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Dive into the research topics where Alejandro Benítez-Llambay is active.

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Featured researches published by Alejandro Benítez-Llambay.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

The origin of the mass discrepancy-acceleration relation in ΛCDM.

Julio F. Navarro; Alejandro Benítez-Llambay; Azadeh Fattahi; Carlos S. Frenk; Aaron D. Ludlow; Kyle A. Oman; Matthieu Schaller; Tom Theuns

We examine the origin of the mass discrepancy–radial acceleration relation (MDAR) of disc galaxies. This is a tight empirical correlation between the disc centripetal acceleration and that expected from the baryonic component. The MDAR holds for most radii probed by disc kinematic tracers, regardless of galaxy mass or surface brightness. The relation has two characteristic accelerations: a0, above which all galaxies are baryon dominated, and amin, an effective minimum acceleration probed by kinematic tracers in isolated galaxies. We use a simple model to show that these trends arise naturally in Λ cold dark matter (ΛCDM). This is because (i) disc galaxies in ΛCDM form at the centre of dark matter haloes spanning a relatively narrow range of virial mass; (ii) cold dark matter halo acceleration profiles are self-similar and have a broad maximum at the centre, reaching values bracketed precisely by amin and a0 in that mass range and (iii) halo mass and galaxy size scale relatively tightly with the baryonic mass of a galaxy in any successful ΛCDM galaxy formation model. Explaining the MDAR in ΛCDM does not require modifications to the cuspy inner mass profiles of dark haloes, although these may help to understand the detailed rotation curves of some dwarf galaxies and the origin of extreme outliers from the main relation. The MDAR is just a reflection of the self-similar nature of cold dark matter haloes and of the physical scales introduced by the galaxy formation process.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Mass-Discrepancy Acceleration Relation : A Natural Outcome of Galaxy Formation in Cold Dark Matter Halos

Aaron D. Ludlow; Alejandro Benítez-Llambay; Matthieu Schaller; Tom Theuns; Carlos S. Frenk; Richard G. Bower; Joop Schaye; Robert A. Crain; Julio F. Navarro; Azadeh Fattahi; Kyle A. Oman

We analyze the total and baryonic acceleration profiles of a set of well-resolved galaxies identified in the eagle suite of hydrodynamic simulations. Our runs start from the same initial conditions but adopt different prescriptions for unresolved stellar and active galactic nuclei feedback, resulting in diverse populations of galaxies by the present day. Some of them reproduce observed galaxy scaling relations, while others do not. However, regardless of the feedback implementation, all of our galaxies follow closely a simple relationship between the total and baryonic acceleration profiles, consistent with recent observations of rotationally supported galaxies. The relation has small scatter: Different feedback implementations-which produce different galaxy populations-mainly shift galaxies along the relation rather than perpendicular to it. Furthermore, galaxies exhibit a characteristic acceleration g_{†}, above which baryons dominate the mass budget, as observed. These observations, consistent with simple modified Newtonian dynamics, can be accommodated within the standard cold dark matter paradigm.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

The core–cusp problem: a matter of perspective

Anna Genina; Alejandro Benítez-Llambay; Carlos S. Frenk; Shaun Cole; Azadeh Fattahi; Julio F. Navarro; Kyle A. Oman; Till Sawala; Tom Theuns

The existence of two kinematically and chemically distinct stellar subpopulations in the Sculptor and Fornax dwarf galaxies offers the opportunity to constrain the density profile of their matter haloes by measuring the mass contained within the well-separated half-light radii of the two metallicity subpopulations. Walker and Penarrubia have used this approach to argue that data for these galaxies are consistent with constant-density ‘cores’ in their inner regions and rule out ‘cuspy’ Navarro–Frenk–White (NFW) profiles with high statistical significance, particularly in the case of Sculptor. We test the validity of these claims using dwarf galaxies in the APOSTLE (A Project Of Simulating The Local Environment) Λ cold dark matter cosmological hydrodynamic simulations of analogues of the Local Group. These galaxies all have NFW dark matter density profiles and a subset of them develop two distinct metallicity subpopulations reminiscent of Sculptor and Fornax. We apply a method analogous to that of Walker and Penarrubia to a sample of 50 simulated dwarfs and find that this procedure often leads to a statistically significant detection of a core in the profile when in reality there is a cusp. Although multiple factors contribute to these failures, the main cause is a violation of the assumption of spherical symmetry upon which the mass estimators are based. The stellar populations of the simulated dwarfs tend to be significantly elongated and, in several cases, the two metallicity populations have different asphericity and are misaligned. As a result, a wide range of slopes of the density profile are inferred depending on the angle from which the galaxy is viewed.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

The properties of ‘dark’ ΛCDM haloes in the Local Group

Alejandro Benítez-Llambay; Julio F. Navarro; Carlos S. Frenk; Till Sawala; Kyle A. Oman; Azadeh Fattahi; Matthieu Schaller; Joop Schaye; Robert A. Crain; Tom Theuns

We examine the baryon content of low-mass {\Lambda}CDM halos


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

The vertical structure of gaseous galaxy discs in cold dark matter haloes

Alejandro Benítez-Llambay; Julio F. Navarro; Carlos S. Frenk; Aaron D. Ludlow

(10^8<M_{200}/{\rm M_\odot}<5\times 10^{9})


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

The innate origin of radial and vertical gradients in a simulated galaxy disc.

Julio F. Navarro; Cameron Yozin; Nic Loewen; Alejandro Benítez-Llambay; Azadeh Fattahi; Carlos S. Frenk; Kyle A. Oman; Joop Schaye; Tom Theuns

using the APOSTLE cosmological hydrodynamical simulations. Most of these systems are free of stars and have a gaseous content set by the combined effects of cosmic reionization, which imposes a mass-dependent upper limit, and of ram pressure stripping, which reduces it further in high-density regions. Halos mainly affected by reionization (RELHICs; REionization-Limited HI Clouds) inhabit preferentially low-density regions and make up a population where the gas is in hydrostatic equilibrium with the dark matter potential and in thermal equilibrium with the ionizing UV background. Their thermodynamic properties are well specified, and their gas density and temperature profiles may be predicted in detail. Gas in RELHICs is nearly fully ionized but with neutral cores that span a large range of HI masses and column densities and have negligible non-thermal broadening. We present predictions for their characteristic sizes and central column densities: the massive tail of the distribution should be within reach of future blind HI surveys. Local Group RELHICs (LGRs) have some properties consistent with observed Ultra Compact High Velocity Clouds (UCHVCs) but the sheer number of the latter suggests that most UCHVCs are not RELHICs. Our results suggest that LGRs (i) should typically be beyond 500 kpc from the Milky Way or M31; (ii) have positive Galactocentric radial velocities; (iii) HI sizes not exceeding 1 kpc, and (iv) should be nearly round. The detection and characterization of RELHICs would offer a unique probe of the small-scale clustering of cold dark matter.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

hbt+: an improved code for finding subhaloes and building merger trees in cosmological simulations

Jiaxin Han; Shaun Cole; Carlos S. Frenk; Alejandro Benítez-Llambay; John C. Helly

We study the vertical structure of polytropic centrifugally supported gaseous discs embedded in cold dark matter (CDM) haloes. At fixed radius, R, the shape of the vertical density profile depends weakly on whether the disc is self-gravitating (SG) or non-self-gravitating (NSG). The disc ‘characteristic’ thickness, zH, set by the midplane sound speed and circular velocity, zNSG = (cs/Vc)R, in the NSG case, and by the sound speed and surface density, zSG=c2s/GΣ zSG=cs2/GΣ , in SG discs, is smaller than zSG and zNSG. SG discs are typically Toomre unstable, NSG discs are stable. Exponential discs in CDM haloes with roughly flat circular velocity curves ‘flare’ outwards. Flares in mono abundance or coeval populations in galaxies like the Milky Way are thus not necessarily due to radial migration. For the polytropic equation of state of the Evolution and Assembly of GaLaxies and their Environments (EAGLE) simulations, discs that match observational constraints are NSG for Md < 3 × 109 M⊙ and SG at higher masses, if fully gaseous. We test these analytic results using a set of idealized smoothed particle hydrodynamic simulations and find excellent agreement. Our results clarify the role of the gravitational softening on the thickness of simulated discs, and on the onset of radial instabilities. EAGLE low-mass discs are NSG so the softening plays no role in their vertical structure. High-mass discs are expected to be SG and unstable, and may be artificially thickened and stabilized unless gravity is well resolved. Simulations with spatial resolution high enough to not compromise the vertical structure of a disc also resolve the onset of their instabilities, but the converse is not true.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

The properties of "dark" {\Lambda}CDM halos in the Local Group

Alejandro Benítez-Llambay; Julio F. Navarro; Carlos S. Frenk; Till Sawala; Kyle A. Oman; Azadeh Fattahi; Matthieu Schaller; Joop Schaye; Robert A. Crain; Tom Theuns

We examine the origin of radial and vertical gradients in the age/metallicity of the stellar component of a galaxy disc formed in the APOSTLE cosmological hydrodynamical simulations. Some of these gradients resemble those in the Milky Way, where they have sometimes been interpreted as due to internal evolution, such as scattering off giant molecular clouds, radial migration driven by spiral patterns, or orbital resonances with a bar. Secular processes play a minor role in the simulated galaxy, which lacks strong spiral or bar patterns, and where such gradients arise as a result of the gradual enrichment of a gaseous disc that is born thick but thins as it turns into stars and settles into centrifugal equilibrium. The settling is controlled by the feedback of young stars; which links the star formation, enrichment, and equilibration time-scales, inducing radial and vertical gradients in the gaseous disc and its descendent stars. The kinematics of coeval stars evolve little after birth and provide a faithful snapshot of the gaseous disc structure at the time of their formation. In this interpretation, the age-velocity dispersion relation would reflect the gradual thinning of the disc rather than the importance of secular orbit scattering; the outward flaring of stars would result from the gas disc flare rather than from radial migration; and vertical gradients would arise because the gas disc gradually thinned as it enriched. Such radial and vertical trends might just reflect the evolving properties of the parent gaseous disc, and are not necessarily the result of secular evolutionary processes.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2019

Non-circular motions and the diversity of dwarf galaxy rotation curves

Kyle A. Oman; Antonino Marasco; Julio F. Navarro; Carlos S. Frenk; Joop Schaye; Alejandro Benítez-Llambay

Dark matter subhalos are the remnants of (incomplete) halo mergers. Identifying them and establishing their evolutionary links in the form of merger trees is one of the most important applications of cosmological simulations. The HBT (Hierachical Bound-Tracing) code identifies haloes as they form and tracks their evolution as they merge, simultaneously detecting subhaloes and building their merger trees. Here we present a new implementation of this approach, HBT+ , that is much faster, more user friendly, and more physically complete than the original code. Applying HBT+ to cosmological simulations, we show that both the subhalo mass function and the peak-mass function are well fitted by similar double-Schechter functions. The ratio between the two is highest at the high-mass end, reflecting the resilience of massive subhaloes that experience substantial dynamical friction but limited tidal stripping. The radial distribution of the most-massive subhaloes is more concentrated than the universal radial distribution of lower mass subhaloes. Subhalo finders that work in configuration space tend to underestimate the masses of massive subhaloes, an effect that is stronger in the host centre. This may explain, at least in part, the excess of massive subhaloes in galaxy cluster centres inferred from recent lensing observations. We demonstrate that the peak-mass function is a powerful diagnostic of merger tree defects, and the merger trees constructed using HBT+ do not suffer from the missing or switched links that tend to afflict merger trees constructed from more conventional halo finders. We make the HBT+ code publicly available.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

The properties of ”dark” ΛCDM halos in the Local Group

Alejandro Benítez-Llambay; Julio F. Navarro; Carlos S. Frenk; Till Sawala; Kyle A. Oman; Azadeh Fattahi; Matthieu Schaller; Joop Schaye; Robert A. Crain; Tom Theuns

We examine the baryon content of low-mass {\Lambda}CDM halos

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Robert A. Crain

Liverpool John Moores University

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Till Sawala

University of Helsinki

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