Cosmological baryon spread and impact on matter clustering in CAMELS

Author:

Gebhardt Matthew1ORCID,Anglés-Alcázar Daniel12,Borrow Josh34ORCID,Genel Shy25,Villaescusa-Navarro Francisco26,Ni Yueying78ORCID,Lovell Christopher C910ORCID,Nagai Daisuke11ORCID,Davé Romeel1213ORCID,Marinacci Federico1415ORCID,Vogelsberger Mark316ORCID,Hernquist Lars7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics, University of Connecticut , 196 Auditorium Road, U-3046, Storrs, CT 06269-3046 , USA

2. Center for Computational Astrophysics , Flatiron Institute, 162 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010 , USA

3. Department of Physics and Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge, MA 02139 , USA

4. Institute for Computational Cosmology, Department of Physics, Durham University , South Road, Durham DH1 3LE , UK

5. Columbia Astrophysics Laboratory, Columbia University , 550 West 120th Street, New York, NY 10027 , USA

6. Department of Astrophysical Sciences, Princeton University , 4 Ivy Lane, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA

7. Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics , 60 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 , USA

8. McWilliams Center for Cosmology, Department of Physics, Carnegie Mellon University , Pittsburgh, PA 15213 , USA

9. Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation, University of Portsmouth , Burnaby Road, Portsmouth PO1 3FX , UK

10. Astronomy Centre, University of Sussex , Falmer, Brighton BN1 9QH , UK

11. Department of Physics, Yale University , New Haven, CT 06520 , USA

12. Institute for Astronomy, University of Edinburgh, Royal Observatory , Edinburgh EH9 3HJ , UK

13. Department of Physics & Astronomy, University of the Western Cape , 7535 Cape Town , South Africa

14. Dipartimento di Fisica e Astronomia ‘Augusto Righi’, Universit‘a di Bologna , via Gobetti 93/2, I-40129 Bologna , Italy

15. INAF, Astrophysics and Space Science Observatory Bologna , Via P. Gobetti 93/3, I-40129 Bologna , Italy

16. The NSF AI Institute for Artificial Intelligence and Fundamental Interactions, Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge, MA 02139 , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT We quantify the cosmological spread of baryons relative to their initial neighbouring dark matter distribution using thousands of state-of-the-art simulations from the Cosmology and Astrophysics with MachinE Learning Simulations (CAMELS) project. We show that dark matter particles spread relative to their initial neighbouring distribution owing to chaotic gravitational dynamics on spatial scales comparable to their host dark matter halo. In contrast, gas in hydrodynamic simulations spreads much further from the initial neighbouring dark matter owing to feedback from supernovae (SNe) and active galactic nuclei (AGN). We show that large-scale baryon spread is very sensitive to model implementation details, with the fiducial simba model spreading ∼40 per cent of baryons >1 Mpc away compared to ∼10 per cent for the IllustrisTNG and astrid models. Increasing the efficiency of AGN-driven outflows greatly increases baryon spread while increasing the strength of SNe-driven winds can decrease spreading due to non-linear coupling of stellar and AGN feedback. We compare total matter power spectra between hydrodynamic and paired N-body simulations and demonstrate that the baryonic spread metric broadly captures the global impact of feedback on matter clustering over variations of cosmological and astrophysical parameters, initial conditions, and (to a lesser extent) galaxy formation models. Using symbolic regression, we find a function that reproduces the suppression of power by feedback as a function of wave number (k) and baryonic spread up to $k \sim 10\, h$ Mpc−1 in SIMBA while highlighting the challenge of developing models robust to variations in galaxy formation physics implementation.

Funder

Simons Foundation

NSF

Research Corporation for Science Advancement

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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