On the influence of halo mass accretion history on galaxy properties and assembly bias
Antonio D. Montero-Dorta, Jon\'as Chaves-Montero, M. Celeste Artale,, Ginevra Favole

TL;DR
This study investigates how the specific mass accretion history of dark matter haloes influences galaxy properties and clustering, revealing a strong correlation and evolution of assembly bias effects across redshifts using the IllustrisTNG300 simulation.
Contribution
It introduces the slope of the specific mass accretion history as a key predictor of galaxy properties and clustering, providing new insights into galaxy assembly bias evolution.
Findings
Halo and galaxy properties correlate with the sMAH slope ($eta$).
Galaxy assembly bias amplitude increases with redshift, reaching a factor of 2 at z=1.
$eta$ is a better predictor of galaxy properties than traditional halo proxies.
Abstract
Halo assembly bias is the secondary dependence of the clustering of dark-matter haloes on their assembly histories at fixed halo mass. This established dependence is expected to manifest itself on the clustering of the galaxy population, a potential effect commonly known as galaxy assembly bias. Using the IllustrisTNG300 magnetohydrodynamical simulation, we analyse the dependence of the properties and clustering of galaxies on the shape of the specific mass accretion history of their hosting haloes (sMAH). We first show that several halo and galaxy properties strongly correlate with the slope of the sMAH () at fixed halo mass. Namely, haloes with increasingly steeper increment their halo masses faster at early times, and their hosted galaxies present larger stellar-to-halo mass ratios, lose their gas faster, reach the peak of their star formation histories at higher…
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