4.7 Article

THE GROWTH OF DARK MATTER HALOS: EVIDENCE FOR SIGNIFICANT SMOOTH ACCRETION

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 719, Issue 1, Pages 229-239

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/719/1/229

Keywords

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

Funding

  1. DFG [STE1869/1-1, GE625/15-1]
  2. International Max Planck Research School in Astrophysics

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We study the growth of dark matter halos in the concordance Lambda CDM cosmology using several N-body simulations of large cosmological volumes. We construct merger trees from the Millennium and Millennium-II Simulations, covering the ranges 10(9)-10(15) M-circle dot in halo mass and 1-10(5) in merger mass ratio. Our algorithm takes special care of halo fragmentation and ensures that the mass contribution of each merger to halo growth is only counted once. This way the integrated merger rate converges and we can consistently determine the contribution of mergers of different mass ratios to halo growth. We find that all resolved mergers, up to mass ratios of 10(5):1, contribute only approximate to 60% of the total halo mass growth, while major mergers are subdominant, e. g., mergers with mass ratios smaller than 3:1 (10:1) contribute only approximate to 20% (approximate to 30%). This is verified with an analysis of two additional simulation boxes, where we follow all particles individually throughout cosmic time. Our results are also robust against using several halo definitions. Under the assumption that the power-law behavior of the merger rate at large mass ratios can be extrapolated to arbitrarily large mass ratios, it is found that, independent of halo mass, approximate to 40% of the mass in halos comes from genuinely smooth accretion of dark matter that was never bound in smaller halos. We discuss possible implications of our findings for galaxy formation. One implication, assuming as is standard that the pristine intergalactic medium is heated and photoionized by UV photons, is that all halos accrete >40% of their baryons in smooth cold T greater than or similar to 10(4) K gas, rather than as warm, enriched, or clumpy gas or as stars.

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