Characterising the Structure of Halo Merger Trees Using a Single Parameter: The Tree Entropy
From MaRDI portal
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
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 , 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 () corresponds to smoothly assembled haloes without any mergers. In contrast, the highest entropy () represents haloes grown purely by equal-mass binary mergers. Using simulated merger trees extracted from the cosmological -body simulation SURFS, we compute the natural distribution of , a skewed bell curve peaking near . This distribution exhibits weak dependences on halo mass and redshift , which can be reduced to a single dependence on the relative peak height in the matter perturbation field. By exploring the correlations between and global galaxy properties generated by the SHARK semi-analytic model, we find that 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.
This page was built for publication: Characterising the Structure of Halo Merger Trees Using a Single Parameter: The Tree Entropy
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q6329949)