论文标题
flybys,轨道,飞溅:Subhalos和光环边界的重要性
Flybys, orbits, splashback: subhalos and the importance of the halo boundary
论文作者
论文摘要
暗物质光环与孤立的寄主或Subhalos的分类对于我们对结构形成和银河系连接的理解至关重要。最常见的是,Subhalos被定义为驻留在球形过度密度边界(例如病毒半径)内。由此产生的宿主 - subhalo关系敏感地取决于某种任意的过度密度阈值,但是这种依赖性的影响很少被量化。最近提出的飞溅半径往往更大,并且比最大的球形过度密度边界还包括更多的subhalos。我们系统地研究了子荷兰分数对半径定义的依赖性,并表明它可能因不同球形过度密度定义之间的统一因素而有所不同。与病毒定义相比,使用Splashback Radii仍可以使Subhalos的丰度增加一倍。我们还量化了过去曾经是Subhalos的宿主的Flyby(或后挡板)光环的丰度。我们表明,这些物体中的大多数是标记错误的卫星,当我们使用Splashback半径时,它们自然被归类为Subhalos。我们表明,可以将subhalo分数理解为仅峰高和线性功率谱的斜率的通用函数。我们提供了一个简单的拟合函数,可将我们的仿真结果捕获到各种光环质量,红移和宇宙学中的精度为20%。最后,我们证明了Splashback Radii显着改变了我们对当地群体中卫星和飞行星系的理解。
The classification of dark matter halos as isolated hosts or subhalos is critical for our understanding of structure formation and the galaxy-halo connection. Most commonly, subhalos are defined to reside inside a spherical overdensity boundary such as the virial radius. The resulting host-subhalo relations depend sensitively on the somewhat arbitrary overdensity threshold, but the impact of this dependence is rarely quantified. The recently proposed splashback radius tends to be larger and to include more subhalos than even the largest spherical overdensity boundaries. We systematically investigate the dependence of the subhalo fraction on the radius definition and show that it can vary by factors of unity between different spherical overdensity definitions. Using splashback radii can yet double the abundance of subhalos compared to the virial definition. We also quantify the abundance of flyby (or backsplash) halos, hosts that used to be subhalos in the past. We show that the majority of these objects are mislabeled satellites that are naturally classified as subhalos when we use the splashback radius. We show that the subhalo fraction can be understood as a universal function of only peak height and the slope of the linear power spectrum. We provide a simple fitting function that captures our simulation results to 20% accuracy across a wide range of halo masses, redshifts, and cosmologies. Finally, we demonstrate that splashback radii significantly change our understanding of satellite and flyby galaxies in the Local Group.