Secondary Infall and the Pseudo-Phase-Space Density Profiles of Cold Dark Matter Halos

Abstract

We use N-body simulations to investigate the radial dependence of the density and velocity dispersion in cold dark matter (CDM) halos. In particular, we explore how closely Q rho/sigma3, a surrogate measure of the phase-space density, follows a power-law in radius. Our study extends earlier work by considering, in addition to spherically-averaged profiles, local Q-estimates for individual particles, Qi; profiles based on the ellipsoidal radius dictated by the triaxial structure of the halo, Qi(r'); and by carefully removing substructures in order to focus on the profile of the smooth halo, Qs. The resulting Qis(r') profiles follow closely a power law near the center, but show a clear upturn from this trend near the virial radius, r200. The location and magnitude of the deviations are in excellent agreement with the predictions from Bertschinger's spherical secondary-infall similarity solution. In this model, Q r-1.875 in the inner, virialized regions, but departures from a power-law occur near r200 because of the proximity of this radius to the location of the first shell crossing - the shock radius in the case of a collisional fluid. Particles there have not yet fully virialized, and so Q departs from the inner power-law profile. Our results imply that the power-law nature of Q profiles only applies to the inner regions and cannot be used to predict accurately the structure of CDM halos beyond their characteristic scale radius.

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