7–11 Jul 2025
Teaching and Learning Centre (TLC)
Europe/London timezone
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Dwarf Galaxy Growth Across the Cosmic Web

10 Jul 2025, 16:57
14m
TLC033

TLC033

Talk Illuminating the Faintest Galaxies: Dwarf Galaxies as Probes of Dark Matter, Feedback, and the First Stars Illuminating the Faintest Galaxies: Dwarf Galaxies as Probes of Dark Matter, Feedback, and the First Stars

Description

Dwarf galaxies are considered laboratories for studying the assembly of galaxies in the early universe, and their properties at final day may vary as a function of environment. In our work, we used the DM-only simulation COCO, along with the semi-analytic model GALFORM to investigate the differences in dwarf stellar mass assembly between different areas of the cosmic web. Our findings show large trends in the stellar mass assemblies of dwarfs, with satellites in nodes assembling an average of 1.78 Gyrs earlier than satellites in walls, but only 0.23 Gyrs earlier for central galaxies. Satellite galaxies show strong dependence of mass assembly on environment, which is driven predominantly by the epoch at which an object becomes part of a larger host in different regions of the cosmic web. On the other hand, central galaxies do not show trends as significant as those of their host dark matter haloes due to the differences in the stellar to halo mass relation between different areas of the cosmic web. We also investigate the effect of varying parameters controlling the timing and filtering scale for reionisation, finding significant effects particularly in the regime of ultrafaints. This work is unique in providing a statistical investigation of the stellar mass assemblies of galaxies in this mass regime, and how those properties depend on the parameters of reionisation.

Author

Mac McMullan (Durham University)

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