Galaxies in a Simulated $\Lambda$CDM Universe II: Observable Properties and Constraints on Feedback
Du\v{s}an Kere\v{s} (1), Neal Katz (2), Romeel Dave (3), Mark Fardal, (2), David H. Weinberg (4) ((1) Harvard/CFA, (2) UMass, (3) U. of Arizona,, (4) Ohio-State)

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to analyze galaxy properties at z=0, demonstrating that effective feedback mechanisms are essential to match observed galaxy mass functions and star formation rates, especially at high and low masses.
Contribution
It investigates the effects of different feedback models on galaxy mass and star formation, highlighting the need for mass-dependent feedback to reproduce observations.
Findings
Models without strong feedback overproduce galaxy masses.
Preventive feedback alone does not match high-mass galaxy observations.
Ejective feedback is necessary to reduce progenitor masses and match the galaxy population.
Abstract
We compare the properties of galaxies that form in a cosmological simulation without strong feedback to observations at z=0. We confirm previous findings that models without strong feedback overproduce the observed galaxy baryonic mass function, especially at the low and high mass extremes. Through post-processing we investigate what kinds of feedback would be required to reproduce observed galaxy masses and star formation rates. To mimic an extreme form of "preventive" feedback (e.g., AGN radio mode) we remove all baryonic mass that was originally accreted via "hot mode" from shock-heated gas. This does not bring the high mass end of the galaxy mass function into agreement with observations because much of the stellar mass in these systems formed at high redshift from baryons that originally accreted via "cold mode" onto lower mass progenitors. An efficient "ejective" feedback…
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