2. The cold dark matter model for structure formation
Important cosmological tests assume the CDM model for structure formation (Sec. III.C), so we must consider tests of the model. The model has proved to be a useful basis for analyses of the physics of formation of galaxies and clusters of galaxies (e.g., Kay et al., 2002; Colberg et al., 2000; and references therein). There are issues to consider, however; Sellwood and Kosowsky (2001) give a useful survey of the situation. We remark on recent developments and what seem to us to be critical issues.
Numerical simulations of the dark mass distribution in the CDM model predict that massive halos have many low mass satellites, perhaps significantly more than the number observed around the Milky Way galaxy (Klypin et al., 1999; Moore et al., 1999a). The issue is of great interest but not yet a critical test, because it is difficult to predict the nature of star formation in a low mass dark halo: what does a dark halo look like when star formation or the neutral gas content makes it visible? For recent discussions see Tully et al. (2002) and Stoehr et al. (2002).
The nature of the dark mass distribution within galaxies is a
critical issue, because we know where to look for a distinctive
CDM feature: a cusp-like central mass distribution, the
density varying with radius r as
r-
with
1. The power law
is not unexpected, because there is
nothing in the CDM model to fix an astronomically interesting value
for a core radius.
(61)
A measure of the mass distribution in disk galaxies is the
rotation curve: the circular velocity as a function
of radius for matter supported by rotation. In some low surface
brightness galaxies the observed rotation curves are close to solid
body, vc
r, near the
center, consistent with a near
homogeneous core, and inconsistent with the cusp-like CDM mass
distribution. (62)
The circular velocity produced by the mass
distribution
r-1
is not very different from
solid body, or from the observations, and the difference might be
erased by gravitational rearrangement of the dark mass
by the fluctuations in the distribution of baryonic mass driven by
star formation, winds, or supernovae. This is too
complicated to assess by current numerical simulations. But we do
have a phenomenological hint: central solid body rotation
is most clearly seen in the disk-like galaxies with the lowest
surface brightnesses, the objects in which the baryon mass seems
least likely to have had a significant gravitational effect on
the dark mass. This challenge to the CDM model is pressing.
The challenge may be resolved in a warm dark matter
model, where the particles are assigned a primeval velocity
dispersion that suppresses the initial power spectrum of density
fluctuations on small scales
(Moore et al., 1999b;
Sommer-Larsen and Dolgov,
2001;
Bode, Ostriker, and Turok,
2001).
But it seems to be difficult to reconcile the wanted suppression
of small-scale power with the observation of small-scale
clustering in the Lyman-
forest - the neutral hydrogen observed at z ~ 3 in the
Lyman-
resonance absorption
lines in quasar spectra
(Narayanan et al., 2000;
Knebe et al., 2002).
Spergel and Steinhardt
(2000)
point out that the scattering cross section of self-interacting
cold dark matter particles can be adjusted to suppress the
cusp-like core. (63)
Davé et al. (2001)
demonstrate the effect in numerical simulations. But
Miralda-Escudé (2002)
points out that the
collisions would tend to make the velocity distribution
isotropic, contrary to the evidence for ellipsoidal distributions
of dark matter in clusters of galaxies. For recent surveys of
the very active debate on these issues see
Primack (2002) and
Tasitsiomi (2002);
for references to still other possible fixes see
Davé et al. (2001).
Another critical issue traces back to the biasing
picture discussed in Sec. III.D. If
M0 is
well below unity
there need not be significant mass in the voids defined by the
large galaxies. But the biasing process still operates, and might
be expected to cause dwarf or irregular galaxies to trespass
into the voids outlined by the large regular galaxies. This seems to
happen in CDM model simulations to a greater extent than is observed.
Mathis and White (2002)
discuss voids in
CDM
simulations, but do not address the trespassing issue. The
reader is invited to compare the relative distributions of big
and little galaxies in the simulation in Fig. 1 of
Mathis and White (2002)
with the examples of observed distributions in Figs. 1 and 2 in
Peebles (1989)
and in Figs. 1 to 3 in
Peebles (2001).
The community thought is that the trespassing issue need not be a problem for the CDM model: the low mass density in voids disfavors formation of galaxies from the debris left in these regions. But we have not seen an explanation of why local upward mass fluctuations, of the kind that produce normal galaxies in populated regions, and appear also in the predicted debris in CDM voids, fail to produce dwarf or irregular void galaxies. An easy explanation is that the voids contain no matter, having been gravitationally emptied by the growth of primeval non-Gaussian mass density fluctuations. The evidence in tests (10) and (11) in Sec. IV.B is that the initial conditions are close to Gaussian. But non-Gaussian initial conditions that reproduce the character of the galaxy distribution, including suppression of the trespassing effect, would satisfy test (10) by construction.
We mention finally the related issues of when the large elliptical galaxies formed and when they acquired the central compact massive objects that are thought to be remnant quasar engines (Lynden-Bell, 1969).
In the CDM model large elliptical galaxies form in substantial
numbers at redshift z < 1. Many astronomers do not see this as a
problem, because ellipticals do tend to contain relatively young
star populations, and some elliptical galaxies have grown by recent
mergers, as predicted in the CDM model.
(64)
But prominent merger events are rare, and the young stars seen in
ellipticals generally seem to be a "frosting"
(Trager et al., 2000)
of recent star formation on a dominant old star population. The
straightforward reading of the evidence assembled in
Peebles (2002)
is that most of the large ellipticals
are present as assembled galaxies of stars at z = 2. The
CDM model
prediction is uncertain because it depends on
the complex processes of star formation that are so difficult to
model. The reading of the situation by
Thomas and Kauffmann
(1999) is that the predicted abundance of giant ellipticals at
z = 2 is less than about one third of what it is now. Deciding
whether the gap between theory and observation can be closed is
not yet straightforward.
A related issue arises from the observations of quasars at redshift z ~ 6, which seem to be difficult to understand within the CDM model. By conventional estimates (65) these quasars are powered by black holes with masses at the upper end of the range of masses of the central compact objects - let us call them black holes - in the largest present-day elliptical galaxies. Here are some options to consider. First, the quasars may be in the few giant elliptical galaxies that have already formed at z ~ 6 . This would be difficult to understand in the CDM model (Efstathiou and Rees, 1988), and it may be difficult to understand why these giant ellipticals did not continue to grow by merging into unacceptable numbers of super-giant galaxies today. Second, the quasars at z ~ 6 may be in more modest star clusters that later grew by merging into giant ellipticals. But how could this growth preserve the remarkably tight correlation between the central black hole mass and the velocity dispersion of the stars? (66) If the giant ellipticals grew by merging of smaller galaxies, as predicted by CDM, wouldn't the black hole masses also grow by merging? That seems contrary to the estimate that the central engines of the z ~ 6 quasars are about as large as what are thought to be remnant quasar engines in galaxies at low redshift. Third, maybe large ellipticals grew by accretion around pre-existing black holes, without a lot of merging. This is explored by Danese et al. (2002).
There does not seem to be a coherent pattern to the present list of challenges to the CDM model. The rotation curves of low surface brightness galaxies suggest we want to suppress the primeval density fluctuations on small scales, but the observations of what seem to be mature elliptical galaxies at high redshifts suggest we want to increase small-scale fluctuations, or maybe postulate non-Gaussian fluctuations that grow into the central engines for quasars at z ~ 6. We do not want these central engines to appear in low surface brightness galaxies, of course.
It would not be at all surprising if the confusion of challenges
proved to be at least in part due to the difficulty of comparing
necessarily schematic analytic and numerical model analyses
to the limited and indirect empirical constraints. But it is also
easy to imagine that the CDM model has to be refined because the
physics of the dark sector of matter and energy is more
complicated than
CDM, and maybe
even more complicated
than any of the alternatives now under discussion. Perhaps some of
the structure formation ideas people were considering a decade
ago, which invoke good physics, also will prove to be significant
factors in relieving the problems with structure formation. And
the important point for our purpose is that we do not know how
the relief might affect the cosmological tests.
61 Pioneering work on the theory of the central mass distribution in a dark mass halo is in Dubinski and Carlberg (1991). Moore (1994) and Flores and Primack (1994) are among the first to point out the apparent disagreement between theory and observation. Back.
62 The situation is reviewed by
de Blok et al. (2001),
and
de Blok and Bosma (2002).
The galaxy NGC 3109 is a helpful example
because it is particularly close - just outside the Local
Group - and so particularly well resolved. An optical image is
in plate 39 in the Hubble Atlas of Galaxies
(Sandage, 1961b).
The radial
velocity measurements across the face of the galaxy, in Figs. 1 and 2 in
Blais-Ouellette, Amram, and
Carignan (2001), are
consistent with circular motion with
vc
r at
r
2 kpc.
Back.
63 In a power law halo with
r-
,
the velocity dispersion varies with radius as
<v2> ~ GM( < r) / r
r2 -
.
The particle scattering cross section must be adjusted to erase the
effective temperature gradient, thus lowering the mass density at
small radii, without promoting unacceptable core collapse.
Back.
64 The classic merger example is also the nearest large elliptical galaxy, Centaurus A (NGC 5128). The elliptical image is crossed by a band of gas and dust that likely is the result of a merger with one of the spiral galaxies in the group around this elliptical. For a thorough review of what is known about this galaxy see Israel (1998). Back.
65 The quasars discovered in the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey are discussed by
Fan et al. (2001).
If the quasar radiation is not strongly beamed toward us, its
luminosity translates to an Eddington mass (the mass at which
the gravitational pull on unshielded plasma balances the
radiation pressure) Mbh ~ 109.3
M,
where M
is the mass of the Sun. In a present-day elliptical galaxy with this
mass in the central compact object the line of sight velocity dispersion is
350 km s-1. This
is close to the highest velocity dispersion observed in low
redshift elliptical galaxies. For example, in the
Faber et al. (1989)
catalog of 500 ellipticals, 15 have
300 <
< 400 km
s-1, and none has
a larger
. From the
present-day relation between
and luminosity, an elliptical galaxy with
= 350 km s-1
has mass ~ 1012.3
M
in
stars. The dark matter associated with this many baryons is
MDM ~ 1013
M
. This
is a large mass to assemble at z ~ 6, but it helps that such
objects are rare. The present
number density of giant elliptical galaxies with
> 300
km s-1 is about 10-5 Mpc-3, four
orders of magnitude more than the comoving number density of
quasars detected at z ~ 6.
Back.
66 Ferrarese and Merritt (2000) and Gebhardt et al. (2000) show that the black hole mass correlates with the velocity dispersion of the stars in an elliptical galaxy and the velocity dispersion of the bulge stars in a spiral galaxy. This is not a direct gravitational effect: the black hole mass is less than 1% of the star mass in the bulge or the elliptical galaxy. Back.