The splashback boundary of haloes in hydrodynamic simulations
Stephanie O'Neil (1), David J. Barnes (1), Mark Vogelsberger (1),, Benedikt Diemer (2) ((1) MIT, (2) UMD)

TL;DR
This study investigates the splashback radius in hydrodynamic and dark matter simulations, finding it correlates with halo properties and is consistent across simulation types, aiding observational efforts.
Contribution
It introduces an optimized method for measuring the splashback radius and compares its behavior in hydrodynamic versus dark matter only simulations.
Findings
$R_{sp}$ decreases with halo mass and redshift.
$R_{sp}/R_{200m}$ decreases with accretion rate.
No significant difference in $R_{sp}$ between hydrodynamic and dark matter only simulations.
Abstract
The splashback radius, , is a physically motivated halo boundary that separates infalling and collapsed matter of haloes. We study in the hydrodynamic and dark matter only IllustrisTNG simulations. The most commonly adopted signature of is the radius at which the radial density profiles are steepest. Therefore, we explicitly optimise our density profile fit to the profile slope and find that this leads to a larger radius compared to other optimisations. We calculate for haloes with masses between as a function of halo mass, accretion rate and redshift. decreases with mass and with redshift for haloes of similar in agreement with previous work. We also find that decreases with halo accretion rate. We apply our analysis to dark matter, gas and…
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