Caught in the cosmic web: environmental effects on subhalo abundance and internal density profiles
Feven Markos Hunde, Oliver Newton, Wojciech A. Hellwing, Maciej Bilicki, Krishna Naidoo

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution cosmological simulations to show that the large-scale cosmic web environment significantly influences the abundance and internal density profiles of subhaloes within host haloes.
Contribution
It introduces a novel segmentation method to classify cosmic web environments and demonstrates their impact on subhalo populations and properties across different host masses.
Findings
Filament hosts have 5-20% more subhaloes than average.
Void hosts are 25% subhalo-poor with lower density profiles.
Subhaloes in voids and walls have lower concentrations, while filament hosts have more concentrated profiles.
Abstract
Using the high-resolution -body cosmological simulation COLOR, we explore the cosmic web (CW) environmental effects on subhalo populations and their internal properties. We use CaCTus, which incorporates an implementation of the state-of-the-art segmentation method NEXUS+, to delineate the simulation volume into nodes, filaments, walls, and voids. We group host haloes by virial mass and segment each mass bin into consecutive CW elements. This reveals that subhalo populations in hosts within specific environments differ on average from the cosmic mean. The subhalo mass function is affected strongly, where hosts in filaments typically contain more subhaloes ( to ), while hosts in voids are subhalo-poor, with fewer subhaloes. We find that the abundance of the most massive subhaloes, with reduced masses of is most sensitive to the CW…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Mathematical Theories and Applications · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
