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A&A 387, 778-787 (2002)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20020339
Spatial distribution of galactic halos and their merger histories
S. Gottlöber1, M. Kerscher2, A. V. Kravtsov3, 4, A. Faltenbacher1, A. Klypin5 and V. Müller11 Astrophysikalisches Institut Potsdam, An der Sternwarte 16, 14482 Potsdam, Germany
2 Sektion Physik, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Theresienstraße 37, 80333 München, Germany
3 Department of Astronomy & Astrophysics, The University of Chicago, 5640 S. Ellis Ave. Chicago, IL 60637, USA
4 Center for Cosmological Physics, Enrico Fermi Institute, The University of Chicago, IL 60637, USA
5 Astronomy Department, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM 88003-0001, USA
(Received 22 February 2002 / Accepted 5 March 2002)
Abstract
We use a novel statistical tool, the mark correlation
functions (MCFs), to study clustering of galaxy-size halos as a
function of their properties and environment in a high-resolution
numerical simulation of the
CDM cosmology. We applied MCFs
using several types of continuous and discrete marks: maximum
circular velocity of halos, merger mark indicating whether halos
experienced or not a major merger in their evolution history (the
marks for halo with mergers are further split according to the epoch
of the last major merger), and a stripping mark indicating whether
the halo underwent a tidal stripping (i.e., mass loss). We find
that halos which experienced a relatively early (
z>1) major merger
or mass loss (due to tidal stripping) in their evolution histories
are over-abundant in halo pairs with separations
3
h-1 Mpc.
This result can be interpreted as spatial segregation of halos with
different merger histories, qualitatively similar to the
morphological segregation in the observed galaxy distribution. In
addition, we find that at
z=0 the mean circular velocity of halos
in pairs of halos with separations
10
h-1 Mpc is larger
than the mean circular velocity
of the
parent halo sample. This mean circular velocity enhancement
increases steadily during the evolution of halos from
z=3 to
z=0, and indicates that the luminosity dependence of galaxy
clustering may be due to the mass segregation of galactic dark
matter halos. The analysis presented in this paper demonstrate that MCFs
provide powerful, yet algorithmically simple, quantitative measures
of segregation in the spatial distribution of objects with respect to
their various properties (marks). This should make MCFs very useful
for analysis of spatial clustering and segregation in current and
future large redshift surveys.
Key words: large-scale structure of the Universe -- methods: statistical -- galaxies: interactions, statistics
Offprint request: S. Gottlöber, sgottloeber@aip.de
© ESO 2002
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