Where do "red and dead" early-type void galaxies come from?
Darren J. Croton, Glennys R. Farrar

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin of red, early-type void galaxies and demonstrates that a universal radio mode AGN heating mechanism, dependent on halo mass, explains their existence across different environments.
Contribution
It shows that environment-independent radio mode AGN heating in galaxy formation models accounts for the observed population of red void galaxies, without needing environment-specific modifications.
Findings
Radio mode heating suppresses star formation in halos above ~10^12.5 M_sun.
Void halo mass function still includes halos capable of hosting red galaxies.
Model reproduces observed space density of red void galaxies.
Abstract
Void regions of the Universe offer a special environment for studying cosmology and galaxy formation, which may expose weaknesses in our understanding of these phenomena. Although galaxies in voids are observed to be predominately gas rich, star forming and blue, a sub-population of bright red void galaxies can also be found, whose star formation was shut down long ago. Are the same processes that quench star formation in denser regions of the Universe also at work in voids? We compare the luminosity function of void galaxies in the 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey, to those from a galaxy formation model built on the Millennium Simulation. We show that a global star formation suppression mechanism in the form of low luminosity "radio mode" AGN heating is sufficient to reproduce the observed population of void early-types. Radio mode heating is environment independent other than its…
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