The Dark Side of Galaxy Color
Andrew P. Hearin (Fermilab), Douglas F. Watson (KICP/U.Chicago)

TL;DR
This paper introduces age distribution matching, a model linking galaxy color and luminosity to halo properties, showing that galaxy assembly history influences galaxy color and accurately reproduces observed galaxy distributions.
Contribution
The paper proposes a novel formalism connecting galaxy color to halo assembly history via the z_starve parameter, improving galaxy-halo occupation modeling.
Findings
Model accurately reproduces galaxy color and luminosity distributions
Galaxy color correlates with halo assembly epoch z_starve
Halo and galaxy assembly are correlated
Abstract
We present age distribution matching, a theoretical formalism for predicting how galaxies of luminosity L and color C occupy dark matter halos. Our model supposes that there are just two fundamental properties of a halo that determine the color and brightness of the galaxy it hosts: the maximum circular velocity Vmax, and the redshift z_starve that correlates with the epoch at which the star formation in the galaxy ceases. The halo property z_starve is intended to encompass physical characteristics of halo mass assembly that may deprive the galaxy of its cold gas supply and, ultimately, quench its star formation. The new, defining feature of the model is that, at fixed luminosity, galaxy color is in monotonic correspondence with z_starve, with the larger values of z_starve being assigned redder colors. We populate an N- body simulation with a mock galaxy catalog based on age…
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