Formation, structure and clustering of CDM...

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Formation, structure and clustering of CDM halos Houjun Mo (UMass) June, 2008

Transcript of Formation, structure and clustering of CDM...

Formation, structure and clustering of CDM halos

Houjun Mo (UMass)

June, 2008

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Structure formation in CDM Scenario

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Hierarchical formation, simple consideration

Consider a perturbation spectrum (or a perturbation profile):

δM(r)M(r)

∝ M−ε , typically ε =neff +3

6(neff : effective power index) .

Spherical collapse model: δM(r)M(r) ≈ 1.68 to collapse

For a single perturbation, the mass accretion history is related to the lineargrowth factor D(z) by

M(z) ∝ D1/ε(z) .

Hierarchical formation requires ε > 0, or neff >−3.

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According to spherical model:

ρv(Rv) = ∆vΩm(z)ρcrit(z) , ∆v∼ constant .

Defining halo virial (circular) velocity:

V2c =

GMv

Rv,

we have

Vc ∝[H(z)Ω1/2

m (z)Mv(z)]1/3

.

At high-z:Vc(z)∼ (1+z)(1/2−1/3ε) .

If ε < 2/3 (i.e. neff < 1, Vc increases with time (potential well builds up with time)

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CDM structure formation

For CDM, −3< neff < 1, structure grows hierarchically to form CDM halos, and Vc

of each halo must grow from zero. There must be a fast accretion regime, whereMv(z) grows faster than 1/H(z) in order to establish halo potential well.

For individual halos, the growth of Vc is determined by the mass accretion history.

Fast and slow accretions:

• If Mv(z) increases faster than 1/H(z), then Vc increases with time;

• If Mv(z) increases as fast as 1/H(z) then Vc ramains constant;

• If Mv(z) increases slower than 1/H(z), then Vc decreases with time.

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Halo accretion histories

The fast/slow accretions are notcompletely random. In general, theformation of a halo can roughtlydivided into two regimes: fast andslow.[Zhao et al. 2003]

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Halo Properties in the fast/slow regimes

Circular velocities at virial radius Rv

and the scale radius rs

ρ(r) ∝ 1/[r(rs+ r)2] (NFW profile) Changes of Rv and rs with time

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Energy ranking preserved, especiallyin the slow accretion regime;completely mixing is not achieved.

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What determine the fast/slow regimes?

Several possibilities:

• Shapes of density peaks of different heights;

• Truncations by large-scale tidal fields;

• Change of local background (due to halo bias).

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Halo structure and formation history

[Zhao et al. 2003]

Explanation in terms of halo formationtime:NFW model: ρ(rs) ∝ ρ(zf ); zf : at which half ofthe halo mass is in progenitors more massivethan 1% of the final mass;Bullock et al. model: c= 9(M/M?)−0.13(1+z)−1;Eke et al. model: c3 = ∆(zc)Ω(z)

∆(z)Ω(zc)

(1+zc1+z

)3;

σ(zc,M) = 1/28;Wechsler et al. model: c = 4.1a/ac; M(a) =M0exp[−2ac(a0/a−1)];Zhao et al. model: inner region established infast accretion with c= 4, and c increases as Rv

increases.

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NFW profile and halo accretion history

Simple spherical model (Lu et al. 2006)For a given mass accreion history, M =M(z), the initial perturbation profile is

δi(r i) = 1.686D(zi)D(z)

,

where r i is related to M by

r i(M) =[

3M4πρ(zi)

]1/3

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Assuming radial orbits

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Effect of velocity isotropization

Assuming particles accreted in the fastaccretion regime have random orbits:

σ2t

σ2r= 2

[1+

(Rt

ra

)β]−1

,

where ra is the characteristic scaledemarcating fast and slow accretion.Effective acceleration includingcentrifugal force in spherical model:

a = g+J2

r3

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Model predictions

Halo concentration: c = Rv/rs

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Interpretations

To produce the inner r−1-profile, twoconditions:(1) Fast collapse: 0 < ε < 1/6, so thatVc increases faster than H−1;(2) Orbit isotropisation in the fastaccretion regime

Fast accretion allows particles with awide range of energies to contributeto the central profile, if permited byangular momentum;

Velocity isotropisation allows mixing ofthese particles, resulting in ρ(r) ∝ r−γ

with γ≈ 1.

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Outer profile

In the slow accretion regime, the growth is inside-out:

ρ(r) =1

4πr2

dMdt

(drdt

)−1

∝Mr3

µ2+µ

,

where µ≡ d lnM/d ln t.

Write M = Me+∆M, Me: the mass of the halo at t−∆t; ∆M is the mass accretedbetween t−∆t and t.

If ∆M increases as a power law of t, and if ∆M Me, then ρ ∝ r−3.

If M(a) continues to grow as M(a) = M0exp[−2ac(a0/a−1)], ρ ∝ r−4 for a a0.

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The ‘universal’ CDM halo profile seems to be determined by initial conditions ofcollapse provided by the CDM model.

• Halo profile depends on formation history.

• How is velocity field isotropized?

• How is velocity structure correlated with halo profile?

• What do the results tell us about the mass profile of elliptical galaxies?

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Halo bias

ξhh = b2ξm

[Gao et al. 05]

Spherical collapse: does notdependent of large-scale environment;Ellipsoidal collapse: depends on localtidal field (Sheth, Mo, Tormen, 01)

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Age-dependence of halo bias

[Jing, Suto, Mo, 07]

Ellipsoidal collapse: halo formationdepends on large-scale tidal field. Isthis the only reason?

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Tidal heating in high density regions

[Wang, Mo, Jing 07]

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• It is clear that halo clustering depends on halo formation.

• Tidal heating and truncation may be the origin of such dependence.

• It is interesting to examine the implications for galaxy assembly in denseenvironments.

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Connection to Galaxies

Dark matter halos: hierarchical formation; Galaxies: not necessarily! [Li, Mo,Gao 08]

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Constrain from Galaxy-Galaxy Lensing

[R. Li et al. 2008]

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Environmental Effects

[Y. Wang wt al. 2008]

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Summary

CDM halos show regularities in their assembly histories: fast accretion followedby slow accretion.

Halo structure depends on formation history: not only concentration, but also theprofile itself may be determined by accretion histoy.

Halo formation depends on environments, likely due to large-scale tidal fields.

Subhalos: number and radial distribution quite well understood in pure DMsimulations, but the connection to reality is not clear.

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