The Past History of Galaxy Clusters told by their present neighbors
Jenny G. Sorce, Stefan Gottl\"ober, Gustavo Yepes

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the present distribution of neighboring galaxies around clusters can reveal their past mass assembly history, offering a new, mass-free observational tool for understanding cluster evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a novel correlation between neighbor distribution and cluster formation history that does not depend on halo mass, validated through large cosmological simulations.
Findings
Neighbor counts within 2 virial radii distinguish active and passive assembly histories.
Clusters with close massive companions tend to have recent active mergers.
Radial neighbor distribution effectively traces past cluster evolution.
Abstract
Galaxy clusters can play a key role in modern cosmology provided their evolution is properly understood. However, observed clusters give us only a single timeframe of their dynamical state. Therefore, finding present observable data of clusters that are well correlated to their assembly history constitutes an inestimable tool for cosmology. Former studies correlating environmental descriptors of clusters to their formation history are dominated by halo mass - environment relations. This paper presents a mass-free correlation between the present neighbor distribution of cluster-size halos and the latter mass assembly history. From the Big Multidark simulation, we extract two large samples of random halos with masses ranging from Virgo to Coma cluster sizes. Additionally, to find the main environmental culprit for the formation history of the Virgo cluster, we compare the Virgo-size halos…
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