Submillimetre galaxies in cosmological hydrodynamical simulations -- an opportunity for constraining feedback models
Christopher C. Hayward, Martin Sparre, Scott C. Chapman, Lars, Hernquist, Dylan Nelson, R\"udiger Pakmor, Annalisa Pillepich, Volker, Springel, Paul Torrey, Mark Vogelsberger, and Rainer Weinberger

TL;DR
This study compares simulated and observed submillimetre galaxy counts using cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, highlighting the potential of SMGs to constrain feedback models in galaxy formation simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a method to predict SMG counts from simulations post-processing, revealing differences between Illustris and IllustrisTNG related to feedback models.
Findings
IllustrisTNG underpredicts SMG counts compared to observations.
Illustris reproduces observed SMG counts at certain flux densities.
SMG redshift distribution in IllustrisTNG matches observations.
Abstract
Submillimetre galaxies (SMGs) have long posed a challenge for theorists, and self-consistently reproducing the properties of the SMG population in a large-volume cosmological hydrodynamical simulation has not yet been achieved. We use a scaling relation derived from previous simulations plus radiative transfer calculations to predict the submm flux densities of simulated SMGs drawn from cosmological simulations from the Illustris and IllustrisTNG projects based on the simulated galaxies' star formation rates (SFRs) and dust masses and compare the predicted number counts with observations. We find that the predicted SMG number counts based on IllustrisTNG are significantly less than observed (more than 1 dex at mJy). The simulation from the original Illustris project yields more SMGs than IllustrisTNG: the predicted counts are consistent with those observed at both…
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