The Redshift Evolution of the Mass Function of Cold Gas in Hierarchical Galaxy Formation Models
C. Power (Leicester/Swinburne), C. M. Baugh (Durham), C. G. Lacey, (Durham)

TL;DR
This study compares predictions from four galaxy formation models on the evolution of cold gas and HI in galaxies, finding little redshift evolution and emphasizing the importance of upcoming HI surveys for testing these models.
Contribution
It evaluates and compares four semi-analytical models' predictions for cold gas mass functions across redshifts and assesses their implications for future HI surveys.
Findings
Models agree broadly on cold gas mass functions at z=0
Cold gas mass functions show little evolution with redshift
Predicted HI source counts inform future radio survey expectations
Abstract
(Abridged) Accurately predicting how the cosmic abundance of neutral hydrogen evolves with redshift is a challenging problem facing modellers of galaxy formation. We investigate the predictions of four currently favoured semi-analytical galaxy formation models applied to the Millennium simulation for the mass function of cold neutral gas (atomic and molecular) in galaxies as a function of redshift, and we use these predictions to construct number counts for the next generation of all-sky neutral atomic hydrogen (HI) surveys. Despite the different implementations of the physical ingredients of galaxy formation, we find that the model predictions are broadly consistent with one another; the key differences reflect how the models treat AGN feedback and how the timescale for star formation evolves with redshift. The models produce mass functions of cold gas in galaxies that are generally in…
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