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A large portion of the baryons at low redshifts are still missing from detection. Most of the missing baryons are believed to reside in large scale cosmic filaments. Understanding the distribution of baryons in filaments is crucial for the search for missing baryons. We investigate the properties of cosmic filaments since $z=4.0$ in a cosmological hydrodynamic simulation, focusing on the density and temperature profiles perpendicular to the filament spines. Our quantitative evaluation confirm the rapid growth of thick and prominent filaments after $z=2$. We find that the local linear density of filaments shows correlation with the local diameter since $z=4.0$. The averaged density profiles of both dark matter and baryonic gas in filaments of different width show self-similarity, and can be described by an isothermal single-beta model. The typical gas temperature increases as the filament width increasing, and is hotter than $10^6$ K for filaments with width $D_{fil} gtrsim 4.0 rm{Mpc}$, which would be the optimal targets for the search of missing baryons via thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich (SZ) effect. The temperature rises significantly from the boundary to the inner core regime in filaments with $D_{fil} gtrsim 4.0 rm{Mpc}$, probably due to heating by accretion shock, while the temperature rise gently in filaments with $D_{fil}< 4.0 rm{Mpc}$.
We present the study of gas phases around cosmic-web filaments detected in the TNG300-1 hydro-dynamical simulation at redshift z=0. We separate the gas in five different phases according to temperature and density. We show that filaments are essentia
Despite containing about a half of the total matter in the Universe, at most wavelengths the filamentary structure of the cosmic web is difficult to observe. In this work, we use large unigrid cosmological simulations to investigate how the geometric
We present a comprehensive study of the distribution of matter around different populations of filaments, using the IllustrisTNG simulation at z=0. We compute the dark matter (DM), gas, and stellar radial density profiles of filaments, and we charact
We investigate the spin evolution of dark matter haloes and their dependence on the number of connected filaments from the cosmic web at high redshift (spin-filament relation hereafter). To this purpose, we have simulated $5000$ haloes in the mass ra
We investigate the alignment of galaxies and haloes relative to cosmic web filaments using the EAGLE hydrodynamical simulation. We identify filaments by applying the NEXUS+ method to the mass distribution and the Bisous formalism to the galaxy distri