Luminous Red Galaxies in hierarchical cosmologies
C. Almeida, C. M. Baugh, D. A. Wake, C. G. Lacey, A. J. Benson, R. G., Bower, K. Pimbblet

TL;DR
This paper presents self-consistent predictions for luminous red galaxies in hierarchical models, comparing two mechanisms for massive galaxy formation suppression and analyzing their success in matching observed properties and clustering.
Contribution
It introduces the first self-consistent predictions for LRGs in hierarchical models and compares two different suppression mechanisms against observations.
Findings
Bower et al. model matches luminosity function and clustering well
Both models fail to match LRG abundance at z=0.5 within a factor of 2
Predicted LRGs have power-law correlation functions consistent with observations
Abstract
Luminous red galaxies (LRGs) are much rarer and more massive than L* galaxies. Coupled with their extreme colours, LRGs therefore provide a demanding testing ground for the physics of massive galaxy formation. We present the first self-consistent predictions for the abundance and properties of LRGs in hierarchical structure formation models. We test two published models which use quite different mechanisms to suppress the formation of massive galaxies: the Bower et al. (2006) model, which invokes ``AGN-feedback'' to prevent gas from cooling in massive haloes, and the Baugh et al. (2005) model which relies upon a ``superwind'' to eject gas before it is turned into stars. Without adjusting any parameters, the Bower et al. model gives an excellent match to the observed luminosity function of LRGs in the SDSS (with a median redshift of z=0.24) and to their clustering; the Baugh et al. model…
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