The journey of QSO haloes from z=6 to the present
R. E. Angulo, V. Springel, S. D. M. White, S. Cole, A. Jenkins, C. M., Baugh, C. S. Frenk

TL;DR
This study uses a large cosmological simulation to explore the evolution of massive haloes from high redshift to today, revealing their mass growth, environmental dependence, and implications for high-redshift quasars.
Contribution
It applies a novel scaling technique to a large simulation to analyze the cosmological dependence and evolution of extreme high-mass haloes from z=6 to present.
Findings
High-z quasar host haloes have median mass ~9x10^12 Msun at z=6.
Descendants of these haloes span a wide mass range today.
Environmental overdensity significantly influences halo growth.
Abstract
We apply a recently developed scaling technique to the Millennium-XXL, one of the largest cosmological N-body simulations carried out to date 3x10^11 particles within a cube of volume ~70Gpc^3). This allows us to investigate the cosmological parameter dependence of the mass and evolution of haloes in the extreme high-mass tail of the z=6 distribution. We assume these objects to be likely hosts for the population of rare but ultraluminous high-redshift quasars discovered by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Haloes with a similar abundance to these quasars have a median mass of 9x10^12 Msun in the currently preferred cosmology, but do not evolve into equally extreme objects at z=0. Rather, their descendants span the full range conventionally assigned to present-day clusters, 6x10^13 to 2.5x10^15 Msun for this same cosmology. The masses both at z=6 and at z=0 shift up or down by factors…
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