Measuring the splashback feature: Dependence on halo properties and history
Qiaorong S. Yu (1,2), Stephanie O'Neil (3,4,5), Xuejian Shen (5), Mark Vogelsberger (5), Sownak Bose (6), Boryana Hadzhyska (7,8,9,10), Lars Hernquist (11), Rahul Kannan (12), Monica Wu (13), Ziang Wu (13,14) ((1) Oxford Math, (2) Oxford Physics, (3) UPenn, (4) Princeton

TL;DR
This paper introduces new measurements of the splashback feature in dark matter haloes, revealing its dependence on halo properties and history, and providing fitting functions to relate these features to halo characteristics.
Contribution
The study defines novel splashback depth and width metrics and analyzes their dependence on halo properties using the MillenniumTNG simulation, offering new insights into halo assembly history.
Findings
Splashback depth scales with halo mass as a power law.
Splashback width strongly depends on halo peak height.
Depth and width are primarily influenced by halo's assembly history.
Abstract
In this study, we define the novel splashback depth and width to examine how the splashback features of dark matter haloes are affected by the physical properties of haloes themselves. We use the largest simulation run in the hydrodynamic MillenniumTNG project. By stacking haloes in bins of halo mass, redshift, mass-dependent properties such as peak height and concentration, and halo formation history, we measure the shape of the logarithmic slope of the density profile of dark matter haloes. Our results show that the splashback depth has a strong dependence on the halo mass which follows a power law . Properties with strong correlation with halo mass demonstrate similar dependence. The splashback width has the strongest dependence on halo peak height and follows a power law . We…
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