Modelling the shapes of the largest gravitationally bound objects
Graziano Rossi, Ravi K. Sheth, Giuseppe Tormen

TL;DR
This paper develops an analytic model combining ellipsoidal collapse physics with excursion set theory to better understand dark matter halo shapes, providing insights into their evolution and mass dependence.
Contribution
It introduces a new analytic approximation for nonlinear halo shape evolution and a planar axis ratio representation, improving understanding of halo shape dynamics.
Findings
Model matches the minor-to-intermediate axis ratio distribution well.
Predicts high-mass halos are more spherical, aligning with recent observations.
Disagrees with some previous studies on minor-to-major axis ratios.
Abstract
We combine the physics of the ellipsoidal collapse model with the excursion set theory to study the shapes of dark matter halos. In particular, we develop an analytic approximation to the nonlinear evolution that is more accurate than the Zeldovich approximation; we introduce a planar representation of halo axis ratios, which allows a concise and intuitive description of the dynamics of collapsing regions and allows one to relate the final shape of a halo to its initial shape; we provide simple physical explanations for some empirical fitting formulae obtained from numerical studies. Comparison with simulations is challenging, as there is no agreement about how to define a non-spherical gravitationally bound object. Nevertheless, we find that our model matches the conditional minor-to-intermediate axis ratio distribution rather well, although it disagrees with the numerical results in…
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