scholarly journals CONSTRAINING DARK MATTER HALO PROFILES AND GALAXY FORMATION MODELS USING SPIRAL ARM MORPHOLOGY. II. DARK AND STELLAR MASS CONCENTRATIONS FOR 13 NEARBY FACE-ON GALAXIES

2014 ◽  
Vol 795 (1) ◽  
pp. 90 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc S. Seigar ◽  
Benjamin L. Davis ◽  
Joel Berrier ◽  
Daniel Kennefick
2018 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 435-487 ◽  
Author(s):  
Risa H. Wechsler ◽  
Jeremy L. Tinker

In our modern understanding of galaxy formation, every galaxy forms within a dark matter halo. The formation and growth of galaxies over time is connected to the growth of the halos in which they form. The advent of large galaxy surveys as well as high-resolution cosmological simulations has provided a new window into the statistical relationship between galaxies and halos and its evolution. Here, we define this galaxy–halo connection as the multivariate distribution of galaxy and halo properties that can be derived from observations and simulations. This galaxy–halo connection provides a key test of physical galaxy-formation models; it also plays an essential role in constraints of cosmological models using galaxy surveys and in elucidating the properties of dark matter using galaxies. We review techniques for inferring the galaxy–halo connection and the insights that have arisen from these approaches. Some things we have learned are that galaxy-formation efficiency is a strong function of halo mass; at its peak in halos around a pivot halo mass of 1012M⊙, less than 20% of the available baryons have turned into stars by the present day; the intrinsic scatter in galaxy stellar mass is small, less than 0.2 dex at a given halo mass above this pivot mass; below this pivot mass galaxy stellar mass is a strong function of halo mass; the majority of stars over cosmic time were formed in a narrow region around this pivot mass. We also highlight key open questions about how galaxies and halos are connected, including understanding the correlations with secondary properties and the connection of these properties to galaxy clustering.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (S359) ◽  
pp. 166-167
Author(s):  
Makoto Ando ◽  
Kazuhiro Shimasaku ◽  
Rieko Momose

AbstractA proto-cluster core is the most massive dark matter halo (DMH) in a given proto-cluster. To reveal the galaxy formation in core regions, we search for proto-cluster cores at z ˜ 2 in ˜1.5deg2 of the COSMOS field. Using pairs of massive galaxies (log (M*/Mʘ) ≥ 11) as tracers of cores, we find 75 candidate cores. A clustering analysis and the extended Press-Schechter model show that their descendant mass at z = 0 is consistent with Fornax-like or Virgo-like clusters. Moreover, using the IllustrisTNG simulation, we confirm that pairs of massive galaxies are good tracers of DMHs massive enough to be regarded as proto-cluster cores. We then derive the stellar mass function and the quiescent fraction for member galaxies of the 75 candidate cores. We find that stellar mass assembly and quenching are accelerated as early as z ˜ 2 in proto-cluster cores.


2020 ◽  
Vol 634 ◽  
pp. A135 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Girelli ◽  
L. Pozzetti ◽  
M. Bolzonella ◽  
C. Giocoli ◽  
F. Marulli ◽  
...  

Aims. Understanding the link between the galaxy properties and the dark matter halos they reside in and their coevolution is a powerful tool for constraining the processes related to galaxy formation. In particular, the stellar-to-halo mass relation (SHMR) and its evolution throughout the history of the Universe provides insights on galaxy formation models and allows us to assign galaxy masses to halos in N-body dark matter simulations. To address these questions, we determine the SHMR throughout the entire cosmic history from z ∼ 4 to the present. Methods. We used a statistical approach to link the observed galaxy stellar mass functions on the COSMOS field to dark matter halo mass functions up to z ∼ 4 from the ΛCDM DUSTGRAIN-pathfinder simulation, which is complete for Mh >  1012.5 M⊙, and extended this to lower masses with a theoretical parameterization. We propose an empirical model to describe the evolution of the SHMR as a function of redshift (either in the presence or absence of a scatter in stellar mass at fixed halo mass), and compare the results with several literature works and semianalytic models of galaxy formation. We also tested the reliability of our results by comparing them to observed galaxy stellar mass functions and to clustering measurements. Results. We derive the SHMR from z = 0 to z = 4, and model its empirical evolution with redshift. We find that M*/Mh is always lower than ∼0.05 and depends both on redshift and halo mass, with a bell shape that peaks at Mh ∼ 1012 M⊙. Assuming a constant cosmic baryon fraction, we calculate the star-formation efficiency of galaxies and find that it is generally low; its peak increases with cosmic time from ∼30% at z ∼ 4 to ∼35% at z ∼ 0. Moreover, the star formation efficiency increases for increasing redshifts at masses higher than the peak of the SHMR, while the trend is reversed for masses lower than the peak. This indicates that massive galaxies (i.e., galaxies hosted at halo masses higher than the SHMR peak) formed with a higher efficiency at higher redshifts (i.e., downsizing effect) and vice versa for low-mass halos. We find a large scatter in results from semianalytic models, with a difference of up to a factor ∼8 compared to our results, and an opposite evolutionary trend at high halo masses. By comparing our results with those in the literature, we find that while at z ∼ 0 all results agree well (within a factor of ∼3), at z >  0 many differences emerge. This suggests that observational and theoretical work still needs to be done. Our results agree well (within ∼10%) with observed stellar mass functions (out to z = 4) and observed clustering of massive galaxies (M* >  1011 M⊙ from z ∼ 0.5 to z ∼ 1.1) in the two-halo regime.


2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (S321) ◽  
pp. 281-281
Author(s):  
Simón Díaz-García ◽  
Heikki Salo ◽  
Eija Laurikainen

AbstractWe use 3.6 μm photometry for 1154 disk galaxies (i < 65°) in the S4G (Sheth et al. 2010). We obtain the average stellar component of the circular velocity (Vdisk) and the mean (dark matter) halo-to-stellar mass ratio (Mhalo/M*) inside the optical radius (Ropt) in bins of total stellar mass (M*, from Muñoz-Mateos et al. 2015), providing observational constraints for galaxy formation models to be tested against. We find the Mhalo/M* − M* relation in good agreement with the best-fit model at z ≈ 0 in ΛCDM cosmological simulations (e.g. Moster 2010), assuming that the dark matter halo within Ropt comprises a constant fraction (~ 4%) of its total mass.


Author(s):  
James W Nightingale ◽  
Richard J Massey ◽  
David R Harvey ◽  
Andrew P Cooper ◽  
Amy Etherington ◽  
...  

Abstract We investigate how strong gravitational lensing can test contemporary models of massive elliptical (ME) galaxy formation, by combining a traditional decomposition of their visible stellar distribution with a lensing analysis of their mass distribution. As a proof of concept, we study a sample of three ME lenses, observing that all are composed of two distinct baryonic structures, a ‘red’ central bulge surrounded by an extended envelope of stellar material. Whilst these two components look photometrically similar, their distinct lensing effects permit a clean decomposition of their mass structure. This allows us to infer two key pieces of information about each lens galaxy: (i) the stellar mass distribution (without invoking stellar populations models) and (ii) the inner dark matter halo mass. We argue that these two measurements are crucial to testing models of ME formation, as the stellar mass profile provides a diagnostic of baryonic accretion and feedback whilst the dark matter mass places each galaxy in the context of LCDM large scale structure formation. We also detect large rotational offsets between the two stellar components and a lopsidedness in their outer mass distributions, which hold further information on the evolution of each ME. Finally, we discuss how this approach can be extended to galaxies of all Hubble types and what implication our results have for studies of strong gravitational lensing.


2020 ◽  
Vol 493 (3) ◽  
pp. 4453-4462
Author(s):  
Jian-hua He

ABSTRACT We investigate how a property of a galaxy correlates most tightly with a property of its host dark matter halo, using state-of-the-art hydrodynamical simulations of galaxy formation: EAGLE, Illustris, and IllustrisTNG. Unlike most of the previous work, our analyses focus on all types of galaxies, including both central and satellite galaxies. We find that the stellar mass of a galaxy at the epoch of the peak circular velocity with an evolution correction gives the tightest such correlation to the peak circular velocity Vpeak of the galaxy’s underling dark matter halo. The evolution of galaxy stellar mass reduces rather than increases scatter in such a relation. We also find that one major source of scatter comes from star stripping due to the strong interactions between galaxies. Even though, we show that the size of scatter predicted by hydrodynamical simulations has a negligible impact on the clustering of dense Vpeak-selected subhalo from simulations, which suggests that even the simplest subhalo abundance matching (SHAM), without scatter and any additional free parameter, can provide a robust prediction of galaxy clustering that can agree impressively well with the observations from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) main galaxy survey.


2006 ◽  
Vol 645 (2) ◽  
pp. 1012-1023 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc S. Seigar ◽  
James S. Bullock ◽  
Aaron J. Barth ◽  
Luis C. Ho

Author(s):  
D. Kairatkyzy ◽  
◽  
H. C. Quevedo ◽  
◽  
◽  
...  

In this paper we use two suites of ultra-high resolution N-body simulations Phoenix and Aquarius Projects to study the assembly history of sub-halos and its dependence on host halo mass. We found that more massive haloes have more progenitors, which is in contrast with former works because they counted dynamical progenitors repeatedly. Less massive halos have larger fraction of dynamical progenitors than more massive ones. The typical accretion time depends strongly on host halo mass. Progenitors of galactic halos are accreted at higher redshift than that of cluster halos. Once these progenitors orbit their primary systems, they rapidly lose their original mass but not their identifiers. Most of the progenitors are able to survive to present day. At given redshift, the survival fraction of accreted sub-halos is independent of host halo mass, while sub-halos in high mass halos lost more mass. In the second part, we use a semi-analytical galaxy formation model compiled on a Millennium Simulation to study the size evolution of massive early-type galaxies from redshift z = 2 to present days. We find that the model we used is able to well reproduce the amplitude and slope of size-mass relation, as well as its evolution. The amplitude of this relation reflects the typical compactness of dark matter halos at the time when most stars are formed. This link between size and star formation epoch is propagated in through galaxy combinations. Minor combinations are increasingly important with increasing present day stellar mass for galaxies more massive than 1011.4M⊙. At lower masses, major combinations are more important. In situ star formation contributes more to the size growth than it does to stellar mass growth. Similar to former works, we find that minor combinations dominate the subsequent growth both in stellar mass and in size for early formed early-type galaxies.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc S. Seigar

We investigate the dark matter halo density profile of M33. We find that the HI rotation curve of M33 is best described by an NFW dark matter halo density profile model, with a halo concentration of and a virial mass of . We go on to use the NFW concentration of M33, along with the values derived for other galaxies (as found in the literature), to show that correlates with both spiral arm pitch angle and supermassive black hole mass.


2020 ◽  
Vol 493 (1) ◽  
pp. 1361-1374 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arya Farahi ◽  
Matthew Ho ◽  
Hy Trac

ABSTRACT Cold dark matter model predicts that the large-scale structure grows hierarchically. Small dark matter haloes form first. Then, they grow gradually via continuous merger and accretion. These haloes host the majority of baryonic matter in the Universe in the form of hot gas and cold stellar phase. Determining how baryons are partitioned into these phases requires detailed modelling of galaxy formation and their assembly history. It is speculated that formation time of the same mass haloes might be correlated with their baryonic content. To evaluate this hypothesis, we employ haloes of mass above $10^{14}\, \mathrm{M}_{\odot }$ realized by TNG300 solution of the IllustrisTNG project. Formation time is not directly observable. Hence, we rely on the magnitude gap between the brightest and the fourth brightest halo galaxy member, which is shown that traces formation time of the host halo. We compute the conditional statistics of the stellar and gas content of haloes conditioned on their total mass and magnitude gap. We find a strong correlation between magnitude gap and gas mass, BCG stellar mass, and satellite galaxies stellar mass, but not the total stellar mass of halo. Conditioning on the magnitude gap can reduce the scatter about halo property–halo mass relation and has a significant impact on the conditional covariance. Reduction in the scatter can be as significant as 30 per cent, which implies more accurate halo mass prediction. Incorporating the magnitude gap has a potential to improve cosmological constraints using halo abundance and allows us to gain insight into the baryon evolution within these systems.


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