4.7 Article

The manifestation of secondary bias on the galaxy population from IllustrisTNG300

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 496, Issue 2, Pages 1182-1196

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/staa1624

Keywords

methods: numerical; galaxies: formation; galaxies: haloes; cosmology: theory; dark matter; large-scale structure of Universe

Funding

  1. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de S ao Paulo (FAPESP)
  2. Austrian National Science Foundation through Fonds zur Forderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung (FWF) [P31154-N27]
  3. FAPESP
  4. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico (CNPq)
  5. Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Cientifico y Tecnologico (Fondecyt) [1191813]
  6. Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica (CONICYT) [Basal AFB-170002]
  7. Agencia Nacional de Promocion Cientifica y Tecnologica [PICT 20153098]
  8. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas (CONICET, Argentina)
  9. Secretaria de Ciencia y Tecnologia de la Universidad Nacional de Cordoba (SeCyT, UNC, Argentina)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We use the improved IllustrisTNG300 magnetohydrodynamical cosmological simulation to revisit the effect that secondary halo bias has on the clustering of the central galaxy population. With a side length of 205 h(-1) Mpc and significant improvements on the subgrid model with respect to previous Illustris simulations, IllustrisTNG300 allows us to explore the dependencies of galaxy clustering over a large cosmological volume and halo mass range. We show at high statistical significance that the halo assembly bias signal (i.e. the secondary dependence of halo bias on halo formation redshift) manifests itself on the clustering of the galaxy population when this is split by stellar mass, colour, specific star formation rate, and surface density. A significant signal is also found for galaxy size: at fixed halo mass, larger galaxies are more tightly clustered than smaller galaxies. This effect, in contrast to the rest of the dependencies, seems to be uncorrelated with halo formation time, with some small correlation only detected for halo spin. We also explore the transmission of the spin bias signal, i.e. the secondary dependence of halo bias on halo spin. Although galaxy spin retains little information about the total halo spin, the correlation is enough to produce a significant galaxy spin bias signal. We discuss possible ways to probe this effect with observations.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available