We investigate the structure of cold dark matter halos using advanced models of spherical collapse and accretion in an expanding universe. These are based on solving time-dependent equations for the moments of the phase-space distribution function in the fluid approximation; our approach includes non-radial random motions and, most importantly, an advanced treatment of both dynamical relaxation effects that take place in the infalling matter: phase-mixing associated with shell crossing and collective collisions related to physical clumpiness. We find self-similar solutions for the spherically averaged profiles of mass density ρ(r), pseudo phase-space density Q(r), and anisotropy parameter β(r). These profiles agree with the outcomes of state-of-the-art N-body simulations in the radial range currently probed by the latter; at smaller radii, we provide specific predictions. In the perspective provided by our self-similar solutions, we link the halo structure to its two-stage growth history and propose the following picture. During the early fast collapse of the inner region dominated by a few merging clumps, efficient dynamical relaxation plays a key role in producing closely universal mass density and pseudo phase-space density profiles; in particular, these are found to depend only weakly on the detailed shape of the initial perturbation and the related collapse times. The subsequent inside-out growth of the outer regions feeds on the slow accretion of many small clumps and diffuse matter; thus the outskirts are only mildly affected by dynamical relaxation but are more sensitive to asymmetries and cosmological variance. © 2011. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Lapi, A., & Cavaliere, A. (2011). Self-similar dynamical relaxation of dark matter halos in an expanding universe. Astrophysical Journal, 743(2). https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/743/2/127
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