Ultra-Compact High Velocity Clouds as Minihalos and Dwarf Galaxies
Abstract
We present dark-matter minihalo models for the Ultra-Compact High Velocity HI Clouds (UCHVCs) recently discovered in the 21 cm ALFALFA survey. We assume gravitational confinement of 104 K HI gas by flat-cored dark-matter subhalos within the Local Group. We show that for flat cores, typical (median) tidally-stripped cosmological subhalos at redshift z=0 have dark-matter masses of ~107 Msun within the central 300 pc (independent of total halo mass), consistent with the "Strigari mass scale" observed in low-luminosity dwarf galaxies. Flat-cored subhalos also resolve the mass-discrepancy between simulated and observed satellites around the Milky Way. For the UCHVCs we calculate the photoionization-limited hydrostatic gas profiles for any distance-dependent total observed HI mass and predict the associated (projected) HI half-mass radii, assuming the clouds are embedded in distant (d > 300 kpc) and unstripped subhalos. For a typical UCHVC (0.9 Jy km/s) we predict physical HI half-mass radii of 0.18 to 0.35 kpc (or angular sizes of 0.6 to 2.1 arcmin) for distances ranging from 300 kpc to 2 Mpc. As a consistency check we model the gas rich dwarf galaxy Leo T, for which there is a well-resolved HI column density profile and a known distance (420 kpc). For Leo T we find that a subhalo with M300 ~ 8 (+/-0.2) 106 Msun best fits the observed HI profile. We derive an upper limit of PHIM < 150 K/cm3 for the pressure of any enveloping hot IGM gas at the distance of Leo T. Our analysis suggests that some of the UCHVCs may in fact constitute a population of 21-cm-selected but optically-faint dwarf galaxies in the Local Group.
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