On the scatter in the relation between stellar mass and halo mass: random or halo formation time dependent?
Lan Wang, Gabriella De Lucia, Simone M. Weinmann

TL;DR
This paper compares empirical and semi-analytical models of galaxy-halo relations, revealing that the dependence of stellar mass on halo formation time influences galaxy clustering and challenges the assumption of random scatter in these relations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that galaxy stellar mass depends on halo formation time in semi-analytical models, affecting clustering predictions and highlighting limitations of random scatter assumptions.
Findings
Rescaled DLB07 model fits observed galaxy statistics.
Guo11 model over-predicts clustering of low-mass galaxies.
Galaxy stellar mass correlates with halo formation time, especially in Guo11.
Abstract
The empirical HOD model of Wang et al. 2006 fits, by construction, both the stellar mass function and correlation function of galaxies in the local Universe. In contrast, the semi-analytical models of De Lucia & Blazoit 2007 (DLB07) and Guo et al. 2011 (Guo11), built on the same dark matter halo merger trees than the empirical model, still have difficulties in reproducing these observational data simultaneously. We compare the relations between the stellar mass of galaxies and their host halo mass in the three models, and find that they are different. When the relations are rescaled to have the same median values and the same scatter as in Wang et al., the rescaled DLB07 model can fit both the measured galaxy stellar mass function and the correlation function measured in different galaxy stellar mass bins. In contrast, the rescaled Guo11 model still over-predicts the clustering of…
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