Orientations of DM Halos in FIRE-2 Milky Way-mass Galaxies
Jay Baptista, Robyn Sanderson, Dan Huber, Andrew Wetzel, Omid Sameie,, Michael Boylan-Kolchin, Jeremy Bailin, Philip F. Hopkins, Claude-Andre, Faucher-Giguere, Sukanya Chakrabarti, Drona Vargya, Nondh Panithanpaisal,, Arpit Arora, and Emily Cunningham

TL;DR
This study uses FIRE-2 simulations to investigate how dark matter halo orientations vary with radius, time, and dark matter physics, revealing differences between CDM and SIDM models and the impact of massive satellites.
Contribution
It demonstrates that dark matter halo orientations diverge from stellar disks in CDM but remain aligned in SIDM, highlighting potential observational diagnostics.
Findings
Halo minor axes diverge from stellar disks beyond 30 kpc in CDM.
SIDM halos stay aligned with disks out to 200-400 kpc.
Massive satellites significantly influence halo orientation.
Abstract
The shape and orientation of dark matter (DM) halos are sensitive to the micro-physics of the DM particle, yet in many mass models, the symmetry axes of the Milky Way's DM halo are often assumed to be aligned with the symmetry axes of the stellar disk. This is well-motivated for the inner DM halo but not for the outer halo. We use zoomed cosmological-baryonic simulations from the Latte suite of FIRE-2 Milky Way-mass galaxies to explore the evolution of the DM halo's orientation with radius and time, with or without a major merger with a Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) analog, and when varying the DM model. In three of the four CDM halos we examine, the orientation of the halo minor axis diverges from the stellar disk vector by more than 20 degrees beyond about 30 galactocentric kpc, reaching a maximum of 30--90 degrees depending on the individual halo's formation history. In identical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
