Authors
                Dr.
            
                        Mariya Lyubenova
            
  Date and time
                                    2 Jun 2016 - 10:30 Europe/London
                            Address
                                    Aula
Talk language
                                    English
                            Description
                                    Tests of the concordance cold dark matter model on the  scale of galaxies are so far inconclusive due to our poor understanding  of the interplay between baryons and dark matter (DM). Two critical  limitations in previous efforts to disentangle the baryonic and DM  distributions have been the lack of (i) two-dimensional, spatially  complete and radially extended kinematics to infer the total mass  distribution, and (ii) coverage in wavelength to robustly constrain the  baryonic mass distribution and isolate the DM contribution. Both are now  provided by existing integral-field spectroscopic data from the CALIFA  survey of a statistically well-defined sample of ~600 nearby galaxies of  all Hubble types. We apply dynamical and stellar population modelling  in a homogeneous way to the same data. In this way we for the first time  constrain both the normalisation (ratio of dwarf to giant stars) and  shape (single versus broken power-law slope) of the stellar initial mass  function (IMF). We then robustly characterise the mass distribution of  galaxies, from dwarf-star dominance at the high-mass end to dark matter  excess in low-mass spirals. In this way, CALIFA yields physical insights  into the baryonic and DM interplay for a statistically well-defined  sample of nearby galaxies, providing in turn crucial constraints on  galaxy formation and evolution models.