The building up of observed stellar scaling relations of massive galaxies and the connection to black hole growth in the TNG50 simulation
S. Varma, M. Huertas-Company, A. Pillepich, D. Nelson, V., Rodriguez-Gomez, A. Dekel, S.M. Faber, P. Iglesias-Navarro, D.C. Koo, J., Primack

TL;DR
This study uses the TNG50 simulation to analyze how massive galaxies develop their observed structures and morphologies over time, linking these changes to the growth and activity of central supermassive black holes.
Contribution
It provides a detailed simulation-based analysis of galaxy morphological evolution and its connection to SMBH growth, matching many observed relations and revealing new insights into quenching processes.
Findings
Simulation reproduces observed galaxy morphological evolution.
Galaxies increase central stellar density and change morphology around 10^10.5 M_sun.
SMBH activity is linked to galaxy quenching and structural growth.
Abstract
[abridged] We study how mock-observed stellar morphological and structural properties of massive galaxies are built up between and in the TNG50 cosmological simulation. We generate mock images with the properties of the CANDELS survey and derive Sersic parameters and optical rest-frame morphologies as usually done in the observations. Overall, the simulation reproduces the observed evolution of the abundances of different galaxy morphological types of star-forming and quiescent galaxies. The and relations of the simulated star-forming and quenched galaxies also match the observed slopes and zeropoints to within 1-. In the simulation, galaxies increase their observed central stellar mass density () and transform in morphology from irregular/clumpy systems to normal Hubble-type systems in the Star Formation Main…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
