Galaxies-Intergalactic Medium Interaction Calculation --I. Galaxy formation as a function of large-scale environment
Robert A. Crain (1,2), Tom Theuns (1,3), Claudio Dalla Vecchia (4),, Vincent R. Eke (1), Carlos S. Frenk (1), Adrian Jenkins (1), Scott T. Kay, (5), John A. Peacock (6) Frazer R. Pearce (7), Joop Schaye (4), Volker, Springel (8), Peter A. Thomas (9), Simon D. M. White (8)

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to explore how galaxy formation varies with large-scale environment, revealing environmental effects on star formation and galaxy evolution from early times to the present.
Contribution
First hydrodynamical simulations to analyze galaxy formation across different large-scale environments, linking environment to halo mass function and star formation history.
Findings
Star formation rate density varies by environment up to tenfold.
Massive galaxies form early in overdense regions, later in underdense regions.
Star formation exhibits downsizing without requiring AGN feedback.
Abstract
[Abridged] We present the first results of hydrodynamical simulations that follow the formation of galaxies to z=0 in spherical regions of radius ~20 Mpc/h drawn from the Millennium Simulation. The regions have overdensities that deviate by (-2, -1, 0, +1, +2)sigma from the cosmic mean, where sigma is the rms mass fluctuation on a scale of ~20Mpc/h at z=1.5. The simulations have mass resolution of up to 10^6 Msun/h, cover the entire range of large-scale environments and allow extrapolation of statistics to the entire 500 (Mpc/h)^3 Millennium volume. They include gas cooling, photoheating from an ionising background, SNe feedback and winds, but no AGN. We find that the specific SFR density at z <~ 10 varies systematically from region to region by up to an order of magnitude, but the global value, averaged over all volumes, reproduces observational data. Massive, compact galaxies, similar…
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