The EAGLE simulations: atomic hydrogen associated with galaxies
Robert A. Crain, Yannick M. Bahe, Claudia del P. Lagos, Alireza, Rahmati, Joop Schaye, Ian G. McCarthy, Antonino Marasco, Richard G. Bower,, Matthieu Schaller, Tom Theuns, Thijs van der Hulst

TL;DR
The paper evaluates the atomic hydrogen properties of galaxies in the EAGLE simulations, highlighting how resolution and feedback parameters influence the realism of HI distribution and its evolution from redshift 1 to 0.
Contribution
It demonstrates that higher-resolution EAGLE simulations better reproduce observed HI properties and clustering, and elucidates the processes governing HI acquisition and loss in galaxies.
Findings
Higher-resolution simulations match observed HI mass functions.
Most present-day galaxy HI is acquired via smooth accretion at z~1.
Over 40% of HI is converted to stars or ejected by z=0.
Abstract
We examine the properties of atomic hydrogen (HI) associated with galaxies in the EAGLE simulations of galaxy formation. EAGLE's feedback parameters were calibrated to reproduce the stellar mass function and galaxy sizes at , and we assess whether this calibration also yields realistic HI properties. We estimate the self-shielding density with a fitting function calibrated using radiation transport simulations, and correct for molecular hydrogen with empirical or theoretical relations. The `standard-resolution' simulations systematically underestimate HI column densities, leading to an HI deficiency in low-mass () galaxies and poor reproduction of the observed HI mass function. These shortcomings are largely absent from EAGLE simulations featuring a factor of 8 (2) better mass (spatial) resolution, within which the HI mass of galaxies evolves more mildly…
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