Rivers of Gas I.: Unveiling The Properties of High Redshift Filaments
Marius Rams{\o}y, Adrianne Slyz, Julien Devriendt, Clotilde Laigle and, Yohan Dubois

TL;DR
This study analyzes high-redshift cosmic filaments around a Milky Way-like galaxy using simulations, revealing their density profiles, core growth, and effects of feedback on their properties.
Contribution
It provides a detailed characterization of high-z gas and dark matter filaments, including their density profiles, core evolution, and the impact of feedback processes.
Findings
Filaments have a plummer-like density profile.
Core radius evolution follows a predictable redshift dependence.
Feedback perturbs temperature and vorticity but not core radius significantly.
Abstract
At high redshift, the cosmic web is widely expected to have a significant impact on the morphologies, dynamics and star formation rates of the galaxies embedded within it, underscoring the need for a comprehensive study of the properties of such a filamentary network. With this goal in mind, we perform an analysis of high- gas and dark matter (DM) filaments around a Milky Way-like progenitor simulated with the {\sc ramses} adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) code from cosmic scales (1 Mpc) down to the virial radius of its DM halo host (20 kpc at ). Radial density profiles of both gas and DM filaments are found to have the same functional form, namely a plummer-like profile modified to take into account the wall within which these filaments are embedded. Measurements of the typical filament core radius from the simulation are consistent with that of isothermal…
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