Assembly of filamentary void galaxy configurations

Steven Rieder*, Rien van de Weijgaert, Marius Cautun, Burcu Beygu, Simon Portegies Zwart

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

41 Citations (Scopus)
233 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

We study the formation and evolution of filamentary configurations of dark matter haloes in voids. Our investigation uses the high-resolution Lambda cold dark matter simulation CosmoGrid to look for void systems resembling the VGS_31 elongated system of three interacting galaxies that was recently discovered by the Void Galaxy Survey inside a large void in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey galaxy redshift survey. H I data revealed these galaxies to be embedded in a common elongated envelope, possibly embedded in intravoid filament. In the CosmoGrid simulation we look for systems similar to VGS_31 in mass, size and environment. We find a total of eight such systems. For these systems, we study the distribution of neighbour haloes, the assembly and evolution of the main haloes and the dynamical evolution of the haloes, as well as the evolution of the large-scale structure in which the systems are embedded. The spatial distribution of the haloes follows that of the dark matter environment. We find that VGS_31-like systems have a large variation in formation time, having formed between 10 Gyr ago and the present epoch. However, the environments in which the systems are embedded evolved to resemble each other substantially. Each of the VGS_31-like systems is embedded in an intravoid wall, that no later than z = 0.5 became the only prominent feature in its environment. While part of the void walls retain a rather featureless character, we find that around half of them are marked by a pronounced and rapidly evolving substructure. Five haloes find themselves in a tenuous filament of a fewh-1 Mpc long inside the intravoid wall. Finally, we compare the results to observed data from VGS_31. Our study implies that the VGS_31 galaxies formed in the same (proto) filament, and did not meet just recently. The diversity amongst the simulated halo systems indicates that VGS_31 may not be typical for groups of galaxies in voids.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)222-241
Number of pages20
JournalMonthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Volume435
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 11-Oct-2013

Keywords

  • galaxies: formation
  • galaxies: interactions
  • cosmology: theory
  • dark matter
  • large-scale structure of Universe
  • DIGITAL SKY SURVEY
  • PROMINENT NEARBY VOIDS
  • COSMIC WEB
  • REDSHIFT-SURVEY
  • GRAVITATIONAL-INSTABILITY
  • PHOTOMETRIC PROPERTIES
  • SPECTROSCOPIC SURVEY
  • HALO-FINDER
  • EVOLUTION
  • UNIVERSE

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