Spin transfer from dark matter to gas during halo formation
Jie Li, Danail Obreschkow, Chris Power, Claudia del P. Lagos

TL;DR
This paper investigates why gas in dark matter haloes acquires higher specific angular momentum than dark matter itself, revealing that torques during collapse transfer angular momentum from dark matter to gas, a process modeled with ellipsoidal collapse simulations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that angular momentum transfer from dark matter to gas during halo formation explains the observed excess in gas angular momentum in cosmological simulations.
Findings
Gas has ~40% higher specific angular momentum than dark matter in haloes.
Inner halo gas exhibits more coherent rotation and excess angular momentum.
A simple ellipsoidal collapse model predicts the angular momentum transfer process.
Abstract
In the protogalactic density field, diffuse gas and collision-less cold dark matter (DM) are often assumed sufficiently mixed that both components experience identical tidal torques. However, haloes in cosmological simulations consistently end up with a higher specific angular momentum (sAM) in gas, even in simulations without radiative cooling and galaxy formation physics. We refine this result by analysing the spin distributions of gas and DM in 50,000 well-resolved haloes in a non-radiative cosmological simulation from the SURFS suite. The sAM of the halo gas on average ends up 40\% above that of the DM. This can be pinned down to an excess AM in the inner halo (50\% virial radius), paralleled by a more coherent rotation pattern in the gas. We uncover the leading driver for this AM difference through a series of control simulations of a collapsing ellipsoidal top-hat,…
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