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The graininess of dark matter haloes


Zemp, M; Diemand, J; Kuhlen, M; Madau, P; Moore, B; Potter, D; Stadel, J; Widrow, L (2009). The graininess of dark matter haloes. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 394(2):641-659.

Abstract

We use the recently completed one billion particle Via Lactea IIΛ cold dark matter simulation to investigate local properties like density, mean velocity, velocity dispersion, anisotropy, orientation and shape of the velocity dispersion ellipsoid, as well as the structure in velocity space of dark matter haloes. We show that at the same radial distance from the halo centre, these properties can deviate by orders of magnitude from the canonical, spherically averaged values, a variation that can only be partly explained by triaxiality and the presence of subhaloes. The mass density appears smooth in the central relaxed regions but spans four orders of magnitude in the outskirts, both because of the presence of subhaloes as well as of underdense regions and holes in the matter distribution. In the inner regions, the local velocity dispersion ellipsoid is aligned with the shape ellipsoid of the halo. This is not true in the outer parts where the orientation becomes more isotropic. The clumpy structure in local velocity space of the outer halo cannot be well described by a smooth multivariate normal distribution. Via Lactea II also shows the presence of cold streams made visible by their high 6D phase space density. Generally, the structure of dark matter haloes shows a high degree of graininess in phase space that cannot be described by a smooth distribution function.

Abstract

We use the recently completed one billion particle Via Lactea IIΛ cold dark matter simulation to investigate local properties like density, mean velocity, velocity dispersion, anisotropy, orientation and shape of the velocity dispersion ellipsoid, as well as the structure in velocity space of dark matter haloes. We show that at the same radial distance from the halo centre, these properties can deviate by orders of magnitude from the canonical, spherically averaged values, a variation that can only be partly explained by triaxiality and the presence of subhaloes. The mass density appears smooth in the central relaxed regions but spans four orders of magnitude in the outskirts, both because of the presence of subhaloes as well as of underdense regions and holes in the matter distribution. In the inner regions, the local velocity dispersion ellipsoid is aligned with the shape ellipsoid of the halo. This is not true in the outer parts where the orientation becomes more isotropic. The clumpy structure in local velocity space of the outer halo cannot be well described by a smooth multivariate normal distribution. Via Lactea II also shows the presence of cold streams made visible by their high 6D phase space density. Generally, the structure of dark matter haloes shows a high degree of graininess in phase space that cannot be described by a smooth distribution function.

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Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:07 Faculty of Science > Institute for Computational Science
Dewey Decimal Classification:530 Physics
Scopus Subject Areas:Physical Sciences > Astronomy and Astrophysics
Physical Sciences > Space and Planetary Science
Uncontrolled Keywords:methods: N-body simulations, methods: numerical, galaxies: haloes, galaxies: kinematics and dynamics, galaxies: structure, dark matter
Language:English
Date:April 2009
Deposited On:25 Feb 2010 20:15
Last Modified:28 Jun 2022 07:58
Publisher:Wiley-Blackwell
ISSN:0035-8711
Funders:Swiss National Science Foundation, NASA [HST-AR-11268.01-A1, NNX08AV68G], Hubble Fellowship [HST-HF-01194.01]
Additional Information:The attached file is a preprint (accepted version) of an article published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. The definitive version is available at www3.interscience.wiley.com
OA Status:Hybrid
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2008.14361.x
Related URLs:http://arxiv.org/abs/0812.2033
Project Information:
  • : FunderSNSF
  • : Grant ID
  • : Project TitleSwiss National Science Foundation
  • : Funder
  • : Grant ID
  • : Project TitleNASA [HST-AR-11268.01-A1, NNX08AV68G]
  • : Funder
  • : Grant ID
  • : Project TitleHubble Fellowship [HST-HF-01194.01]
  • Content: Accepted Version
  • Content: Published Version
  • Language: English
  • Description: Nationallizenz 142-005