Over the last decades, cosmological simulations of galaxy formation have been instrumental for advancing our understanding of structure and galaxy formation in the Universe. These simulations follow the nonlinear evolution of galaxies modeling a variety of physical processes over an enormous range of scales. A better understanding of the physics relevant for shaping galaxies, improved numerical methods, and increased computing power have led to simulations that can reproduce a large number of observed galaxy properties. Modern simulations model dark matter, dark energy, and ordinary matter in an expanding space-time starting from well-defined initial conditions. The modeling of ordinary matter is most challenging due to the large array of physical processes affecting this matter component. Cosmological simulations have also proven useful to study alternative cosmological models and their impact on the galaxy population. This review presents a concise overview of the methodology of cosmological simulations of galaxy formation and their different applications. arXiv:1909.07976v4 [astro-ph.GA] 23 Oct 2019 become important for cosmological studies since they can, for example, explore the impact of alternative cosmological models on the galaxy population. Cosmological simulations of galaxy formation therefore provide important insights into a wide range of problems in astrophysics and cosmology. The most important components of cosmological galaxy formation simulations are discussed in this review. A schematic overview of the different ingredients of cosmological simulations is presented in Figure 2. Cosmological FrameworkCosmological simulations of galaxy formation are performed within a cosmological model and start from specific initial conditions. Both of these ingredients are now believed to be known to high precision. Cosmological ModelVarious observations revealed that our Universe is geometrically flat and dominated by dark matter and dark energy accounting for about ∼ 95% of the energy density. Standard model particles make up for the remaining ∼ 5% and are collectively referred to as baryons. The leading model for structure formation assumes that dark matter is cold, with negligible random motions when decoupled from other matter, and collisionless, so-called cold dark matter, and dark energy is represented by a cosmological constant Λ, which drives the accelerated expansion of the Universe. This leads to the concordance ΛCDM model, which builds the framework for galaxy formation. Measurements of the cosmic microwave background combined with other observations such as the distance-redshift relation from Type Ia supernovae, abundances of galaxy clusters, and galaxy clustering constrain the fundamental parameters of the ΛCDM model 3 . Initial ConditionsInitial conditions for cosmological simulations specify the perturbations imposed on top of a homogeneous expanding background. The background model is generally taken to be a spatially flat Friedmann-Lemaître-Robertson-Walker space-time with a defined compositio...
Recently, rapid observational and theoretical progress has established that black holes (BHs) play a decisive role in the formation and evolution of individual galaxies as well as galaxy groups and clusters. In particular, there is compelling evidence that BHs vigorously interact with their surroundings in the central regions of galaxy clusters, indicating that any realistic model of cluster formation needs to account for these processes. This is also suggested by the failure of previous generations of hydrodynamical simulations without BH physics to simultaneously account for the paucity of strong cooling flows in clusters, the slope and amplitude of the observed cluster scaling relations, and the high-luminosity cutoff of central cluster galaxies. Here we use high-resolution cosmological simulations of a large cluster and group sample to study how BHs affect their host systems. We focus on two specific properties, the halo gas fraction and the X-ray luminosity-temperature scaling relation, both of which are notoriously difficult to reproduce in self-consistent hydrodynamical simulations. We show that BH feedback can solve both of these issues, bringing them in excellent agreement with observations, without alluding to the "cooling only" solution that produces unphysically bright central galaxies. By comparing a large sample of simulated AGN-heated clusters with observations, our new simulation technique should make it possible to reliably calibrate observational biases in cluster surveys, thereby enabling various high-precision cosmological studies of the dark matter and dark energy content of the universe.
We use a set of high‐resolution hydrodynamical simulations of clusters of galaxies to study the build‐up of the intracluster light (ICL), an interesting and likely significant component of their total stellar mass. Our sample of groups and clusters includes active galactic nucleus (AGN) feedback and is of high enough resolution to accurately resolve galaxy populations down to the smallest galaxies that are expected to significantly contribute to the stellar mass budget. We describe and test four different methods to identify the ICL in cluster simulations, thereby allowing us to assess the reliability of the measurements. For all of the methods, we consistently find a very significant ICL stellar fraction (∼45 per cent) which exceeds the values typically inferred from observations. However, we show that this result is robust with respect to numerical resolution and integration accuracy, remarkably insensitive to changes in the star formation model, and almost independent of halo mass. It is also almost invariant when black hole growth is included, even though AGN feedback successfully prevents excessive overcooling in clusters and leads to a drastically improved agreement of the simulated cluster galaxy population with observations. In particular, the luminosities of central cluster galaxies and the ages of their stellar populations are much more realistic when including AGN. In the light of these findings, it appears challenging to construct a simulation model that simultaneously matches the cluster galaxy population and at the same time produces a low ICL component. We find that intracluster stars are preferentially stripped in a cluster's densest region from massive galaxies that fall into the forming cluster at z > 1. Surprisingly, some of the intracluster stars also form in the intracluster medium inside cold gas clouds that are stripped out of infalling galaxies.
High-redshift quasi-stellar object (QSO) spectra show large spatial fluctuations in the Ly α opacity of the intergalactic medium on surprisingly large scales at $z$ ≳ 5.5. We present a radiative transfer simulation of cosmic reionization driven by galaxies that reproduces this large scatter and the rapid evolution of the Ly α opacity distribution at 5 < $z$ < 6. The simulation also reproduces the low Thomson scattering optical depth reported by the latest cosmic microwave background (CMB) measurement and is consistent with the observed short near-zones and strong red damping wings in the highest redshift QSOs. It also matches the rapid disappearance of observed Ly α emission by galaxies at $z$ ≳ 6. Reionization is complete at $z$ = 5.3 in our model, and 50 per cent of the volume of the Universe is ionized at $z$ = 7. Agreement with the Ly α forest data in such a late reionization model requires a rapid evolution of the ionizing emissivity of galaxies that peaks at $z$ ∼ 6.8. The late end of reionization results in a large scatter in the photoionization rate and the neutral hydrogen fraction at redshifts as low as $z$ ≲ 5.5 with large residual neutral ‘islands’ that can produce very long Gunn–Peterson troughs resembling those seen in the data.
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