Redshift and luminosity evolution of the intrinsic alignments of galaxies in Horizon-AGN
Nora Elisa Chisari, Clotilde Laigle, Sandrine Codis, Yohan Dubois,, Julien Devriendt, Lance Miller, Karim Benabed, Adrianne Slyz, Raphael, Gavazzi, Christophe Pichon

TL;DR
This study uses Horizon-AGN simulations to analyze how galaxy intrinsic alignments evolve with redshift and luminosity, revealing a transition from radial to tangential alignments and comparing results with observations and models.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the redshift and luminosity dependence of galaxy intrinsic alignments using hydrodynamical simulations, highlighting the need for higher resolution data.
Findings
Alignments transition from radial to tangential with redshift and luminosity.
Elliptical galaxy alignments are smaller but follow observed trends.
Discs show null alignments consistent with low-redshift observations.
Abstract
Intrinsic galaxy shape and angular momentum alignments can arise in cosmological large-scale structure due to tidal interactions or galaxy formation processes. Cosmological hydrodynamical simulations have recently come of age as a tool to study these alignments and their contamination to weak gravitational lensing. We probe the redshift and luminosity evolution of intrinsic alignments in Horizon-AGN between z=0 and z=3 for galaxies with an r-band absolute magnitude of <-20. Alignments transition from being radial at low redshifts and high luminosities, dominated by the contribution of ellipticals, to being tangential at high redshift and low luminosities, where discs dominate the signal. This cannot be explained by the evolution of the fraction of ellipticals and discs alone: intrinsic evolution in the amplitude of alignments is necessary. The alignment amplitude of elliptical galaxies…
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