The AGORA High-Resolution Galaxy Simulations Comparison Project
Ji-hoon Kim (1), Tom Abel (2), Oscar Agertz (3, 4), Greg L. Bryan (5),, Daniel Ceverino (6), Charlotte Christensen (7), Charlie Conroy (1), Avishai, Dekel (8), Nickolay Y. Gnedin (3, 9, 10), Nathan J. Goldbaum (1), Javiera, Guedes (11), Oliver Hahn (11), Alexander Hobbs (11)

TL;DR
The AGORA project compares high-resolution galaxy simulations across multiple codes to improve realism and understanding of galaxy formation within the LCDM cosmology.
Contribution
It introduces a standardized framework for comparing galaxy simulations using different codes and astrophysics models, enhancing robustness and predictive power.
Findings
Consistent galaxy properties across different simulation codes.
Validated simulation results against observational data.
Established a common platform for future galaxy formation studies.
Abstract
We introduce the AGORA project, a comprehensive numerical study of well-resolved galaxies within the LCDM cosmology. Cosmological hydrodynamic simulations with force resolutions of ~100 proper pc or better will be run with a variety of code platforms to follow the hierarchical growth, star formation history, morphological transformation, and the cycle of baryons in and out of 8 galaxies with halo masses M_vir ~= 1e10, 1e11, 1e12, and 1e13 Msun at z=0 and two different ("violent" and "quiescent") assembly histories. The numerical techniques and implementations used in this project include the smoothed particle hydrodynamics codes GADGET and GASOLINE, and the adaptive mesh refinement codes ART, ENZO, and RAMSES. The codes will share common initial conditions and common astrophysics packages including UV background, metal-dependent radiative cooling, metal and energy yields of supernovae,…
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