The abundance of (not just) dark matter haloes
Till Sawala, Carlos S. Frenk, Robert A. Crain, Adrian Jenkins, Joop, Schaye, Tom Theuns, Jesus Zavala

TL;DR
This paper investigates how baryonic physics influences the abundance and properties of structures in Lambda-CDM cosmology, showing that baryons significantly reduce the number of observable low-mass galaxies and reconcile models with observations.
Contribution
It provides new insights into baryonic effects on structure formation and offers correction methods for dark matter-only simulations to better match observations.
Findings
Baryons reduce the abundance of structures below ~10^12 solar masses.
Accounting for baryons aligns Lambda-CDM predictions with observed galaxy velocity functions.
Dark subhaloes are common, affecting galaxy abundance and mass estimates.
Abstract
We study the effect of baryons on the abundance of structures and substructures in a Lambda-CDM cosmology, using a pair of high resolution cosmological simulations from the GIMIC project. Both simulations use identical initial conditions, but while one contains only dark matter, the other also includes baryons. We find that gas pressure, reionisation, supernova feedback, stripping, and truncated accretion systematically reduce the total mass and the abundance of structures below ~10^12 solar masses compared to the pure dark matter simulation. Taking this into account and adopting an appropriate detection threshold lowers the abundance of observed galaxies with maximum circular velocities below 100 km/s, significantly reducing the reported discrepancy between Lambda-CDM and the measured HI velocity function of the ALFALFA survey. We also show that the stellar-to-total mass ratios of…
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