An overmassive Dark Halo around an Ultra-diffuse Galaxy in the Virgo Cluster

Abstract

Ultra diffuse galaxies (UDGs) have the sizes of giant galaxies but the luminosities of dwarfs. A key to understanding their origins comes from their total masses, but their low surface brightnesses (μ(V) ≥ 25.0) generally prohibit dynamical studies. Here we report the first such measurements for a UDG (VCC~1287 in the Virgo cluster), based on its globular cluster system dynamics and size. From 7 GCs we measure a mean systemic velocity v sys = 1071+14-15 km/s, thereby confirming a Virgo-cluster association. We measure a velocity dispersion of 33+16-10 km/s within 8.1 kpc, corresponding to an enclosed mass of (4.5 2.8)×109 M and a g-band mass-to-light ratio of (M/L)g = 106+126-54. From the cumulative mass curve, along with the GC numbers, we estimate a virial mass of 8×1010 M, yielding a dark-to-stellar mass fraction of 3000. We show that this UDG is an outlier in M star - M halo relations, suggesting extreme stochasticity in relatively massive star-forming halos in clusters. Finally, we discuss how counting GCs offers an efficient route to determining virial masses for UDGs.

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