Rigging dark haloes: Why is hierarchical galaxy formation consistent with the inside-out build-up of thin discs?
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 418:4 (2011) 2493-2507
Abstract:
State-of-the-art hydrodynamical simulations show that gas inflow through the virial sphere of dark matter haloes is focused (i.e. has a preferred inflow direction), consistent (i.e. its orientation is steady in time) and amplified (i.e. the amplitude of its advected specific angular momentum increases with time). We explain this to be a consequence of the dynamics of the cosmic web within the neighbourhood of the halo, which produces steady, angular momentum rich, filamentary inflow of cold gas. On large scales, the dynamics within neighbouring patches drives matter out of the surrounding voids, into walls and filaments before it finally gets accreted on to virialized dark matter haloes. As these walls/filaments constitute the boundaries of asymmetric voids, they acquire a net transverse motion, which explains the angular momentum rich nature of the later infall which comes from further away. We conjecture that this large-scale driven consistency explains why cold flows are so efficient at building up high-redshift thin discs inside out. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.How active galactic nucleus feedback and metal cooling shape cluster entropy profiles
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 417:3 (2011) 1853-1870
Abstract:
Observed clusters of galaxies essentially come in two flavours: non-cool-core clusters characterized by an isothermal temperature profile and a central entropy floor, and cool-core clusters where temperature and entropy in the central region are increasing with radius. Using cosmological resimulations of a galaxy cluster, we study the evolution of its intracluster medium (ICM) gas properties, and through them we assess the effect of different (subgrid) modelling of the physical processes at play, namely gas cooling, star formation, feedback from supernovae and active galactic nuclei (AGNs). More specifically, we show that AGN feedback plays a major role in the pre-heating of the protocluster as it prevents a high concentration of mass from collecting in the centre of the future galaxy cluster at early times. However, AGN activity during the cluster's later evolution is also required to regulate the mass flow into its core and prevent runaway star formation in the central galaxy. Whereas the energy deposited by supernovae alone is insufficient to prevent an overcooling catastrophe, supernovae are responsible for spreading a large amount of metals at high redshift, enhancing the cooling efficiency of the ICM gas. As the AGN energy release depends on the accretion rate of gas on to its central black hole engine, the AGNs respond to this supernova-enhanced gas accretion by injecting more energy into the surrounding gas, and as a result increase the amount of early pre-heating. We demonstrate that the interaction between an AGN jet and the ICM gas that regulates the growth of the AGN's black hole can naturally produce cool-core clusters if we neglect metals. However, as soon as metals are allowed to contribute to the radiative cooling, only the non-cool-core solution is produced. © 2011 The Authors. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.How active galactic nucleus feedback and metal cooling shape cluster entropy profiles
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 417:3 (2011) 1853-1870
The environment and redshift dependence of accretion on to dark matter haloes and subhaloes
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 417:1 (2011) 666-680
Abstract:
A dark-matter-only Horizon Project simulation is used to investigate the environment and redshift dependences of accretion on to both haloes and subhaloes. These objects grow in the simulation via mergers and via accretion of diffuse non-halo material, and we measure the combined signal from these two modes of accretion. It is found that the halo accretion rate varies less strongly with redshift than predicted by the Extended Press-Schechter formalism and is dominated by minor merger and diffuse accretion events at z= 0, for all haloes. These latter growth mechanisms may be able to drive the radio-mode feedback hypothesised for recent galaxy-formation models, and have both the correct accretion rate and the form of cosmological evolution. The low-redshift subhalo accretors in the simulation form a mass-selected subsample safely above the mass resolution limit that reside in the outer regions of their host, with ∼70 per cent beyond their host's virial radius, where they are probably not being significantly stripped of mass. These subhaloes accrete, on average, at higher rates than haloes at low redshift and we argue that this is due to their enhanced clustering at small scales. At cluster scales, the mass accretion rate on to haloes and subhaloes at low redshift is found to be only weakly dependent on environment, and we confirm that at z∼ 2 haloes accrete independently of their environment at all scales, as reported by other authors. By comparing our results with an observational study of black hole growth, we support previous suggestions that at z > 1, dark matter haloes and their associated central black holes grew coevally, but show that by the present-day, dark matter haloes could be accreting at fractional rates that are up to a factor of 3 - 4 higher than their associated black holes. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.AGN feedback using AMR cosmological simulations
ArXiv 1109.1457 (2011)