Galaxy Morphology and Star Formation in the Illustris Simulation at z=0
Gregory F. Snyder, Paul Torrey, Jennifer M. Lotz, Shy Genel, Cameron, K. McBride, Mark Vogelsberger, Annalisa Pillepich, Dylan Nelson, Laura V., Sales, Debora Sijacki, Lars Hernquist, Volker Springel

TL;DR
This study uses the Illustris Simulation to analyze galaxy morphology and star formation at z=0, finding that simulated galaxies exhibit realistic structural diversity and correlations with physical properties, with some size and feature discrepancies.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the Illustris Simulation can reproduce observed galaxy morphological trends and their relation to mass and star formation, providing insights into galaxy formation models.
Findings
Illustris creates diverse galaxy morphologies consistent with observations.
Galaxy morphology correlates with rotation and environment as observed.
Simulated galaxies at certain masses show size and structural discrepancies.
Abstract
We study how optical galaxy morphology depends on mass and star formation rate (SFR) in the Illustris Simulation. To do so, we measure automated galaxy structures in 10808 simulated galaxies at z=0 with stellar masses 10^9.7 < M_*/M_sun < 10^12.3. We add observational realism to idealized synthetic images and measure non-parametric statistics in rest-frame optical and near-IR images from four directions. We find that Illustris creates a morphologically diverse galaxy population, occupying the observed bulge strength locus and reproducing median morphology trends versus stellar mass, SFR, and compactness. Morphology correlates realistically with rotation, following classification schemes put forth by kinematic surveys. Type fractions as a function of environment agree roughly with data. These results imply that connections among mass, star formation, and galaxy structure arise naturally…
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