8 research outputs found
The Role of Cold Flows and Reservoirs in Galaxy Formation With Strong Feedback
We examine gas accretion and subsequent star formation in representative
galaxies from the McMaster Unbiased Galaxy Simulations (Stinson et al. 2010).
Accreted gas is bimodal with a natural temperature division at K, near
the peak of the cooling curve. Cold-mode accretion dominates inflows at early
times, creating a peak in total accretion at redshift z=2-4 and declining
exponentially below z2. Hot-mode accretion peaks near z=1-2 and declines
gradually. Hot-mode exceeds cold-mode accretion at z1.8 for all four
galaxies rather than when the galaxy reaches a characteristic mass. Cold-mode
accretion can fuel immediate star formation, while hot-mode accretion
preferentially builds a large, hot gas reservoir in the halo. Late-time star
formation relies on reservoir gas accreted 2-8 Gyr prior. Thus, the reservoir
allows the star formation rate to surpass the current overall gas accretion
rate. Stellar feedback cycles gas from the interstellar medium back into the
hot reservoir. Stronger feedback results in more gas cycling, gas removal in a
galactic outflow and less star formation overall, enabling simulations to match
the observed star formation history. For lower mass galaxies in particular,
strong feedback can delay the star formation peak to z=1-2 from the accretion
peak at z=2-4.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
MaGICC-WDM: the effects of warm dark matter in hydrodynamical simulations of disc galaxy formation
We study the effect of warm dark matter (WDM) on hydrodynamic simulations of
galaxy formation as part of the Making Galaxies in a Cosmological Context
(MaGICC) project. We simulate three different galaxies using three WDM
candidates of 1, 2 and 5 keV and compare results with pure cold dark matter
simulations. WDM slightly reduces star formation and produces less centrally
concentrated stellar profiles. These effects are most evident for the 1 keV
candidate but almost disappear for keV. All simulations
form similar stellar discs independent of WDM particle mass. In particular, the
disc scale length does not change when WDM is considered. The reduced amount of
star formation in the case of 1 keV particles is due to the effects of WDM on
merging satellites which are on average less concentrated and less gas rich.
The altered satellites cause a reduced starburst during mergers because they
trigger weaker disc instabilities in the main galaxy. Nevertheless we show that
disc galaxy evolution is much more sensitive to stellar feedback than it is to
WDM candidate mass. Overall we find that WDM, especially when restricted to
current observational constraints ( keV), has a minor
impact on disc galaxy formation.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables; minor clarifications added in results
section, conclusions unchanged; accepted for publication in MNRA
Improving on numerical simulations of nonlinear CMB anisotropies
Publisher's Version/PDFAn Adaptative-Particle-Particle-Particle-Mesh code (HYDRA) plus a ray-tracing procedure was used in [1] to perform an exhaustive analysis of the weak lensing anisotropy. Other nonlinear Cosmic Microwave Background anisotropies, such as the Rees-Sciama and the Sunyaev-Zel.dovich effects are also being studied by using the same tools. Here we present some advances in our study of these nonlinear anisotropies. The primary advance is due to the use of better simulations with greater particle densities and appropriate softening, although other parameters have also been adjusted to get better estimates. Thus, we improve on a previous paper [2] where the Rees-Sciama effect was studied with Particle-Mesh simulations. We focus particular attention on the resolution improvement and its consequences
Simulations of the formation, evolution and clustering of galaxies and quasars
The cold dark matter model has become the leading theoretical picture for the formation of structure in the Universe. This model, together with the theory of cosmic inflation, makes a clear prediction for the initial conditions for structure formation and predicts that structures grow hierarchically through gravitational instability. Testing this model requires that the precise measurements delivered by galaxy surveys can be compared to robust and equally precise theoretical calculations. Here we present a simulation of the growth of dark matter structure using 2,1603 particles, following them from redshift z = 127 to the present in a cube-shaped region 2.230 billion lightyears on a side. In postprocessing, we also follow the formation and evolution of the galaxies and quasars. We show that baryon-induced features in the initial conditions of the Universe are reflected in distorted form in the low-redshift galaxy distribution, an effect that can be used to constrain the nature of dark energy with future generations of observational surveys of galaxies