From dwarf spheroidals to cDs: Simulating the galaxy population in a LCDM cosmology
Qi Guo, Simon White, Michael Boylan-Kolchin, Gabriella De Lucia,, Guinevere Kauffmann, Gerard Lemson, Cheng Li, Volker Springel, Simone, Weinmann

TL;DR
This study uses advanced semi-analytic models on large cosmological simulations to accurately reproduce galaxy properties, revealing insights into galaxy formation, satellite abundance, and clustering, with some discrepancies in low-mass galaxy passive fractions.
Contribution
It introduces updated galaxy formation models applied to high-resolution simulations, improving predictions of galaxy abundance, clustering, and satellite properties in a LCDM cosmology.
Findings
Excellent fit to observed galaxy abundance across a wide mass range.
Reionisation effects may be unnecessary for the missing satellite problem.
Overprediction of clustering for low-mass galaxies suggests high sigma_8 value.
Abstract
We apply updated semi-analytic galaxy formation models simultaneously to the stored halo/subhalo merger trees of the Millennium and Millennium-II simulations. These differ by a factor of 125 in mass resolution, allowing explicit testing of resolution effects on predicted galaxy properties. We have revised the treatments of the transition between the rapid infall and cooling flow regimes of gas accretion, of the sizes of bulges and of gaseous and stellar disks, of supernova feedback, of the transition between central and satellite status as galaxies fall into larger systems, and of gas and star stripping once they become satellites. Plausible values of efficiency and scaling parameters yield an excellent fit not only to the observed abundance of low-redshift galaxies over 5 orders of magnitude in stellar mass and 9 magnitudes in luminosity, but also to the observed abundance of Milky Way…
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