Galaxy Formation as a Cosmological Tool. I: The Galaxy Merger History as a Measure of Cosmological Parameters
Christopher J. Conselice, Asa F.L. Bluck, Alice Mortlock, David, Palamara, Andrew J. Benson

TL;DR
This paper explores how galaxy merger histories, influenced by cosmological parameters, can serve as a tool to constrain the universe's fundamental properties, using theoretical models and upcoming survey data.
Contribution
It introduces a method to connect galaxy merger history with cosmological parameters, highlighting the potential of future surveys to improve cosmological constraints.
Findings
Merger fraction varies up to a factor of three with cosmology.
Current merger measurements align with the concordance cosmology.
Future surveys can significantly refine cosmological parameter estimates.
Abstract
As galaxy formation and evolution over long cosmic time-scales depends to a large degree on the structure of the universe, the assembly history of galaxies is potentially a powerful approach for learning about the universe itself. In this paper we examine the merger history of dark matter halos based on the Extended Press-Schechter formalism as a function of cosmological parameters, redshift and halo mass. We calculate how major halo mergers are influenced by changes in the cosmological values of , , , the dark matter particle temperature (warm vs. cold dark matter), and the value of a constant and evolving equation of state parameter . We find that the merger fraction at a given halo mass varies by up to a factor of three for halos forming under the assumption of Cold Dark Matter, within different underling cosmological parameters. We…
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