Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA): halo formation times and halo assembly bias on the cosmic web
Rita Tojeiro, Elizabeth Eardley, John A. Peacock, Peder Norberg,, Mehmet Alpaslan, Simon P. Driver, Bruno Henriques, Andrew M. Hopkins, Prajwal, R. Kafle, Aaron S. G. Robotham, Peter Thomas, Chiara Tonini, Vivienne Wild

TL;DR
This paper provides observational evidence for halo assembly bias linked to geometric environment and explores how halo formation times relate to galaxy properties using GAMA data and semi-analytic models.
Contribution
It demonstrates the environmental dependence of halo formation times and validates proxies for halo age through mock spectral observations.
Findings
Low-mass haloes in knots are older than in voids
Halo assembly bias reverses at high halo masses
Stellar mass and star-formation rate are good proxies for halo formation time
Abstract
We present evidence for halo assembly bias as a function of geometric environment. By classifying GAMA galaxy groups as residing in voids, sheets, filaments or knots using a tidal tensor method, we find that low-mass haloes that reside in knots are older than haloes of the same mass that reside in voids. This result provides direct support to theories that link strong halo tidal interactions with halo assembly times. The trend with geometric environment is reversed at large halo mass, with haloes in knots being younger than haloes of the same mass in voids. We find a clear signal of halo downsizing - more massive haloes host galaxies that assembled their stars earlier. This overall trend holds independently of geometric environment. We support our analysis with an in-depth exploration of the L-Galaxies semi-analytic model, used here to correlate several galaxy properties with three…
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