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The distribution of ejected subhaloes and its implication for halo assembly bias
Authors:Huiyuan Wang  H J Mo  Y P Jing
Institution:Center for Astrophysics, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, Anhui 230026, China;Key Laboratory for Research in Galaxy and Cosmology, USTC, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Hefei, Anhui 230026, China;Department of Astronomy, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003-9305, USA;Shanghai Astronomical Observatory, The Partner Group of MPA, Nandan Road 80, Shanghai 200030, China
Abstract:Using a high-resolution cosmological N -body simulation, we identify the ejected population of subhaloes, which are haloes at redshift   z = 0  but were once contained in more massive 'host' haloes at high redshifts. The fraction of the ejected subhaloes in the total halo population of the same mass ranges from 9 to 4 per cent for halo masses from  ~1011  to  ~1012  h ?1 M  . Most of the ejected subhaloes are distributed within four times the virial radius of their hosts. These ejected subhaloes have distinct velocity distribution around their hosts in comparison to normal haloes. The number of subhaloes ejected from a host of given mass increases with the assembly redshift of the host. Ejected subhaloes in general reside in high-density regions, and have a much higher bias parameter than normal haloes of the same mass. They also have earlier assembly times, so that they contribute to the assembly bias of dark matter haloes seen in cosmological simulations. However, the assembly bias is not dominated by the ejected population, indicating that large-scale environmental effects on normal haloes are the main source for the assembly bias.
Keywords:methods: statistical  galaxies: haloes  dark matter  large-scale structure of Universe
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