The evolution of the star formation rate function in the EAGLE simulations: A comparison with UV, IR and H$\alpha$ observations from z ~ 8 to z ~ 0
A. Katsianis, G. Blanc, C. P. Lagos, N. Tejos, R. G. Bower, A. Alavi,, V. Gonzalez, T. Theuns, M. Schaller, S. Lopez

TL;DR
This study uses the EAGLE simulations to analyze galaxy star formation rates from redshift 8 to 0, comparing with observations and examining feedback effects, revealing the roles of supernovae and AGN feedback across cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of simulated and observed star formation rate functions over a wide redshift range, highlighting feedback mechanisms' impact on galaxy evolution.
Findings
Supernova feedback controls galaxy abundance at all redshifts.
AGN feedback influences only the highest star-forming systems at low redshift.
Most star formation occurs in high-mass halos (10^{11-13} M_sun) even early on.
Abstract
We investigate the evolution of the galaxy Star Formation Rate Function (SFRF) and Cosmic Star Formation Rate Density (CSFRD) of galaxies in the Evolution and Assembly of GaLaxies and their Environments (EAGLE) simulations. In addition, we present a compilation of UV, IR and H SFRFs and compare these with the predictions from the EAGLE suite of cosmological hydrodynamic simulations. We find that the constraints implied by different indicators are inconsistent with each other for the highest star-forming objects at z < 2, a problem that is possibly related to selection biases and the uncertainties of dust attenuation effects. EAGLE's feedback parameters were calibrated to reproduce realistic galaxy sizes and stellar masses at z = 0.1. In this work we test if and why those choices yield realistic Star Formation Rates (SFRs) for as well. We demonstrate…
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