The impact of baryons on the spins and shapes of dark matter haloes
S. E. Bryan, S. T. Kay, A. R. Duffy, J. Schaye, C. Dalla Vecchia and, C. M. Booth

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to analyze how baryonic processes influence the spin and shape of dark matter haloes across different cosmic epochs, revealing that baryons can significantly alter halo properties, especially in the inner regions.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the impact of baryons on dark matter halo spin and shape, including their dependence on feedback strength and redshift, using high-resolution cosmological simulations.
Findings
Baryons increase central halo spin by up to 30% at z=0 with weak feedback.
Halo sphericity correlates negatively with mass at z=0, less so at z=2.
Stronger feedback reduces baryonic impact on halo shape and spin.
Abstract
We use numerical simulations to investigate how the statistical properties of dark matter (DM) haloes are affected by the baryonic processes associated with galaxy formation. We focus on how these processes influence the spin and shape of a large number of DM haloes covering a wide range of mass scales, from galaxies to clusters at redshifts zero and one, extending to dwarf galaxies at redshift two. The haloes are extracted from the OverWhelmingly Large Simulations, a suite of state-of-the-art high-resolution cosmological simulations run with a range of feedback prescriptions. We find that the median spin parameter in DM-only simulations is independent of mass, redshift and cosmology. At z=0 baryons increase the spin of the DM in the central region (<=0.25 r_200) by up to 30 per cent when feedback is weak or absent. This increase can be attributed to the transfer of angular momentum…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
