Isolated galaxies in hierarchical galaxy formation models - present-day properties and environmental histories
Michaela Hirschmann, Gabriella De Lucia, Angela Iovino, Olga Cucciati

TL;DR
This study uses hierarchical galaxy formation models to analyze the properties and histories of isolated galaxies, confirming observational trends and examining the effects of isolation criteria on galaxy classification.
Contribution
It provides a detailed statistical analysis of isolated galaxies using 2D and 3D criteria, highlighting their properties, merger histories, and the impact of projection effects.
Findings
Isolated galaxies are mostly late-type and star-forming.
Less than 15% of isolated galaxies are satellites.
Approximately 45% of isolated galaxies experienced at least one merger.
Abstract
In this study, we have carried out a detailed, statistical analysis of isolated model galaxies, taking advantage of publicly available hierarchical galaxy formation models. To select isolated galaxies, we employ 2D methods widely used in the observational literature, as well as a more stringent 3D isolation criterion that uses the full 3D-real space information. In qualitative agreement with observational results, isolated model galaxies have larger fractions of late-type, star forming galaxies with respect to randomly selected samples of galaxies with the same mass distribution. We also find that the samples of isolated model galaxies typically contain a fraction of less than 15 per cent of satellite galaxies, that reside at the outskirts of their parent haloes where the galaxy number density is low. Projection effects cause a contamination of 2D samples of about 18 per cent, while we…
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