Bibcode
Stringer, M. J.; Benson, A. J.; Bundy, K.; Ellis, R. S.; Quetin, E. L.
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 393, Issue 4, pp. 1127-1140.
Fecha de publicación:
3
2009
Número de citas
33
Número de citas referidas
30
Descripción
Only by incorporating various forms of feedback can theories of galaxy
formation reproduce the present-day luminosity function of galaxies. It
has also been argued that such feedback processes might explain the
counterintuitive behaviour of `downsizing' witnessed since redshifts z
~= 1-2. To examine this question, observations spanning 0.4 < z <
1.4 from the Deep Extragalactic Evolutionary Probe (DEEP)2/Palomar
survey are compared with a suite of equivalent mock observations derived
from the Millennium Simulation, populated with galaxies using the
GALFORM code. Although the model successfully reproduces the observed
total mass function and the general trend of `downsizing', it fails to
accurately reproduce the colour distribution and type-dependent mass
functions at all redshifts probed. This failure is shared by other
semi-analytical models which collectively appear to `over-quench' star
formation in intermediate-mass systems. These mock lightcones are also a
valuable tool for investigating the reliability of the observational
results in terms of cosmic variance. Using variance estimates derived
from the lightcones, we confirm the significance of the decline since z
~ 1 in the observed number density of massive blue galaxies which, we
argue, provides the bulk of the associated growth in the red sequence.
We also assess the limitations arising from cosmic variance in terms of
our ability to observe mass-dependent growth since z ~ 1.