Halo concentrations in the standard Λ cold dark matter cosmology

Prada, Francisco; Klypin, Anatoly A.; Cuesta, Antonio J.; Betancort-Rijo, J. E.; Primack, Joel
Bibliographical reference

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 423, Issue 4, pp. 3018-3030.

Advertised on:
7
2012
Number of authors
5
IAC number of authors
1
Citations
630
Refereed citations
579
Description
We study the concentration of dark matter haloes and its evolution in N-body simulations of the standard Λ cold dark matter (ΛCDM) cosmology. The results presented in this paper are based on four large N-body simulations with ˜10 billion particles each: the Millennium-I and -II, Bolshoi and MultiDark simulations. The MultiDark (or BigBolshoi) simulation is introduced in this paper. This suite of simulations with high mass resolution over a large volume allows us to compute with unprecedented accuracy the concentration over a large range of scales (about six orders of magnitude in mass), which constitutes the state of the art of our current knowledge on this basic property of dark matter haloes in the ΛCDM cosmology. We find that there is consistency among the different simulation data sets, despite the different codes, numerical algorithms and halo/subhalo finders used in our analysis. We confirm a novel feature for halo concentrations at high redshifts: a flattening and upturn with increasing mass. The concentration c(M, z) as a function of mass and the redshift and for different cosmological parameters shows a remarkably complex pattern. However, when expressed in terms of the linear rms fluctuation of the density field σ(M, z), the halo concentration c(σ) shows a nearly universal simple U-shaped behaviour with a minimum at a well-defined scale at σ˜ 0.71. Yet, some small dependences with redshift and cosmology still remain. At the high-mass end (σ < 1), the median halo kinematic profiles show large signatures of infall and highly radial orbits. This c-σ(M, z) relation can be accurately parametrized and provides an analytical model for the dependence of concentration on halo mass. When applied to galaxy clusters, our estimates of concentrations are substantially larger - by a factor up to 1.5 - than previous results from smaller simulations, and are in much better agreement with results of observations.
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