Galactic star formation and accretion histories from matching galaxies to dark matter haloes
Benjamin P. Moster, Thorsten Naab, Simon D. M. White

TL;DR
This paper introduces a multi-epoch abundance matching method to connect galaxy stellar masses with dark matter halo histories, predicting star formation and accretion patterns across cosmic time.
Contribution
The study develops a self-consistent statistical model that links galaxy and halo evolution over redshift, incorporating satellite accretion and providing new fitting functions for galaxy properties.
Findings
Star formation efficiency peaks at 23% at z=0, decreasing to 9% at z=4.
Massive haloes form stars earlier, with peak star formation at higher redshifts.
In low-mass haloes, satellite accretion minimally contributes to galaxy assembly.
Abstract
We present a new statistical method to determine the relationship between the stellar masses of galaxies and the masses of their host dark matter haloes over the entire cosmic history from z~4 to the present. This multi-epoch abundance matching (MEAM) model self-consistently takes into account that satellite galaxies first become satellites at times earlier than they are observed. We employ a redshift-dependent parameterization of the stellar-to-halo mass relation to populate haloes and subhaloes in the Millennium simulations with galaxies, requiring that the observed stellar mass functions at several redshifts be reproduced simultaneously. Using merger trees extracted from the dark matter simulations in combination with MEAM, we predict the average assembly histories of galaxies, separating into star formation within the galaxies (in-situ) and accretion of stars (ex-situ). The peak…
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