The Evolution of Assembly Bias
Sergio Contreras, Idit Zehavi, Nelson Padilla, Carlton Baugh, Esteban, Jim\'enez, Ivan Lacerna

TL;DR
This study investigates how assembly bias in galaxy formation evolves over cosmic time using a semi-analytical model and N-body simulations, revealing redshift-dependent changes in halo and galaxy clustering behaviors.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the evolution of assembly bias and offers extensive occupation function data for realistic mock galaxy catalogues.
Findings
Assembly bias weakens for halo age at higher redshift.
Reversal and increase of assembly bias for halo concentration at higher redshift.
Galaxy clustering decreases with redshift and lower number density samples.
Abstract
We examine the evolution of assembly bias using a semi-analytical model of galaxy formation implemented in the Millennium-WMAP7 N-body simulation. We consider fixed number density galaxy samples ranked by stellar mass or star formation rate. We investigate how the clustering of haloes and their galaxy content depend on halo formation time and concentration, and how these relationships evolve with redshift. At the dependences of halo clustering on halo concentration and formation time are similar. However, at higher redshift, halo assembly bias weakens for haloes selected by age, and reverses and increases for haloes selected by concentration. The variation of the halo occupation with concentration and formation time is also similar at and changes at higher redshifts. In this case, the occupancy variation with halo age stays mostly constant with redshift but decreases for…
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