Cosmological baryon transfer in the SIMBA simulations
Josh Borrow, Daniel Angles-Alcazar, Romeel Dave

TL;DR
This paper introduces a framework to quantify baryon movement relative to dark matter in cosmological simulations, revealing significant baryon transfer due to feedback processes, which impacts galaxy formation models.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel method to analyze baryon transfer in simulations, highlighting the extent of baryon decoupling from dark matter and its implications.
Findings
40% of baryons moved > 1h^{-1} Mpc by z=0
Only 60% of halo gas originates from initial Lagrangian regions
Up to 20% of gas in Milky Way-sized halos comes from other halos' regions
Abstract
We present a framework for characterizing the large scale movement of baryons relative to dark matter in cosmological simulations, requiring only the initial conditions and final state of the simulation. This is performed using the spread metric which quantifies the distance in the final conditions between initially neighbouring particles, and by analysing the baryonic content of final haloes relative to that of the initial Lagrangian regions defined by their dark matter component. Applying this framework to the SIMBA cosmological simulations, we show that 40% (10%) of cosmological baryons have moved () by , due primarily to entrainment of gas by jets powered by AGN, with baryons moving up to away in extreme cases. Baryons decouple from the dynamics of the dark matter component due to hydrodynamic…
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