The morphologies of present-day galaxies in the COLIBRE simulations
Victor J. Forouhar Moreno, Joop Schaye, Matthieu Schaller, Aaron Ludlow, Robert J. McGibbon, Alejandro Ben\'itez-Llambay, Evgenii Chaikin, Carlos S. Frenk, Filip Hu\v{s}ko, Sylvia Ploeckinger, Alexander J. Richings, James W. Trayford

TL;DR
This paper analyzes galaxy morphologies in the COLIBRE simulations, showing how they relate to galaxy properties and addressing previous simulation limitations to match observed relations.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive overview of galaxy morphologies in COLIBRE simulations, highlighting improved realism and detailed correlations with galaxy and halo properties.
Findings
Good convergence of morphologies across mass resolutions.
Kinematic morphology correlates strongly with stellar mass and color.
Disky galaxies are more gas-rich, star-forming, and younger.
Abstract
The diversity of galaxy morphologies and their relations with galaxy and halo properties is fundamental to understanding galaxy formation. Cosmological simulations of representative volumes can help disentangle the origin of observed correlations, but most suffer from two main limitations that affect morphologies: an over-pressurised interstellar medium and spurious interactions between stellar and dark matter particles. We present an overview of galaxy morphologies in the COLIBRE simulations, which address these limitations and reproduce many observed galaxy scaling relations. To quantify galaxy morphology, we use four (strongly-correlated) theory-space metrics, three kinematic and one spatial. We explore how different choices and limitations affect these indicators, including luminosity- versus mass-weighting, aperture size and shot noise. Overall, we find good convergence in…
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