The Properties of Sub-mm Galaxies in Hierarchical Models
Mark Swinbank (1), Cedric Lacey (1), Ian Smail (1), Carlton Baugh (1),, Carlos Frenk (1), Andrew Blain (2), Scott Chapman (3), Kristen Coppin (1),, Rob Ivison (4,5), Laura Hainline (6), Juan Gonzalez (1) ((1) ICC, Durham, (2), Caltech, (3) Cambridge, (4) IfA

TL;DR
This study uses a semi-analytical galaxy formation model combined with spectrophotometric codes to analyze the properties of sub-millimeter galaxies, comparing predictions with observational data to assess model accuracy and identify discrepancies.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that the combined model accurately predicts the far-infrared properties and redshift distribution of sub-mm galaxies, while highlighting issues with stellar mass predictions.
Findings
Predicted far-infrared SEDs match observations well.
Redshift distribution peaks at z=2.0, consistent with data.
Model underestimates stellar masses of sub-mm galaxies.
Abstract
We use the combined GALFORM semi-analytical model of galaxy formation and GRASIL spectrophotometric code to investigate the properties of galaxies selected via their sub-mm emission. Our fiducial model has previously been shown to fit the properties of local ULIRGs, as well as the number counts of faint sub-mm galaxies. Here, we test the model in detail by comparing the SEDs and stellar, dynamical, gas and halo masses of sub-mm galaxies against observational data. We precisely mimic the sub-mm and radio selection function of the observations and show that the predicted far-infrared properties of model galaxies with S_850>5mJy and S_1.4>30uJy are in good agreement with observations. Although the dust emission model does not assume a single dust temperature, the far-infrared SEDs are well described by single component modified black-body spectrum with characteristic temperature 32+/-5K.…
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