Bibcode
McCarthy, I. G.; Schaye, J.; Font, A. S.; Theuns, T.; Frenk, C. S.; Crain, R. A.; Dalla Vecchia, C.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 427, Issue 1, pp. 379-392.
Advertised on:
11
2012
Citations
54
Refereed citations
53
Description
We examine the rotation rates, sizes and star formation (SF)
efficiencies of a representative population of simulated disc galaxies
extracted from the Galaxies-Intergalactic Medium Interaction Calculation
(GIMIC) suite of cosmological hydrodynamic simulations. These
simulations include efficient, but energetically feasible supernova
feedback, but have not been tuned in any way to produce 'realistic' disc
galaxies. Yet, they generate a large number of discs, without requiring
extremely high resolution. Over the wide galaxy stellar mass range, 9.0
≲ log 10 [M*(M⊙)] < 10.5,
the simulations reproduce the observed Tully-Fisher relation, the
rotation curves of disc galaxies in bins of stellar mass, the mass-size
relation of disc galaxies, the optical rotation to virial circular
velocity ratio ('Vopt/Vvir') and the SF
efficiencies of disc galaxies as inferred from stacked weak lensing and
stacked satellite kinematics observations. They also reproduce the
specific star formation rates of ˜L* galaxies but
predict too low levels of SF for low-mass galaxies, which is plausibly
due to the finite resolution of the simulations. At higher stellar
masses, log10[M*(M⊙)] > 10.6,
the simulated galaxies are too concentrated and have too high SF
efficiencies. We conjecture that this shortcoming reflects the neglect
of feedback from accreting supermassive black holes in these
simulations. We conclude that it is possible to generate a
representative population of disc galaxies that reproduces many of the
observed trends of local disc galaxies using standard numerical
hydrodynamic techniques and a plausible implementation of the 'subgrid'
astrophysical processes thought to be relevant to galaxy formation.