What Do Dark Matter Properties Tell Us About Their Mass Assembly Histories?
Abstract
Individual dark matter halos in cosmological simulations vary widely in their detailed structural properties such as shape, rotation, substructure and degree of internal relaxation. Recent non-parametric (principal component) analyses suggest that a few principal components explain a large fraction of the scatter in halo properties. The main principal component is closely linked with concentration, which in turn is known to be related to the mass accretion history of the halo. Here we examine more generally the connection between mass accretion history and structural parameters. The space of mass accretion histories has principal components of its own. We find that the strongest two can be interpreted as the overall age of the halo and the acceleration or deceleration of growth at late times. These two components only account for 70%\ of the scatter in mass accretions histories however, due to the stochastic effect of major mergers. Relating structural parameters to formation history, we find that concentration correlates strongly with the early history of the halo, while relaxation correlates with the late history. We examine the inferences about formation history that can be drawn by splitting haloes into subsamples, based on observable properties such as concentration and shape at some final time. This approach suggests interesting possibilities, such as the possibility of defining young and old samples of galaxy clusters in a rigorous, quantitative way, or testing the dynamical assumptions of galaxy formation models empirically.
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