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The shape of dark matter haloes in the Aquarius simulations: Evolution and memory

Authors :
Vera-Ciro, C.A.
Sales, L. V.
Helmi, A.
Reyle, C
Robin, A
Schultheis, M
Astronomy
Kapteyn Astronomical Institute
Source :
Assembling the Puzzle of the Milky Way: EPJ Web of Conferences, 19, European Physical Journal Web of Conferences, EPJ Web of Conferences, Vol 19, p 01009 (2012)
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
E D P SCIENCES, 2012.

Abstract

We use the high resolution cosmological N -body simulations from the Aquarius project to investigate in detail the mechanisms that determine the shape of Milky Way-type dark matter haloes. We find that, when measured at the instantaneous virial radius, the shape of individual haloes changes with time, evolving from a typically prolate configuration at early stages to a more triaxial/oblate geometry at the present day. This evolution in halo shape correlates well with the distribution of the infalling material: prolate configurations arise when haloes are fed through narrow filaments, which characterizes the early epochs of halo assembly, whereas triaxial/oblate configurations result as the accretion turns more isotropic at later times. Interestingly, at redshift z = 0, clear imprints of the past history of each halo are recorded in their shapes at different radii, which also exhibit a variation from prolate in the inner regions to triaxial/oblate in the outskirts. Provided that the Aquarius haloes are fair representatives of Milky Way-like 1012 M☉ objects, we conclude that the shape of such dark matter haloes is a complex, time-dependent property, with each radial shell retaining memory of the conditions at the time of collapse.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Assembling the Puzzle of the Milky Way: EPJ Web of Conferences, 19, European Physical Journal Web of Conferences, EPJ Web of Conferences, Vol 19, p 01009 (2012)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b6e662a84e2a730bbece116c15f5efda