Galaxy Zoo: Morphological classification of galaxy images from the Illustris simulation
Hugh Dickinson, Lucy Fortson, Chris Lintott, Claudia Scarlata, Kyle, Willett, Steven Bamford, Melanie Beck, Carolin Cardamone, Melanie Galloway,, Brooke Simmons, William Keel, Sandor Kruk, Karen Masters, Mark Vogelsberger,, Paul Torrey, Gregory F. Snyder

TL;DR
This study compares visual galaxy morphologies from the Illustris simulation with SDSS observations using Galaxy Zoo data, revealing mass-dependent similarities and differences likely due to simulation resolution limits.
Contribution
It provides a novel comparison of simulated and real galaxy morphologies using citizen science classifications, highlighting resolution effects and potential physical differences.
Findings
At stellar masses below 10^11 M_sun, more disk-like galaxies in Illustris than SDSS.
Convergence in morphology distributions occurs at higher masses.
Simulated galaxies show fewer unambiguously featured systems at high masses.
Abstract
Modern cosmological simulations model the universe with increasing sophistication and at higher spatial and temporal resolutions. These enhancements permit detailed comparisons between the simulation outputs and real observational data. Recent projects such as Illustris are capable of producing simulated images that are comparable to those obtained from local surveys. This paper tests how well Illustris achieves this goal across a diverse population of galaxies using visual morphologies derived from Galaxy Zoo citizen scientists. Morphological classifications provided by volunteers for simulated galaxies are compared with similar data for a compatible sample of images drawn from the SDSS Legacy Survey. This paper investigates how simple morphological characterization by human volunteers asked to distinguish smooth from featured systems differs between simulated and real galaxy images.…
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