Alignments between Galaxies and the Cosmic Web at z 1-2 in the IllustrisTNG Simulations
Abstract
Galaxy formation theories predict that galaxy shapes and angular momenta have nonrandom alignments with the cosmic web. This leads to so-called intrinsic alignment between pairs of galaxies, which is important to quantify as a nuisance parameter for weak lensing. We study galaxy-cosmic web alignment in the IllustrisTNG suite of hydrodynamical simulations at redshifts 1 and 2, finding that alignment trends are consistent with previous studies. However, we find that the magnitude of the spin alignment signal is ~2.4× weaker than seen in previous studies of the Horizon-AGN simulation, suggesting that this signal may have a significant dependence on subgrid physics. Based on IllustrisTNG, we then construct mock observational spectroscopic surveys that can probe shape-cosmic web alignment at z ~ 1-2, modeled on the low-z galaxy redshift and IGM tomography surveys on the upcoming Subaru Prime Focus Spectrograph Galaxy Evolution (PFS GE) survey. However, even over box sizes of L = 205 h -1 Mpc, we find that global anisotropies induce a sample variance in the 2D projected alignment signal that depend on the projected direction; this induces significant errors in the observed alignment. We predict a 5.3σ detection of IllustrisTNG's shape alignment signal at z ~ 1 from Subaru PFS GE, although a detection would be challenging at z ~ 2. However, a rough rescaling of the relative alignment signal strengths between the TNG and Horizon-AGN simulations suggests that PFS GE should be able to more easily constrain the latter's stronger signal.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- September 2023
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2211.09331
- Bibcode:
- 2023ApJ...954...49Z
- Keywords:
-
- Cosmic web;
- Galaxy formation;
- Hydrodynamical simulations;
- Intergalactic medium;
- Redshift surveys;
- 330;
- 595;
- 767;
- 813;
- 1378;
- Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- 28 pages, 10 figures. Accepted by The Astrophysical Journal