Navarro–Frenk–White profile
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The Navarro–Frenk–White (NFW) profile is a spatial mass distribution of
dark matter Dark matter is a hypothetical form of matter thought to account for approximately 85% of the matter in the universe. Dark matter is called "dark" because it does not appear to interact with the electromagnetic field, which means it does not ...
fitted to dark matter halos identified in
N-body In physics and astronomy, an ''N''-body simulation is a simulation of a dynamical system of particles, usually under the influence of physical forces, such as gravity (see ''n''-body problem for other applications). ''N''-body simulations ar ...
simulations by Julio Navarro,
Carlos Frenk Carlos Silvestre Frenk (born 27 October 1951) is a Mexican-British cosmologist and the Ogden Professor of Fundamental Physics at Durham University.University of Durham Department of PhysicsResearch in the Department: Status and Outlook March ...
and Simon White. The NFW profile is one of the most commonly used model profiles for dark matter halos.


Density distribution

In the NFW profile, the density of dark matter as a function of radius is given by: : \rho (r)=\frac where ''ρ''0 and the "scale radius", ''Rs'', are parameters which vary from halo to halo. The integrated mass within some radius ''R''max is : M=\int_0^ 4\pi r^2 \rho (r) \, dr=4\pi \rho_0 R_s^3 \left \ln\left(\frac\right)-\frac\right The total mass is divergent, but it is often useful to take the edge of the halo to be the
virial radius In astrophysics, the virial mass is the mass of a gravitationally bound astrophysical system, assuming the virial theorem applies. In the context of galaxy formation and dark matter halos, the virial mass is defined as the mass enclosed within ...
, ''R''vir, which is related to the "concentration parameter", ''c'', and scale radius via : R_\mathrm=cR_s (Alternatively, one can define a radius at which the average density within this radius is \Delta times the critical or mean density of the universe, resulting in a similar relation: R_=c_ R_s . The virial radius will lie around R_ to R_ , though values of \Delta=1000 are used in X-ray astronomy, for example, due to higher concentrations.) The total mass in the halo within R_\mathrm is : M = \int_0^ 4\pi r^2 \rho (r) \, dr=4\pi \rho_0 R_s^3 \left ln(1+c) - \frac \right The specific value of ''c'' is roughly 10 or 15 for the Milky Way, and may range from 4 to 40 for halos of various sizes. This can then be used to define a dark matter halo in terms of its mean density, solving the above equation for \rho_0 and substituting it into the original equation. This gives : \rho(r) = \frac , where * \rho_ \equiv M \biggr / \left( \frac \pi R_^3 \right) is the mean density of the halo, * A_ = \left \ln(1+c) - \frac \right is from the mass calculation, and * x = r/R_ is the fractional distance to the virial radius.


Higher order moments

The integral of the ''squared density'' is : \int_0^ 4\pi r^2 \rho (r)^2 \, dr=\frac R_s^3 \rho_0^2 \left -\frac\right so that the mean squared density inside of ''R''max is : \langle \rho^2 \rangle_=\frac \left -\frac\right which for the virial radius simplifies to : \langle \rho^2 \rangle_=\frac \left -\frac\right\approx \frac and the mean squared density inside the scale radius is simply : \langle \rho^2 \rangle_=\frac\rho_0^2


Gravitational potential

Solving Poisson's equation gives the gravitational potential : \Phi(r) = - \frac \ln \left( 1+ \frac \right) with the limits \lim_ \Phi=0 and \lim_ \Phi=-4\pi G\rho_0 R_s^2 . The acceleration due to the NFW potential is: : \overrightarrow=-\frac=G\frac\frac\overrightarrow where M_=\fracr_^3 200\rho_.


Radius of the maximum circular velocity

The radius of the maximum circular velocity (confusingly sometimes also referred to as R_\max) can be found from the maximum of M(r)/r as : R^\max_ = \alpha R_s where \alpha \approx 2.16258 is the positive root of : \ln \left( 1 + \alpha \right) = \frac . Maximum circular velocity is also related to the characteristic density and length scale of NFW profile: : V^\max_ \approx 1.64 R_s \sqrt


Dark matter simulations

Over a broad range of halo mass and redshift, the NFW profile approximates the equilibrium configuration of dark matter halos produced in simulations of collisionless dark matter particles by numerous groups of scientists. Before the dark matter virializes, the distribution of dark matter deviates from an NFW profile, and significant substructure is observed in simulations both during and after the collapse of the halos. Alternative models, in particular the
Einasto profile The Einasto profile (or Einasto model) is a mathematical function that describes how the density \rho of a spherical stellar system varies with distance r from its center. Jaan Einasto introduced his model at a 1963 conference in Alma-Ata, Kazak ...
, have been shown to represent the dark matter profiles of simulated halos as well as or better than the NFW profile by including an additional third parameter. The Einasto profile has a finite (zero) central slope, unlike the NFW profile which has a divergent (infinite) central density. Because of the limited resolution of N-body simulations, it is not yet known which model provides the best description of the central densities of simulated dark-matter halos. Simulations assuming different cosmological initial conditions produce halo populations in which the two parameters of the NFW profile follow different mass-concentration relations, depending on cosmological properties such as the density of the universe and the nature of the very early process which created all structure. Observational measurements of this relation thus offer a route to constraining these properties.


Observations of halos

The dark matter density profiles of massive galaxy clusters can be measured directly by gravitational lensing and agree well with the NFW profiles predicted for cosmologies with the parameters inferred from other data. For lower mass halos, gravitational lensing is too noisy to give useful results for individual objects, but accurate measurements can still be made by averaging the profiles of many similar systems. For the main body of the halos, the agreement with the predictions remains good down to halo masses as small as those of the halos surrounding isolated galaxies like our own. The inner regions of halos are beyond the reach of lensing measurements, however, and other techniques give results which disagree with NFW predictions for the dark matter distribution inside the visible galaxies which lie at halo centers. Observations of the inner regions of bright galaxies like the
Milky Way The Milky Way is the galaxy that includes our Solar System, with the name describing the galaxy's appearance from Earth: a hazy band of light seen in the night sky formed from stars that cannot be individually distinguished by the naked eye. ...
and M31 may be compatible with the NFW profile, but this is open to debate. The NFW dark matter profile is not consistent with observations of the inner regions of low surface brightness galaxies, which have less central mass than predicted. This is known as the cusp-core or cuspy halo problem. It is currently debated whether this discrepancy is a consequence of the nature of the dark matter, of the influence of dynamical processes during galaxy formation, or of shortcomings in dynamical modelling of the observational data.


See also

*
Einasto profile The Einasto profile (or Einasto model) is a mathematical function that describes how the density \rho of a spherical stellar system varies with distance r from its center. Jaan Einasto introduced his model at a 1963 conference in Alma-Ata, Kazak ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Navarro-Frenk-White profile Astrophysics Dark matter