Galaxy Formation in WDM Cosmology
N. Menci, F. Fiore, A. Lamastra

TL;DR
This study explores how Warm Dark Matter (WDM) influences galaxy formation by modifying the power spectrum, resulting in fewer low-mass galaxies and a sharper cutoff at high luminosities, aligning better with observations.
Contribution
It is the first to analyze WDM effects on galaxy properties using a semi-analytic model, demonstrating potential solutions to CDM's overprediction issues.
Findings
Flattened faint-end slope of luminosity functions in WDM
Sharper cutoff at bright end for low redshift galaxies
Reduced number of low-mass haloes and satellite galaxies in WDM
Abstract
We investigate for the first time the effects of a Warm Dark Matter (WDM) power spectrum on the statistical properties of galaxies using a semi-analytic model of galaxy formation. The WDM spectrum we adopt as a reference case is suppressed - compared to the standard Cold Dark Matter (CDM) case - below a cut-off scale ~ 1 Mpc corresponding (for thermal relic WDM particles) to a mass m_X=0.75 keV. This ensures consistency with present bounds provided by the microwave background WMAP data and by the comparison of hydrodynamical N-body simulations with observed Lyman-{\alpha} forest. We run our fiducial semi-analytic model with such a WDM spectrum to derive galaxy luminosity functions (in B, UV, and K bands) and the stellar mass distributions over a wide range of cosmic epochs, to compare with recent observations and with the results in the CDM case. The predicted color distribution of…
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.
