The velocity shear tensor: tracer of halo alignment
Noam I. Libeskind, Yehuda Hoffman, Jaime Forero-Romero, Stefan, Gottl\"ober, Alexander Knebe, Matthias Steinmetz, Anatoly Klypin

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the velocity shear tensor can serve as a fundamental tracer of halo and galaxy alignment within the cosmic web, revealing correlations with shape, spin, and subhalo orbits.
Contribution
It introduces the velocity shear tensor as a novel framework to analyze and understand the alignment of halos, spins, and subhaloes with the cosmic web in the non-linear regime.
Findings
Larger mass haloes are found in regions with more isotropic shear.
Halo shape aligns with shear eigenvectors, with the longest axis aligned with the slowest collapsing eigenvector.
Halo spin alignment with the cosmic web varies with mass and web type, showing a non-universal spin flip.
Abstract
The alignment of DM halos and the surrounding large scale structure (LSS) is examined in the context of the cosmic web. Halo spin, shape and the orbital angular momentum of subhaloes is investigated relative to the LSS using the eigenvectors of the velocity shear tensor evaluated on a grid with a scale of 1 Mpc/h, deep within the non-linear regime. Knots, filaments, sheets and voids are associated with regions that are collapsing along 3, 2, 1 or 0 principal directions simultaneously. Each halo is tagged with a web classification (i.e. knot halo, filament halo, etc) according to the nature of the collapse at the halo's position. The full distribution of shear eigenvalues is found to be substantially different from that tagged to haloes, indicating that the observed velocity shear is significantly biased. We find that larger mass haloes live in regions where the shear is more isotropic,…
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.
