Characterising the Structure of Halo Merger Trees Using a Single Parameter: The Tree Entropy

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Publication:6329949

DOI10.1093/MNRAS/STAA445arXiv1911.11959MaRDI QIDQ6329949FDOQ6329949


Authors: Danail Obreschkow, Pascal J. Elahi, Claudia del P. Lagos, Rhys J. J. Poulton, A. D. Ludlow Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 27 November 2019

Abstract: Linking the properties of galaxies to the assembly history of their dark matter haloes is a central aim of galaxy evolution theory. This paper introduces a dimensionless parameter sin[0,1], the "tree entropy", to parametrise the geometry of a halo's entire mass assembly hierarchy, building on a generalisation of Shannon's information entropy. By construction, the minimum entropy (s=0) corresponds to smoothly assembled haloes without any mergers. In contrast, the highest entropy (s=1) represents haloes grown purely by equal-mass binary mergers. Using simulated merger trees extracted from the cosmological N-body simulation SURFS, we compute the natural distribution of s, a skewed bell curve peaking near s=0.4. This distribution exhibits weak dependences on halo mass M and redshift z, which can be reduced to a single dependence on the relative peak height deltamc/sigma(M,z) in the matter perturbation field. By exploring the correlations between s and global galaxy properties generated by the SHARK semi-analytic model, we find that s contains a significant amount of information on the morphology of galaxies in fact more information than the spin, concentration and assembly time of the halo. Therefore, the tree entropy provides an information-rich link between galaxies and their dark matter haloes.













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