The dwarf stellar mass function in different environments and the lack of a generic missing dwarfs problem in {\Lambda}CDM
Ilin Lazar, Sugata Kaviraj, Garreth Martin, Aaron Watkins, Darshan Kakkad, Brian Bichang'a, Katarina Kraljic, Sukyoung K. Yi, Yohan Dubois, Julien E. G. Devriendt, Sebastien Peirani, Christophe Pichon

TL;DR
This study investigates how the galaxy stellar mass function varies with environment and finds no evidence of a universal missing dwarfs problem in LambdaCDM models, using deep observations and simulations.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of dwarf galaxy populations across different environments, combining deep observational data with multiple high-resolution simulations.
Findings
Environmental dependence of the dwarf mass function is significant.
No evidence of a universal missing dwarfs problem in LambdaCDM.
Mass function shape varies with proximity to large-scale structures.
Abstract
We combine deep photometric data in the COSMOS and XMM-LSS fields with high-resolution cosmological hydrodynamical simulations to explore two key questions: (1) how does the galaxy stellar mass function, particularly in the dwarf (Mstar < 10^9.5 MSun ) regime, vary with environment, defined as distance from the large-scale structure (LSS) traced by nodes and filaments in the cosmic web? (2) is there a generic 'missing dwarfs' problem in LambdaCDM predictions when all environments - and not just satellites around Milky Way like galaxies - are considered? The depth of the observational data used here enables us to construct complete, unbiased samples of galaxies, down to Mstar ~ 10^7 MSun and out to z ~ 0.4. Strong environmental differences are found for the galaxy stellar mass function when considering distance from LSS. As we move closer to LSS, the dwarf mass function becomes…
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