An observer's view of simulated galaxies: disc-to-total ratios, bars, and (pseudo-)bulges
Cecilia Scannapieco (1,2), Dimitri A. Gadotti (2,3), Patrik Jonsson, (4), Simon D.M. White (2) ((1) AIP, (2) MPA, (3) ESO, (4) CfA)

TL;DR
This study compares kinematic and photometric methods for analyzing galaxy components in simulations, revealing systematic differences and highlighting the limitations of current models in replicating observed galaxy structures.
Contribution
It demonstrates that photometric decompositions yield higher disc-to-total ratios and better match observed galaxy properties than kinematic estimates in simulated galaxies.
Findings
Kinematic D/T ratios are systematically lower than photometric ones.
Many simulated galaxies contain bars with Bar/T ratios of 0.2-0.4.
Simulated bulges resemble pseudo-bulges with low Sersic indices.
Abstract
We use cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of the formation of Milky Way-mass galaxies to study the relative importance of the main stellar components, i.e., discs, bulges, and bars, at redshift zero. The main aim of this work is to understand if estimates of the structural parameters of these components determined from kinematics (as is usually done in simulations) agree well with those obtained using a photometric bulge/disc/bar decomposition (as done in observations). To perform such a comparison, we have produced synthetic observations of the simulation outputs with the Monte-Carlo radiative transfer code SUNRISE and used the BUDDA code to make 2D photometric decompositions of the resulting images (in the i and g bands). We find that the kinematic disc-to-total ratio (D/T) estimates are systematically and significantly lower than the photometric ones. While the maximum D/T…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
