Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/7714
Title: Symphony: Cosmological Zoom-in Simulation Suites over Four Decades of Host Halo Mass
Authors: Nadler, Ethan O.
BANERJEE, ARKA et al.
ADHIKARI, SUSMITA
Dept. of Physics
Keywords: Dark-matter substructure
Star-formation histories
Rhapsody-g simulations
Large-magellanic-cloud
Faint dwarf galaxies
Milky-way
Local group
Satellite galaxies
Luminosity functions
Missing satellites
2023-APR-WEEK1
TOC-APR-2023
2023
Issue Date: Mar-2023
Publisher: IOP Publishing
Citation: Astrophysical Journal, 945(2).
Abstract: We present Symphony, a compilation of 262 cosmological, cold-dark-matter-only zoom-in simulations spanning four decades of host halo mass, from 1011–1015 M⊙. This compilation includes three existing simulation suites at the cluster and Milky Way–mass scales, and two new suites: 39 Large Magellanic Cloud-mass (1011 M⊙) and 49 strong-lens-analog (1013 M⊙) group-mass hosts. Across the entire host halo mass range, the highest-resolution regions in these simulations are resolved with a dark matter particle mass of ≈3 × 10−7 times the host virial mass and a Plummer-equivalent gravitational softening length of ≈9 × 10−4 times the host virial radius, on average. We measure correlations between subhalo abundance and host concentration, formation time, and maximum subhalo mass, all of which peak at the Milky Way host halo mass scale. Subhalo abundances are ≈50% higher in clusters than in lower-mass hosts at fixed sub-to-host halo mass ratios. Subhalo radial distributions are approximately self-similar as a function of host mass and are less concentrated than hosts' underlying dark matter distributions. We compare our results to the semianalytic model Galacticus, which predicts subhalo mass functions with a higher normalization at the low-mass end and radial distributions that are slightly more concentrated than Symphony. We use UniverseMachine to model halo and subhalo star formation histories in Symphony, and we demonstrate that these predictions resolve the formation histories of the halos that host nearly all currently observable satellite galaxies in the universe.
URI: https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/acb68c
http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/7714
ISSN: 0004-637X
1538-4357
Appears in Collections:JOURNAL ARTICLES

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