The hierarchical structure of galactic haloes: differentiating clusters from stochastic clumping with astrolink

Author:

Oliver William H123ORCID,Elahi Pascal J4ORCID,Lewis Geraint F3ORCID,Buck Tobias12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Universität Heidelberg, Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Wissenschaftliches Rechnen , Im Neuenheimer Feld 205, D-69120 Heidelberg , Germany

2. Universität Heidelberg, Zentrum für Astronomie, Institut für Theoretische Astrophysik , Albert-Ueberle-Straße 2, D-69120 Heidelberg , Germany

3. Sydney Institute for Astronomy, School of Physics A28, The University of Sydney , NSW 2006 , Australia

4. Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre , 1 Bryce Avenue, Kensington, WA 6151 , Australia

Abstract

ABSTRACT We present astrolink, an efficient and versatile clustering algorithm designed to hierarchically classify astrophysically relevant structures from both synthetic and observational data sets. We build upon clustar-nd, a hierarchical galaxy/(sub)halo finder, so that astrolink now generates a 2D representation of the implicit clustering structure as well as ensuring that clusters are statistically distinct from the noisy density fluctuations implicit within the n-dimensional input data. This redesign replaces the three cluster extraction parameters from clustar-nd with a single parameter, S – the lower statistical significance threshold of clusters, which can be automatically and reliably estimated via a dynamical model-fitting process. We demonstrate the robustness of this approach compared to astrolink’s predecessors by applying each algorithm to a suite of simulated galaxies defined over various feature spaces. We find that astrolink delivers a more powerful clustering performance while being $\sim 27~{{\ \rm per \, cent}}$ faster and using less memory than clustar-nd. With these improvements, astrolink is ideally suited to extracting a meaningful set of hierarchical and arbitrarily shaped astrophysical clusters from both synthetic and observational data sets – lending itself as a great tool for morphological decomposition within the context of hierarchical structure formation.

Funder

University of Sydney

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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