The Three Hundred : contrasting clusters galaxy density in hydrodynamical and dark matter simulations
A. Jim\'enez Mu\~noz, J. F. Mac\'ias-P\'erez, G. Yepes, M. De Petris,, A. Ferragamo, W. Cui, J.S. G\'omez

TL;DR
This study compares hydrodynamical and dark matter simulations of galaxy clusters to assess their effectiveness for upcoming cosmological surveys, highlighting the importance of resolution and baryonic physics in accurately modeling galaxy distributions.
Contribution
It demonstrates how baryonic physics affects subhalo survival and distribution, and identifies the resolution needed for simulations to match Euclid survey expectations.
Findings
Baryonic physics preserves more low-mass subhalos.
Dark matter only simulations may bias galaxy density profiles.
A resolution of 1.8×10^8 h^{-1} M_sun is needed for Euclid-like data.
Abstract
Cluster number counts will be a key cosmological probe in the next decade thanks to the Euclid satellite mission. For this purpose, cluster detection algorithm performance, which are sensitive to the spatial distribution of the cluster galaxy members and their luminosity function, need to be accurately characterized. Using The Three Hundred hydrodynamical and dark matter only simulations we study a complete sample of massive clusters beyond 7 (5) 10 M at redshift 0 (1) on a volume. We find that the mass resolution of the current hydrodynamical simulations (1.5 10 M) is not enough to characterize the luminosity function of the sample in the perspective of Euclid data. Nevertheless, these simulations are still useful to characterize the spatial distribution of the cluster substructures assuming a common relative…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
