The effect of metal enrichment and galactic winds on galaxy formation in cosmological zoom simulations
Michaela Hirschmann, Thorsten Naab, Romeel Dave, Benjamin D., Oppenheimer, Jeremiah P. Ostriker, Rachel S. Somerville, Ludwig Oser,, Reinhard Genzel, Linda J. Tacconi, Natascha M. Foerster-Schreiber, Andreas, Burkert, Shy Genel

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological zoom simulations to examine how metal cooling and galactic winds influence galaxy formation, revealing their effects on star formation history, galaxy size, and stellar composition across different halo masses.
Contribution
It introduces detailed simulations showing the combined impact of metal cooling and galactic winds on galaxy evolution, matching some observations but highlighting ongoing discrepancies.
Findings
Suppresses early star formation and matches observed histories.
Increases high-redshift galaxy sizes and gas fractions.
Over-predicts low-redshift star formation in massive galaxies.
Abstract
We investigate the differential effects of metal cooling and galactic stellar winds on the cosmological formation of individual galaxies with three sets of cosmological, hydrodynamical zoom simulations of 45 halos in the mass range 10^11<M_halo<10^13M_sun. Models including both galactic winds and metal cooling (i) suppress early star formation at z>1 and predict reasonable star formation histories, (ii) produce galaxies with high cold gas fractions (30-60 per cent) at high redshift, (iii) significantly reduce the galaxy formation efficiencies for halos (M_halo<10^12M_sun) at all redshifts in agreement with observational and abundance matching constraints, (iv) result in high-redshift galaxies with reduced circular velocities matching the observed Tully-Fisher relation at z~2, and (v) significantly increase the sizes of low-mass galaxies (M_stellar<3x10^10M_sun) at high redshift…
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