Galaxy orientation with the cosmic web across cosmic time
S. Codis, A. Jindal, N. E. Chisari, D. Vibert, Y. Dubois, C. Pichon,, J. Devriendt

TL;DR
This paper studies how galaxy spins align with the cosmic web over time using simulations, revealing mass-dependent and redshift-evolving alignment patterns that impact cosmic shear measurements.
Contribution
It provides new insights into galaxy-cosmic web alignments across cosmic time, including shape and spin correlations, with implications for weak lensing surveys.
Findings
Low-mass galaxies tend to align with filaments and walls.
Massive galaxies have spins perpendicular to filaments and walls.
Alignment signals evolve with redshift and galaxy morphology.
Abstract
This work investigates the alignment of galactic spins with the cosmic web across cosmic time using the cosmological hydrodynamical simulation Horizon-AGN. The cosmic web structure is extracted via the persistent skeleton as implemented in the DISPERSE algorithm. It is found that the spin of low-mass galaxies is more likely to be aligned with the filaments of the cosmic web and to lie within the plane of the walls while more massive galaxies tend to have a spin perpendicular to the axis of the filaments and to the walls. The mass transition is detected with a significance of 9 sigmas. This galactic alignment is consistent with the alignment of the spin of dark haloes found in pure dark matter simulations and with predictions from (anisotropic) tidal torque theory. However, unlike haloes, the alignment of low-mass galaxies is weak and disappears at low redshifts while the orthogonal spin…
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