Dissecting Galaxy Formation: II. Comparing Substructure in Pure Dark Matter and Baryonic Models
Emilio Romano-Diaz (UK Lexington), Isaac Shlosman (UK Lexington),, Clayton Heller (Georgia SU), Yehuda Hoffman (Hebrew University, Israel)

TL;DR
This study compares the evolution and properties of substructure in pure dark matter halos versus baryonic models, revealing differences in subhalo mass functions, spatial distributions, and disruption rates.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of subhalo characteristics in dark matter only and baryonic models using constrained simulations with star formation and feedback.
Findings
Subhalo mass functions follow a power law with different slopes for PDM and BDM.
Radial distribution of subhalos can be approximated by a power law with steepening near Rvmax.
BDM subhalos are depleted faster in the central regions due to tidal disruption.
Abstract
We compare the substructure evolution in pure dark matter (DM) halos with those in the presence of baryons (PDM and BDM). The prime halos have been analyzed by Romano-Diaz et al (2009). Models have been evolved from identical initial conditions using Constrained Realizations, including star formation and feedback. A comprehensive catalog of subhalos has been compiled and properties of subhalos analyzed in the mass range of 10^8 Mo - 10^11 Mo. We find that subhalo mass functions are consistent with a single power law, M_sbh^{alpha}, but detect a nonnegligible shift between these functions, alpha -0.86 for the PDM, and -0.98 for the BDM. Overall, alpha const. in time with variations of +-15%. Second, we find that the radial mass distribution of subhalos can be approximated by a power law, R^{gamma} with a steepening around the radius of a maximal circular velocity, Rvmax, in the prime…
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