Forming Realistic Late-Type Spirals in a LCDM Universe: The Eris Simulation
Javiera Guedes, Simone Callegari, Piero Madau, and Lucio Mayer

TL;DR
The Eris simulation successfully models a realistic late-type spiral galaxy within a LCDM universe, matching many observed properties and scaling relations, thus addressing previous simulation shortcomings.
Contribution
This work presents the first cosmological hydrodynamic simulation producing a Milky Way-like galaxy with realistic structure and properties, using high resolution and specific star formation criteria.
Findings
Galaxy has a rotationally-supported disk with realistic scale length.
Simulation reproduces observed Tully-Fisher and mass-halo relations.
Hot halo gas constitutes 26% of baryons, consistent with observations.
Abstract
Simulations of the formation of late-type spiral galaxies in a cold dark matter LCDM universe have traditionally failed to yield realistic candidates. Here we report a new cosmological N-body/SPH simulation of extreme dynamic range in which a close analog of a Milky Way disk galaxy arises naturally. Termed Eris, the simulation follows the assembly of a galaxy halo of mass Mvir=7.9x10^11 Msun with a total of N=18.6 million particles (gas + dark matter + stars) within the final virial radius, and a force resolution of 120 pc. It includes radiative cooling, heating from a cosmic UV field and supernova explosions, a star formation recipe based on a high gas density threshold (nSF=5 atoms cm^-3 rather than the canonical nSF=0.1 atoms cm^-3), and neglects AGN feedback. At the present epoch, the simulated galaxy has an extended rotationally-supported disk with a radial scale length Rd=2.5 kpc,…
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