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Dark-ages Reionization and Galaxy formation simulation – I. The dynamical lives of high-redshift galaxies

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posted on 2024-07-26, 14:09 authored by Gregory B. Poole, Paul W. Angel, Simon J. Mutch, Chris Power, Alan DuffyAlan Duffy, Paul M. Geil, Andrei Mesinger, Stuart B. Wyithe
We present the Dark-ages Reionization and Galaxy formation Observables from Numerical Simulations (DRAGONS) programme and Tiamat, the collisionless N-body simulation programme upon which DRAGONS is built. The primary trait distinguishing Tiamat from other large simulation programme is its density of outputs at high redshift (100 from z = 35 to z = 5; roughly one every 10 Myr) enabling the construction of very accurate merger trees at an epoch when galaxy formation is rapid and mergers extremely frequent. We find that the friends-of-friends halo mass function agrees well with the prediction of Watson et al. at high masses, but deviates at low masses, perhaps due to our use of a different halo finder or perhaps indicating a break from ‘universal’ behaviour. We then analyse the dynamical evolution of galaxies during the Epoch of Reionization finding that only a small fraction (∼20 per cent) of galactic haloes are relaxed. We illustrate this using standard relaxation metrics to establish two dynamical recovery time-scales: (i) haloes need ∼1.5 dynamical times following formation, and (ii) ∼2 dynamical times following a major (3:1) or minor (10:1) merger to be relaxed. This is remarkably consistent across a wide mass range. Lastly, we use a phase-space halo finder to illustrate that major mergers drive long-lived massive phase-space structures which take many dynamical times to dissipate. This can yield significant differences in the inferred mass build-up of galactic haloes and we suggest that care must be taken to ensure a physically meaningful match between the galaxy formation physics of semi-analytic models and the halo finders supplying their input.

Funding

Distant horizons: understanding the first galaxies in the universe

Australian Research Council

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Observing the synthetic universe: revealing the dark cosmos with future telescopes

Australian Research Council

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The Orbits and Interactions of Satellite Galaxies: A Fundamental Test of Cosmology

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Monstrous Black Holes, Dead Stars and Accretion-Powered Feedback in Galaxy Formation

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ISSN

0035-8711

Journal title

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Volume

459

Issue

3

Pagination

14 pp

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Copyright statement

This article has been accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. Copyright © 2016 The Authors. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Language

eng

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