Monday, February 27, 2012

1202.5315 (J. M. Gabor et al.)

The Growth of Red Sequence Galaxies in a Cosmological Hydrodynamic Simulation    [PDF]

J. M. Gabor, R. Davé
We examine the cosmic growth of the red sequence in a cosmological hydrodynamic simulation that includes a heuristic prescription for quenching star formation that yields a realistic passive galaxy population today. In this prescription, halos dominated by hot gas are continually heated to prevent their coronae from fueling new star formation. Hot coronae primarily form in halos above ~10^12 Msun, so that galaxies with stellar masses ~10^10.5 Msun are the first to be quenched and move onto the red sequence at z>2. The red sequence is concurrently populated at low masses by satellite galaxies in large halos that are starved of new fuel, resulting in a dip in passive galaxy number densities around 10^10 Msun that agrees qualitatively with observations. Stellar mass growth continues for galaxies even after joining the red sequence, primarily through minor mergers with a typical mass ratio ~20%. For the most massive systems, the size growth implied by the distribution of merger mass ratios is typically ~2 times the corresponding mass growth, consistent with observations. This model reproduces mass-density and colour-density trends in the local universe, with essentially no evolution to z=1, with the hint that such relations may be washed out by z~2. Our simulation produces a high red galaxy fraction at both high galaxy overdensity, independent of stellar mass, and high mass, independent of overdensity, suggesting quenching mechanisms associated with both environment and mass; in our model, both are connected to the presence of surrounding hot gas.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1202.5315

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