Time evolution of intrinsic alignments of galaxies
Denise M. Schmitz, Christopher M. Hirata, Jonathan Blazek, Elisabeth, Krause

TL;DR
This paper models the time evolution of galaxy intrinsic alignments, including advection effects, revealing their dependence on velocity shear and implications for weak lensing and galaxy evolution studies.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model that incorporates galaxy advection into IA evolution, linking IA to velocity shear and nonlocality in the bispectrum.
Findings
Advection causes nonlocality in the galaxy-galaxy-IA bispectrum.
The model connects IA evolution to galaxy formation history.
Implications for constraining IA redshift dependence and weak lensing systematics.
Abstract
Intrinsic alignments (IA), correlations between the intrinsic shapes and orientations of galaxies on the sky, are both a significant systematic in weak lensing and a probe of the effect of large-scale structure on galactic structure and angular momentum. In the era of precision cosmology, it is thus especially important to model IA with high accuracy. Efforts to use cosmological perturbation theory to model the dependence of IA on the large-scale structure have thus far been relatively successful; however, extant models do not consistently account for time evolution. In particular, advection of galaxies due to peculiar velocities alters the impact of IA, because galaxy positions when observed are generally different from their positions at the epoch when IA is believed to be set. In this work, we evolve the galaxy IA from the time of galaxy formation to the time at which they are…
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.
