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The AGORA High-resolution Galaxy Simulations Comparison Project IV: Halo and Galaxy Mass Assembly in a Cosmological Zoom-in Simulation at $z\le2$

Authors :
Roca-Fàbrega, Santi
Kim, Ji-hoon
Primack, Joel R.
Jung, Minyong
Genina, Anna
Hausammann, Loic
Kim, Hyeonyong
Lupi, Alessandro
Nagamine, Kentaro
Powell, Johnny W.
Revaz, Yves
Shimizu, Ikkoh
Strawn, Clayton
Velázquez, Héctor
Abel, Tom
Ceverino, Daniel
Dong, Bili
Quinn, Thomas R.
Shin, Eun-jin
Segovia-Otero, Alvaro
Agertz, Oscar
Barrow, Kirk S. S.
Cadiou, Corentin
Dekel, Avishai
Hummels, Cameron
Oh, Boon Kiat
Teyssier, Romain
Collaboration, The Agora
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

In this fourth paper from the AGORA Collaboration, we study the evolution down to redshift $z=2$ and below of a set of cosmological zoom-in simulations of a Milky Way mass galaxy by eight of the leading hydrodynamic simulation codes. We also compare this CosmoRun suite of simulations with dark matter-only simulations by the same eight codes. We analyze general properties of the halo and galaxy at $z=4$ and 3, and before the last major merger, focusing on the formation of well-defined rotationally-supported disks, the mass-metallicity relation, the specific star formation rate, the gas metallicity gradients, and the non-axisymmetric structures in the stellar disks. Codes generally converge well to the stellar-to-halo mass ratios predicted by semi-analytic models at $z\sim$2. We see that almost all the hydro codes develop rotationally-supported structures at low redshifts. Most agree within 0.5 dex with the observed MZR at high and intermediate redshifts, and reproduce the gas metallicity gradients obtained from analytical models and low-redshift observations. We confirm that the inter-code differences in the halo assembly history reported in the first paper of the collaboration also exist in CosmoRun, making the code-to-code comparison more difficult. We show that such differences are mainly due to variations in code-dependent parameters that control the time-stepping strategy of the gravity solver. We find that variations in the early stellar feedback can also result in differences in the timing of the low-redshift mergers. All the simulation data down to $z=2$ and the auxiliary data will be made publicly available.<br />Comment: Submitted to ApJ. Visit the AGORA Collaboration website (www.agorasimulations.org <http://www.agorasimulations.org/>) for more information

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2402.06202
Document Type :
Working Paper