Controlled Experiments on Dark-Matter Halo Structure and Galaxy Morphology I: What Sets Galaxy Sizes?
Guangze Sun (Peking University), Fangzhou Jiang (Peking University), Jing Wang (Peking University)

TL;DR
This study uses controlled simulations to identify how dark-matter halo properties like spin, concentration, and baryon fraction influence galaxy sizes, revealing concentration as the most predictive factor.
Contribution
It systematically quantifies the impact of halo parameters on galaxy sizes at fixed halo mass using novel simulation and analysis methods.
Findings
Galaxy size increases with halo spin.
Galaxy size decreases with halo concentration.
Halo parameters are key predictors of galaxy size scatter.
Abstract
The properties of galaxies are intricately linked to the characteristics of their host dark-matter haloes. We use a suite of controlled simulations of isolated galaxies to quantify how halo spin, concentration, inner density profile, and baryon fraction regulate galaxy sizes, at fixed halo mass of . We generate initial conditions of haloes and inhabitant spherical gas distributions in equilibrium, on a parameter grid spanned by these four halo parameters, and evolve the systems with the code and the physics. The resulting half-mass radii of stars and cold baryons depend systematically on halo structure and baryon content: galaxy size increases with halo spin, decreases with halo concentration, is weakly sensitive to the inner density slope except in highly cuspy haloes, and is strongly suppressed at high baryon fractions.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
