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We study how halo intrinsic dynamical properties are linked to their formation processes for halos in two mass ranges, $10^{12}-10^{12.5}h^{-1}{rm M_odot}$ and $ge 10^{13}h^{-1}{rm M_odot}$, and how both are correlated with the large scale tidal field within which the halos reside at present. Halo merger trees obtained from cosmological $N$-body simulations are used to identify infall halos that are about to merge with their hosts. We find that the tangential component of the infall velocity increases significantly with the strength of the local tidal field, but no strong correlation is found for the radial component. These results can be used to explain how the internal velocity anisotropy and spin of halos depend on environment. The position vectors and velocities of infall halos are aligned with the principal axes of the local tidal field, and the alignment depends on the strength of the tidal field. Opposite accretion patterns are found in weak and strong tidal fields, in the sense that in a weak field the accretion flow is dominated by radial motion within the local structure, while a large tangential component is present in a strong field. These findings can be used to understand the strong alignments we find between the principal axes of the internal velocity ellipsoids of halos and the local tidal field, and their dependence on the strength of tidal field. They also explain why halo spin increases with the strength of local tidal field, but only in weak tidal fields does the spin-tidal field alignment follow the prediction of the tidal torque theory. We discuss how our results may be used to understand the spins of disk galaxies and velocity structures of elliptical galaxies and their correlations with large-scale structure.
We revisit the question of what mechanism is responsible for the spins of halos of dark matter. The answer to this question is of high importance for modeling galaxy intrinsic alignment, which can potentially contaminate current and future lensing da
The discovery of a relationship between supermassive black hole (SMBH) mass and spiral arm pitch angle (P) is evidence that SMBHs are tied to the overall secular evolution of a galaxy. The discovery of SMBHs in late-type galaxies with little or no bu
The kinematic analysis of dark matter and hydrodynamical simulations suggests that the vorticity in large-scale structure is mostly confined to, and predominantly aligned with their filaments, with an excess of probability of 20 per cent to have the
A self-interacting dark matter halo can experience gravothermal collapse, resulting in a central core with an ultrahigh density. It can further contract and collapse into a black hole, a mechanism proposed to explain the origin of supermassive black
Tidal gravitational forces can modify the shape of galaxies and clusters of galaxies, thus correlating their orientation with the surrounding matter density field. We study the dependence of this phenomenon, known as intrinsic alignment (IA), on the