4.7 Article

The cosmic web and the orientation of angular momenta

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 421, Issue 1, Pages L137-L141

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1745-3933.2012.01222.x

Keywords

cosmology: theory; dark matter; large-scale structure of Universe

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungs Gemeinschaft
  2. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion in Spain
  3. Ramon y Cajal programme through Consolider-Ingenio SyeC [AYA 2009-13875-C03-02, AYA2009-12792-C03-03, CAM S2009/ESP-1496, FPA2009-08958]

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We use a 64 h(-1) Mpc dark-matter-only cosmological simulation to examine the large-scale orientation of haloes and substructures with respect to the cosmic web. A web classification scheme based on the velocity shear tensor is used to assign to each halo in the simulation a web type: knot, filament, sheet or void. Using similar to 10(6) haloes that span similar to 3 orders of magnitude in mass, the orientation of the halo's spin and the orbital angular momentum of subhaloes with respect to the eigenvectors of the shear tensor is examined. We find that the orbital angular momentum of subhaloes tends to align with the intermediate eigenvector of the velocity shear tensor for all haloes in knots, filaments and sheets. This result indicates that the kinematics of substructures located deep within the virialized regions of a halo is determined by its infall which in turn is determined by the large-scale velocity shear, a surprising result given the virialized nature of haloes. The non-random nature of subhalo accretion is thus imprinted on the angular momentum measured at z = 0. We also find that the haloes' spin axis is aligned with the third eigenvector of the velocity shear tensor in filaments and sheets: the halo spin axis points along filaments and lies in the plane of cosmic sheets.

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