nIFTY galaxy cluster simulations III: The Similarity & Diversity of Galaxies & Subhaloes
Pascal J. Elahi, Alexander Knebe, Frazer R. Pearce, Chris Power,, Gustavo Yepes, Weiguang Cui, Daniel Cunnama, Scott T. Kay, Federico, Sembolini, Alexander M. Beck, Romeel Dav\'e, Sean February, Shuiyao Huang,, Neal Katz, Ian G. McCarthy, Giuseppe Murante, Valentin Perret, Ewald

TL;DR
This study compares galaxy and subhalo properties across different hydrodynamical simulation codes in a galaxy cluster, revealing significant variations due to subgrid physics and feedback processes, highlighting challenges in galaxy formation modeling.
Contribution
It systematically evaluates the consistency and diversity of galaxy and subhalo properties across multiple simulation codes with different physics implementations.
Findings
Subhalo populations are consistent within 10% in dark matter only and non-radiative runs.
Galaxy stellar masses vary by up to a factor of 4 between codes.
Including feedback physics increases diversity and systematic differences.
Abstract
We examine subhaloes and galaxies residing in a simulated LCDM galaxy cluster () produced by hydrodynamical codes ranging from classic Smooth Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH), newer SPH codes, adaptive and moving mesh codes. These codes use subgrid models to capture galaxy formation physics. We compare how well these codes reproduce the same subhaloes/galaxies in gravity only, non-radiative hydrodynamics and full feedback physics runs by looking at the overall subhalo/galaxy distribution and on an individual objects basis. We find the subhalo population is reproduced to within for both dark matter only and non-radiative runs, with individual objects showing code-to-code scatter of dex, although the gas in non-radiative simulations shows significant scatter. Including feedback physics significantly increases the…
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