Sub-mm Galaxies in Cosmological Simulations
Mark A. Fardal, Neal Katz, David H. Weinberg, Romeel Dav\'e, Lars, Hernquist

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamic cosmological simulations to predict sub-mm galaxy counts, their properties, and evolution, aligning with observations and suggesting these sources are massive, steadily star-forming galaxies in dense environments.
Contribution
It provides a physical model linking sub-mm sources to massive galaxies forming stars steadily over long timescales, with predictions matching observed counts and redshift distributions.
Findings
Predicted number counts match observations above ~1 mJy.
Sub-mm sources are mainly massive galaxies with moderate star formation rates.
These sources are likely progenitors of massive ellipticals in dense environments.
Abstract
We study the predicted sub-mm emission from massive galaxies in a Lambda-CDM universe, using hydrodynamic cosmological simulations. Assuming that most of the emission from newly formed stars is absorbed and reradiated in the rest-frame far-IR, we calculate the number of galaxies that would be detected in sub-mm surveys conducted with SCUBA. The predicted number counts are strongly dependent on the assumed dust temperature and emissivity law. With plausible choices for SED parameters (e.g., T=35 K, beta=1.0), the simulation predictions reproduce the observed number counts above ~ 1 mJy. The sources have a broad redshift distribution with median z ~ 2, in reasonable agreement with observational constraints. However, the predicted count distribution may be too steep at the faint end, and the fraction of low redshift objects may be larger than observed. In this physical model of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
