Is the dark-matter halo spin a predictor of galaxy spin and size?
Fangzhou Jiang (1), Avishai Dekel (1, 2), Omer Kneller (1), Sharon, Lapiner (1), Daniel Ceverino (3), Joel R. Primack (4), Sandra M. Faber (5),, Andrea V. Macci\`o (6, 7), Aaron Dutton (6), Shy Genel (8, 9), Rachel, S. Somerville (8, 10) ((1) HUJI, (2) UCSC SCIPP

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to show that dark matter halo spin is only weakly correlated with galaxy spin and size, challenging assumptions used in semi-analytic galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It demonstrates that halo spin is not a reliable predictor of galaxy size or spin, highlighting the importance of baryonic processes and merger history.
Findings
Weak correlation between galaxy and halo spin, especially at high redshift.
Halo spin is not a good proxy for galaxy size.
Galaxy and halo spin vectors tend to be aligned with median cosine 0.6-0.7.
Abstract
The similarity between the distributions of spins for galaxies () and for dark-matter haloes (), indicated both by simulations and observations, is naively interpreted as a one-to-one correlation between the spins of a galaxy and its host halo. This is used to predict galaxy sizes in semi-analytic models via , with the half-mass radius of the galaxy and the halo radius. Utilizing two different suites of zoom-in cosmological simulations, we find that and are in fact only barely correlated, especially at . A general smearing of this correlation is expected based on the different spin histories, where the more recently accreted baryons through streams gain and then lose significant angular momentum compared to the gradually accumulated dark…
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