverage, and angular resolution limits against those of foreground stars and background galaxies, and highlight the potential advantages that JWST and the Roman Space Telescope may offer to this specific problem.

Do you plan to attend the symposium in-person or virtually? in-person

Primary author

Christopher Kervick (Carnegie Mellon University)

Co-authors

Dr Julio Chanamé (Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile) Dr Matthew Walker (Carnegie Mellon University) Dr Andrea Bellini (Space Telescope Science Institute) Dr Jorge Peñarrubia (University of Edinburgh)

Presentation Materials

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