Radial Alignment in Simulated Clusters

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© 2008. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Maria J. Pereira et al 2008 ApJ 672 825 DOI 10.1086/523830

0004-637X/672/2/825

Abstract

Observational evidence for the radial alignment of satellites with their dark matter host has been accumulating steadily over the past few years. The effect is seen over a wide range of scales, from massive clusters of galaxies down to galaxy-sized systems, yet the underlying physical mechanism has still not been established. To this end, we have carried out a detailed analysis of the shapes and orientations of dark matter substructures in high-resolution N-body cosmological simulations. We find a strong tendency for radial alignment of the substructure with its host halo: the distribution of halo major axes is very anisotropic, with the majority pointing toward the center of mass of the host. The alignment peaks once the subhalo has passed the virial radius of the host for the first time, but is not subsequently diluted, even after the halos have gone through as many as four pericentric passages. This evidence points to the existence of a very rapid dynamical mechanism acting on these systems, and we argue that tidal torquing throughout their orbits is the most likely candidate.

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10.1086/523830