Convergence of Galaxy Properties with Merger Tree Temporal Resolution
Andrew J. Benson (1), Stefano Borgani (2, 3, 4), Gabriella De, Lucia (3), Michael Boylan-Kolchin (5), Pierluigi Monaco (2, 3) ((1), California Institute of Technology, (2) Dipartimento di Fisica, dell'Universita, Sezione de Astronomia, Italy, (3) Isservatorio Astronomico

TL;DR
This study investigates how the temporal resolution of dark matter halo merger trees affects galaxy property convergence in semi-analytic models, finding that at least 128 snapshots are needed for 5% accuracy in galaxy masses.
Contribution
It quantifies the number of simulation snapshots required for convergence of galaxy properties and provides guidelines for setting snapshot intervals in galaxy formation models.
Findings
128 snapshots needed for 5% convergence in galaxy masses
Weak dependence of convergence rate on snapshot distribution
Provided input parameters for convergence tuning in Galacticus
Abstract
Dark matter halo merger trees are now routinely extracted from cosmological simulations of structure formation. These trees are frequently used as inputs to semi-analytic models of galaxy formation to provide the backbone within which galaxy formation takes place. By necessity, these merger trees are constructed from a finite set of discrete "snapshots" of the N-body simulation and so have a limited temporal resolution. To date, there has been little consideration of how this temporal resolution affects the properties of galaxies formed within these trees. In particular, the question of how many snapshots are needed to achieve convergence in galaxy properties has not be answered. Therefore, we study the convergence in the stellar and total baryonic masses of galaxies, distribution of merger times, stellar mass functions and star formation rates in the Galacticus model of galaxy…
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