Bibcode
Neistein, Eyal; Khochfar, Sadegh; Dalla Vecchia, C.; Schaye, Joop
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 421, Issue 4, pp. 3579-3593.
Fecha de publicación:
4
2012
Número de citas
32
Número de citas referidas
32
Descripción
In this work we develop a new method to turn a state-of-the-art
hydrodynamical cosmological simulation of galaxy formation (HYD) into a
simple semi-analytic model (SAM). This is achieved by summarizing the
efficiencies of accretion, cooling, star formation and feedback given by
the HYD, as functions of the halo mass and redshift. The SAM then uses
these functions to evolve galaxies within merger trees that are
extracted from the same HYD. Surprisingly, by turning the HYD into a
SAM, we conserve the mass of individual galaxies, with deviations at the
level of 0.1 dex, on an object-by-object basis, with no significant
systematics. This is true for all redshifts, and for the mass of stars
and gas components, although the agreement reaches 0.2 dex for satellite
galaxies at low redshift. We show that the same level of accuracy is
obtained even in case the SAM uses only one phase of gas within each
galaxy. Moreover, we demonstrate that the formation history of one
massive galaxy provides sufficient information for the SAM to reproduce
the population of galaxies within the entire cosmological box. The
reasons for the small scatter between the HYD and SAM galaxies are as
follows. (i) The efficiencies are matched as functions of the halo mass
and redshift, meaning that the evolution within merger trees agrees on
average. (ii) For a given galaxy, efficiencies fluctuate around the mean
value on time-scales of 0.2-2 Gyr. (iii) The various mass components of
galaxies are obtained by integrating the efficiencies over time,
averaging out these fluctuations. We compare the efficiencies found here
to standard SAM recipes and find that they often deviate significantly.
For example, here the HYD shows smooth accretion that is less effective
for low-mass haloes, and is always composed of hot or dilute gas;
cooling is less effective at high redshift, and star formation changes
only mildly with cosmic time. The method developed here can be applied
in general to any HYD, and can thus serve as a common language for both
HYDs and SAMs.