Research news on Galaxy dark matter halos

Galaxy dark matter halos as a research area focuses on the structure, composition, and dynamical role of extended, non-luminous mass distributions surrounding galaxies, investigated primarily through gravitational effects such as rotation curves, strong and weak lensing, satellite kinematics, and large-scale structure. This field addresses halo density profiles, concentration–mass relations, subhalo populations, and their dependence on cosmological parameters and dark matter models (e.g., cold vs. warm). It also studies baryon–halo interactions, including feedback-driven core formation, galaxy–halo connection (abundance matching, halo occupation), and the impact of halos on galaxy formation, evolution, and environmental processes within the cosmological context.

Hubble glimpses merging galaxy clusters

This NASA Hubble Space Telescope image features a galaxy cluster called CL0016+1609, or MACS J0018.5+1626, that is very bright at X-ray wavelengths and is one of the most extensively studied clusters at X-ray and radio wavelengths. ...

The galaxy's spin is hiding in the hum of gravitational waves

Picture the Milky Way not as a silent pinwheel of stars but as something that quietly sings. Scattered through it are millions of pairs of dead stars, mostly white dwarfs, whirling around each other and stirring ripples in ...

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