Testing Galaxy Formation Simulations with Damped Lyman-${\alpha}$ Abundance and Metallicity Evolution
Sultan Hassan (NMSU/UWC), Kristian Finlator (NMSU/DAWN), Romeel Dav\'e, (Edinburgh/UWC/SAAO), Christopher W. Churchill (NMSU), and J. Xavier, Prochaska (UCSC/Kavli IPMU)

TL;DR
This study compares two advanced cosmological simulations to understand damped Lyman-alpha absorbers, revealing how feedback mechanisms and ultraviolet background influence their properties and emphasizing the importance of DLA observations in galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It demonstrates the sensitivity of DLA properties to feedback and UVB parameters, and highlights the role of DLA metallicity distributions in constraining galaxy formation physics.
Findings
Strong UVB and slow outflows under-produce DLA abundance.
Faster outflows lead to more metal-rich DLAs.
H2-regulated star formation models predict extremely low-metallicity DLAs.
Abstract
We examine the properties of damped Lyman- absorbers (DLAs) emerging from a single set of cosmological initial conditions in two state-of-the-art cosmological hydrodynamic simulations: {\sc Simba} and {\sc Technicolor Dawn}. The former includes star formation and black hole feedback treatments that yield a good match with low-redshift galaxy properties, while the latter uses multi-frequency radiative transfer to model an inhomogeneous ultraviolet background (UVB) self-consistently and is calibrated to match the Thomson scattering optical depth, UVB amplitude, and Ly- forest mean transmission at . Both simulations are in reasonable agreement with the measured stellar mass and star formation rate functions at , and both reproduce the observed neutral hydrogen cosmological mass density, . However, the DLA abundance and metallicity…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
