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From EMBER to FIRE: predicting high resolution baryon fields from dark matter simulations with Deep Learning

Authors :
Bernardini, Mauro
Feldmann, Robert
Anglés-Alcázar, Daniel
Boylan-Kolchin, Mike
Bullock, James
Mayer, Lucio
Stadel, Joachim
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Hydrodynamic simulations provide a powerful, but computationally expensive, approach to study the interplay of dark matter and baryons in cosmological structure formation. Here we introduce the EMulating Baryonic EnRichment (EMBER) Deep Learning framework to predict baryon fields based on dark-matter-only simulations thereby reducing computational cost. EMBER comprises two network architectures, U-Net and Wasserstein Generative Adversarial Networks (WGANs), to predict two-dimensional gas and HI densities from dark matter fields. We design the conditional WGANs as stochastic emulators, such that multiple target fields can be sampled from the same dark matter input. For training we combine cosmological volume and zoom-in hydrodynamical simulations from the Feedback in Realistic Environments (FIRE) project to represent a large range of scales. Our fiducial WGAN model reproduces the gas and HI power spectra within 10% accuracy down to ~10 kpc scales. Furthermore, we investigate the capability of EMBER to predict high resolution baryon fields from low resolution dark matter inputs through upsampling techniques. As a practical application, we use this methodology to emulate high-resolution HI maps for a dark matter simulation of a L=100 Mpc/h comoving cosmological box. The gas content of dark matter haloes and the HI column density distributions predicted by EMBER agree well with results of large volume cosmological simulations and abundance matching models. Our method provides a computationally efficient, stochastic emulator for augmenting dark matter only simulations with physically consistent maps of baryon fields.<br />Comment: 21 pages, 12 figures, accepted by MNRAS, comments welcome

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2110.11970
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stab3088