The angular momentum of baryons and dark matter halos revisited

ArXiv 1106.0538 (2011)

Authors:

Taysun Kimm, Julien Devriendt, Adrianne Slyz, Christophe Pichon, Susan A Kassin, Yohan Dubois

Abstract:

Recent theoretical studies have shown that galaxies at high redshift are fed by cold, dense gas filaments, suggesting angular momentum transport by gas differs from that by dark matter. Revisiting this issue using high-resolution cosmological hydrodynamics simulations with adaptive mesh refinement, we find that at the time of accretion, gas and dark matter do carry a similar amount of specific angular momentum, but that it is systematically higher than that of the dark matter halo as a whole. At high redshift, freshly accreted gas rapidly streams into the central region of the halo, directly depositing this large amount of angular momentum within a sphere of radius r=0.1rvir. In contrast, dark matter particles pass through the central region unscathed, and a fraction of them ends up populating the outer regions of the halo (r/rvir>0.1), redistributing angular momentum in the process. As a result, large-scale motions of the cosmic web have to be considered as the origin of gas angular momentum rather than its virialised dark matter halo host. This generic result holds for halos of all masses at all redshifts, as radiative cooling ensures that a significant fraction of baryons remain trapped at the centre of the halos. Despite this injection of angular momentum enriched gas, we predict an amount for stellar discs which is in fair agreement with observations at z=0. This arises because the total specific angular momentum of the baryons remains close to that of dark matter halos. We propose a new scenario where gas efficiently carries the angular momentum generated by large-scale structure motions deep inside dark matter halos, redistributing it only in the vicinity of the disc.

X-ray characteristics of NGC3516: A view through the complex absorber

Astrophysical Journal 733:1 (2011)

Authors:

TJ Turner, L Miller, SB Kraemer, JN Reeves

Abstract:

We consider new Suzaku data for NGC3516 taken during 2009 along with other recent X-ray observations of the source. The cumulative characteristics of NGC3516 cannot be explained without invoking changes in the line-of-sight absorption. Contrary to many other well-studied Seyfert galaxies, NGC3516 does not show a positive lag of hard X-ray photons relative to soft photons over the timescales sampled. In the context of reverberation models for the X-ray lags, the lack of such a signal in NGC3516 is consistent with flux variations being dominated by absorption changes. The lack of any reverberation signal in such a highly variable source disfavors intrinsic continuum variability in this case. Instead, the colorless flux variations observed at high flux states for NGC3516 are suggested to be a consequence of Compton-thick clumps of gas crossing the line of sight. © 2011. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved..

Applications of Bayesian model averaging to the curvature and size of the universe

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters 413:1 (2011)

Authors:

M Vardanyan, R Trotta, J Silk

Abstract:

Bayesian model averaging is a procedure to obtain parameter constraints that account for the uncertainty about the correct cosmological model. We use recent cosmological observations and Bayesian model averaging to derive tight limits on the curvature parameter, as well as robust lower bounds on the curvature radius of the Universe and its minimum size, while allowing for the possibility of an evolving dark energy component. Because flat models are favoured by Bayesian model selection, we find that model-averaged constraints on the curvature and size of the Universe can be considerably stronger than non-model-averaged ones. For the most conservative prior choice (based on inflationary considerations), our procedure improves on non-model-averaged constraints on the curvature by a factor of ~2. The curvature scale of the Universe is conservatively constrained to be Rc > 42 Gpc (99 per cent), corresponding to a lower limit to the number of Hubble spheres in the Universe NU > 251 (99 per cent). © 2011 The Authors. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.

Rigging dark halos: why is hierarchical galaxy formation consistent with the inside-out build-up of thin discs?

ArXiv 1105.021 (2011)

Authors:

C Pichon, D Pogosyan, T Kimm, A Slyz, J Devriendt, Y Dubois

Abstract:

State-of-the-art hydrodynamical simulations show that gas inflow through the virial sphere of dark matter halos 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 onto virialised dark matter halos. 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 from the inside out.

Rigging dark halos: why is hierarchical galaxy formation consistent with the inside-out build-up of thin discs?

(2011)

Authors:

C Pichon, D Pogosyan, T Kimm, A Slyz, J Devriendt, Y Dubois