Spatial and kinematic alignments between central and satellite halos
A. Faltenbacher, Y.P. Jing, Cheng Li, Shude Mao, H.J. Mo, Anna, Pasquali, Frank C. van den Bosch

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to analyze spatial and kinematic alignments of satellite halos around group-sized hosts, revealing significant alignment signals that extend beyond the virial radius and reflect large-scale filamentary structures.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of multiple alignment types of satellite halos with their hosts using simulation data, extending understanding beyond previous observational studies.
Findings
Satellites align along the major axis of the GCS within 6 Rvir.
Satellites tend to point towards the GCS, especially on small scales.
Velocity alignments are highly significant on small scales.
Abstract
Based on a cosmological N-body simulation we analyze spatial and kinematic alignments of satellite halos within six times the virial radius of group size host halos (Rvir). We measure three different types of spatial alignment: halo alignment between the orientation of the group central substructure (GCS) and the distribution of its satellites, radial alignment between the orientation of a satellite and the direction towards its GCS, and direct alignment between the orientation of the GCS and that of its satellites. In analogy we use the directions of satellite velocities and probe three further types of alignment: the radial velocity alignment between the satellite velocity and connecting line between satellite and GCS, the halo velocity alignment between the orientation of the GCS and satellite velocities and the auto velocity alignment between the satellites orientations and their…
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