Abstract

ABSTRACT The intrinsic correlations of galaxy shapes and orientations across the large-scale structure of the Universe are a known contaminant to weak gravitational lensing. They are known to be dependent on galaxy properties, such as their mass and morphologies. The complex interplay between alignments and the physical processes that drive galaxy evolution remains vastly unexplored. We assess the sensitivity of intrinsic alignments (shapes and angular momenta) to active galactic nuclei (AGN) feedback by comparing galaxy alignment in twin runs of the cosmological hydrodynamical Horizon simulation, which do and do not include AGN feedback, respectively. We measure intrinsic alignments in three dimensions and in projection at $z$ = 0 and $z$ = 1. We find that the projected alignment signal of all galaxies with resolved shapes with respect to the density field in the simulation is robust to AGN feedback, thus giving similar predictions for contamination to weak lensing. The relative alignment of galaxy shapes around galaxy positions is however significantly impacted, especially when considering high-mass ellipsoids. Using a sample of galaxy ‘twins’ across simulations, we determine that AGN changes both the galaxy selection and their actual alignments. Finally, we measure the alignments of angular momenta of galaxies with their nearest filament. Overall, these are more significant in the presence of AGN as a result of the higher abundance of massive pressure-supported galaxies.

Highlights

  • Gravitational lensing is the distortion of light from a straight path as it travels through the large-scale structure of the universe

  • To the 3D case, we find that alignments of galaxy shapes around galaxy positions are stronger in projection when implementing Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) feedback

  • We have isolated the impact of AGN feedback on galaxy alignment using two simulations of the Horizon suite

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Gravitational lensing is the distortion of light from a straight path as it travels through the large-scale structure of the universe. It is considered as one of the most promising observational techniques of the decade to elucidate the nature of dark matter and dark energy. As a result of this effect, distant galaxy shapes appear coherently distorted by the large-scale structure (see Bartelmann 2010 for a review). Measuring and modelling these patterns sheds light on the composition and evolution of our Universe. “Intrinsic alignments” across very large scales are an astrophysical contaminant which needs to be modelled for the accurate extraction of cosmological information (Hirata & Seljak 2004; Bridle & King 2007; Hirata & Seljak 2010; Kirk et al 2012)

Intrinsic alignments
Active Galactic Nuclei feedback
This work
THE HORIZON SIMULATION
Definitions
Galaxy dynamics
Galaxy matching
Morphology comparison
FILAMENTS
Correlations in three dimensions
Projected correlations in two dimensions
Alignments with filaments
Shape alignments around galaxies
Full galaxy population
High-mass ellipsoids
Cross-correlations
Spin correlations
CONCLUSIONS
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