Observed structural parameters of EAGLE galaxies: reconciling the mass-size relation in simulations with local observations
Anna de Graaff, James Trayford, Marijn Franx, Matthieu Schaller, Joop, Schaye, Arjen van der Wel

TL;DR
This study compares simulated galaxy sizes and morphologies from the EAGLE simulation with observations, showing that optical light measurements improve the match with real data and highlighting differences in galaxy profiles.
Contribution
It demonstrates that measuring galaxy sizes using optical light reduces discrepancies between simulations and observations, emphasizing the importance of observational methods in galaxy analysis.
Findings
r-band sizes are typically 0.1 dex larger than stellar half-mass radii
r-band sizes improve agreement with observed mass-size relations
Simulated galaxy morphologies are often less similar to local early-type galaxies
Abstract
We use mock images of galaxies in the 100 Mpc EAGLE simulation to establish the differences between the sizes and morphologies inferred from the stellar mass distributions and the optical light distributions. The optical, -band images used were constructed with a radiative transfer method to account for the effects of dust, and we measure galaxy structural parameters by fitting S\'ersic models to the images with Galfit. We find that the derived -band half-light radii differ systematically from the stellar half-mass radii, as the -band sizes are typically 0.1 dex larger, and can deviate by as much as dex. The magnitude of this size discrepancy depends strongly on the dust attenuation and star formation activity within the galaxy, as well as the measurement method used. Consequently, we demonstrate that the -band sizes significantly improve the agreement…
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