Extensions to models of the galaxy-halo connection

11 Aug 2020  ·  Boryana Hadzhiyska, Sownak Bose, Daniel Eisenstein, Lars Hernquist ·

We explore two widely used empirical models for the galaxy-halo connection, subhalo abundance matching (SHAM) and the halo occupation distribution (HOD) and compare their predictions with the hydrodynamical simulation IllustrisTNG (TNG) for a range of statistics that quantify the galaxy distribution at $n_{\rm gal}\approx1.3\times10^{-3}\,[{\rm Mpc}/h]^{-3}$. We observe that in their most straightforward implementations, both models fail to reproduce the two-point clustering measured in TNG. We find that SHAM models constructed using the relaxation velocity, $V_{\rm relax}$, and the peak velocity, $V_{\rm peak}$, perform best, and match the clustering reasonably well, although neither model captures adequately the one-halo clustering. Splitting the total sample into sub-populations, we discover that SHAM overpredicts the clustering of high-mass, blue, star-forming, and late-forming galaxies and uderpredicts that of low-mass, red, quiescent, and early-forming galaxies. We also study various baryonic effects, finding that subhalos in the dark-mater-only simulation have consistently higher values of their SHAM-proxy properties than their full-physics counterparts. We then consider a two-dimensional implementation of the HOD model augmented with a secondary parameter (environment, velocity anisotropy, $\sigma^2R_{\rm halfmass}$, and total potential) and tuned so as to match the two-point clustering of the IllustrisTNG galaxies on large scales. We analyze these galaxy populations adopting alternative statistical tools such as galaxy-galaxy lensing, void-galaxy cross-correlations and cumulants of the smoothed density field, finding that the hydrodynamical galaxy distribution disfavors $\sigma^2 R_{\rm halfmass}$ and the total potential as secondary parameters, while the environment and velocity anisotropy samples are consistent with full-physics across all statistical probes examined.

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Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics