The SAMI Galaxy Survey: comparing 3D spectroscopic observations with galaxies from cosmological hydrodynamical simulations
Jesse van de Sande, Claudia D.P. Lagos, Charlotte Welker, Joss, Bland-Hawthorn, Felix Schulze, Rhea-Silvia Remus, Yannick Bahe, Sarah Brough,, Julia J. Bryant, Luca Cortese, Scott M. Croom, Julien Devriendt, Yohan, Dubois, Michael Goodwin, Iraklis S. Konstantopoulos

TL;DR
This study compares predictions from four cosmological hydrodynamical simulations with observational data from multiple galaxy surveys at redshift zero, assessing their accuracy in reproducing galaxy properties and identifying areas for improvement.
Contribution
It provides a detailed, methodologically careful comparison between simulations and observations, highlighting successes and discrepancies in galaxy structural and dynamical properties.
Findings
Magneticum matches observed galaxy ellipticities well.
Simulations show moderate offsets in size, velocity dispersion, and stellar age.
Massive galaxies are better reproduced than low-mass ones.
Abstract
Cosmological hydrodynamical simulations are rich tools to understand the build-up of stellar mass and angular momentum in galaxies, but require some level of calibration to observations. We compare predictions at from the Eagle, Hydrangea, Horizon-AGN, and Magneticum simulations with integral field spectroscopic (IFS) data from the SAMI Galaxy Survey, ATLAS3D, CALIFA and MASSIVE surveys. The main goal of this work is to simultaneously compare structural, dynamical, and stellar population measurements in order to identify key areas of success and tension. We have taken great care to ensure that our simulated measurement methods match the observational methods as closely as possible. We find that the Eagle and Hydrangea simulations reproduce many galaxy relations but with some offsets at high stellar masses. There are moderate mismatches in (+), (-), …
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