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Computational cosmology as seen through a telescope: observational properties of simulated galaxies

The current generation of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations offer new levels of fidelity in galaxy formation and evolution that can be benchmarked against observations. However, it is crucial that the comparison between the simulation products and observations is performed on level-ground. Using mock-observations of galaxies from hydrodynamical simulations with observational realism, an image-based comparison is enabled between the simulations and modern galaxy surveys that allow galaxy properties to be derived consistently. A new methodology is presented that provides an unprecedentedly comprehensive suite of observational realism to synthetic images of galaxies from simulations and performs detailed decomposition of their morphological structures. The crux of the methodology is that the same procedure for image-based surface-brightness decompositions of galaxy structures is employed for the simulations and observations -- facilitating a fair and unbiased comparison of galaxy properties. The methodology is piloted on galaxies from the Illustris simulation and is designed to enable comparison with galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survery (SDSS). The biases from observational realism on the decomposition results for the simulated galaxies are characterized in detail using several controlled experiments. Then, the decompositions are used in a comparison of the galaxy size-luminosity and bulge-to-total vs. total stellar mass relations. The comparisons show that galaxies from Illustris contain too many discs and too few bulges at low masses M*/M☉≤11 relative to the SDSS. A comparison of the photometric and kinematic bulge-to-total is also enabled by the methodology. The comparison suggests that photometry tends to systematically under-estimate the bulge fractions relative to the kinematics -- allowing no discernible connection to be made between photo-bulges and kinematic bulges. Several possibilities that may be driving the bulge deficit in Illustris' low-mass galaxies are discussed, though particle resolution is argued to be the main culprit. The methodology that is presented in this thesis has broad applications to comparisons between computational and observational galaxy astronomy and stands to provide a wealth of feedback between each community. / Graduate / 0606 / cbottrel@uvic.ca

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:uvic.ca/oai:dspace.library.uvic.ca:1828/7467
Date24 August 2016
CreatorsBottrell, Connor
ContributorsSimard, Luc, Ellison, Sara L.
Source SetsUniversity of Victoria
LanguageEnglish, English
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
RightsAvailable to the World Wide Web

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