2022-03-07T14:59:53Z
2022-03-07T14:59:53Z
2021-09-16
2022-03-07T14:59:53Z
In Salvador-Solé, Manrique & Botella (Paper I), we used the ConflUent System of Peak trajectories (CUSP) formalism to derive from first principles and no single free parameter the accurate abundance and radial distribution of both diffuse dark matter (dDM) and subhaloes accreted on to haloes and their progenitors at all previous times. Here we use those results as initial conditions for the monitoring of the evolution of subhaloes and dDM within the host haloes. Specifically, neglecting dynamical friction, we accurately calculate the effects of repetitive tidal stripping and heating on subhaloes as they orbit inside the host halo and infer the amount of dDM and subsubhaloes they release into the intrahalo medium. We then calculate the expected abundance and radial distribution of stripped subhaloes and dDM. This derivation clarifies the role of halo concentration in substructure and unravels the origin of some key features found in simulations including the dependence of substructure on halo mass. In addition, it unveils the specific effects of dynamical friction on substructure. The results derived here are for purely accreting haloes. In Salvador-Solé et al. (Paper III), we complete the study by addressing the case of low-mass subhaloes, unaffected by dynamical friction, in ordinary haloes having suffered major mergers.
Article
Published version
English
Matèria fosca (Astronomia); Cosmologia; Galàxies; Dark matter (Astronomy); Cosmology; Galaxies
Royal Astronomical Society
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stab2668
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 2021, vol. 509, num. 4, p. 5316-5329
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stab2668
(c) Salvador Solé, Eduard et al., 2021