The effect of gas-dynamics on semi-analytic modeling of cluster galaxies
A. Saro, G. De Lucia, K. Dolag, S. Borgani

TL;DR
This study investigates how non-radiative gas dynamics influence the merger histories and properties of galaxies in clusters, revealing significant effects on the orbits, merging times, and stellar masses of the most massive galaxies.
Contribution
It demonstrates that gas dynamics notably affect halo fragility, merging times, and the stellar mass of brightest cluster galaxies in semi-analytic models.
Findings
Gas dynamics decrease subhalo counts by 25% at z=0.
Gas presence extends satellite merging times due to less massive haloes.
Gas effects lead to 25% larger stellar masses in brightest cluster galaxies.
Abstract
We study the degree to which non-radiative gas dynamics affects the merger histories of haloes along with subsequent predictions from a semi-analytic model (SAM) of galaxy formation. To this aim, we use a sample of dark matter only and non-radiative SPH simulations of four massive clusters. The presence of gas-dynamical processes (e.g. ram-pressure from the hot ICM) makes haloes more fragile in the runs which include gas. This results in a 25 per cent decrease in the total number of subhaloes at z = 0. The impact on the galaxy population predicted by SAMs is complicated by the presence of "orphan" galaxies, i.e. galaxies whose parent substructures are reduced below the resolution limit of the simulation. In the model employed in our study, these galaxies survive for a residual merging time that is computed using a variation of the Chandrasekhar formula. Due to ram-pressure stripping,…
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