Photometric and clustering properties of hydrodynamical galaxies in a cosmological volume: results at z=0
S.E. Nuza (1), K. Dolag (1), A. Saro (2) ((1) MPA-Garching, (2) Astr., Dept. Trieste, INFN-Trieste)

TL;DR
This study uses a hydrodynamical simulation of the local universe to analyze galaxy photometric and clustering properties, addressing overcooling issues and comparing results with observations at redshift zero.
Contribution
It presents a detailed simulation of galaxy formation and evolution in a cosmological volume, incorporating feedback processes and a post-processing correction for star formation suppression.
Findings
Simulated galaxy distributions match observed large-scale patterns.
Overcooling causes overly blue, luminous brightest cluster galaxies.
Post-processing improves luminosity functions and BCG-halo mass relation.
Abstract
In this work, we present results for the photometric and clustering properties of galaxies that arise in a LambdaCDM hydrodynamical simulation of the local universe. The present-day distribution of matter was constructed to match the observed large scale pattern of the IRAS 1.2-Jy galaxy survey. Our simulation follows the formation and evolution of galaxies in a cosmological sphere with a volume of ~130^3 (Mpc/h)^3 including supernova feedback, galactic winds, photoheating due to an uniform meta-galactic background and chemical enrichment of the gas and stellar populations. However, we do not consider AGNs. In the simulation, a total of ~20000 galaxies are formed above the resolution limit, and around 60 haloes are more massive than ~10^14 M_sun. Luminosities of the galaxies are calculated based on a stellar population synthesis model including the attenuation by dust, which is…
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