The influence of the environmental history on quenching star formation in a $\Lambda$CDM universe
Michaela Hirschmann, Gabriella De Lucia, Dave Wilman, Simone Weinmann,, Angela Iovino, Olga Cucciati, Stefano Zibetti, \'Alvaro Villalobos

TL;DR
This study analyzes how environmental history influences star formation quenching in galaxies, revealing discrepancies between models and observations and suggesting improvements in galaxy formation simulations.
Contribution
It highlights the limitations of current models in reproducing observed environmental effects on galaxy quenching and proposes specific modifications to improve their accuracy.
Findings
Models underestimate quiescent centrals and overestimate quiescent satellites.
Quenching in satellites correlates with halo mass and orbital history.
Gas consumption timescales are around 5 Gyr for low-mass satellites.
Abstract
We present a detailed analysis of the influence of the environment and of the environmental history on quenching star formation in central and satellite galaxies in the local Universe. We take advantage of publicly available galaxy catalogues obtained from applying a galaxy formation model to the Millennium simulation. In addition to halo mass, we consider the local density of galaxies within various fixed scales. Comparing our model predictions to observational data (SDSS), we demonstrate that the models are failing to reproduce the observed density dependence of the quiescent galaxy fraction in several aspects: for most of the stellar mass ranges and densities explored, models cannot reproduce the observed similar behaviour of centrals and satellites, they slightly under-estimate the quiescent fraction of centrals and significantly over-estimate that of satellites. We show that in the…
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