The environment and redshift dependence of accretion onto dark matter halos and subhalos
Henry Tillson, Lance Miller, Julien Devriendt

TL;DR
This study uses a dark-matter-only simulation to explore how environment and redshift influence accretion onto halos and subhalos, revealing differences from theoretical models and implications for galaxy formation.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the environment- and redshift-dependent accretion processes onto halos and subhalos, highlighting the dominance of minor mergers and diffuse accretion at low redshift.
Findings
Halo accretion varies less with redshift than EPS predictions.
Subhalos in outer regions have higher accretion rates and are less stripped.
Accretion rates at low redshift are weakly environment-dependent.
Abstract
A dark-matter-only Horizon Project simulation is used to investigate the environment- and redshift- dependence of accretion onto both halos and subhalos. These objects grow in the simulation via mergers and via accretion of diffuse non-halo material, and we measure the combined signal from these two modes of accretion. It is found that the halo accretion rate varies less strongly with redshift than predicted by the Extended Press-Schechter (EPS) formalism and is dominated by minor-merger and diffuse accretion events at z=0, for all halos. These latter growth mechanisms may be able to drive the radio-mode feedback hypothesised for recent galaxy-formation models, and have both the correct accretion rate and form of cosmological evolution. The low redshift subhalo accretors in the simulation form a mass-selected subsample safely above the mass resolution limit that reside in the outer…
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