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We present an updated model for the evolution of the orbits of orphan galaxies to be used in the SAG semi-analytical model of galaxy formation and evolution. In cosmological simulations, orphan galaxies are those satellite galaxies for which, due to limited mass resolution, halo finders lose track of their dark matter subhalos and can no longer be distinguished as self-bound overdensities within the larger host system. Since the evolution of orphans depends strongly on the orbit they describe within their host halo, a proper treatment of their evolution is crucial in predicting the distribution of subhalos and satellite galaxies. The model proposed takes into account the dynamical friction drag, mass loss by tidal stripping and a proximity merger criterion, also it is simple enough to be inexpensive from a computational point of view. To calibrate this model, we apply it onto a dark matter only simulation and compare the results with a high resolution simulation, considering the halo mass function and the two-point correlation function as constraints. We show that while the halo mass function fails to put tight constraints on the dynamical friction, the addition of clustering information helps to better define the parameters of the model related to the spatial distribution of subhalos. Using the model with the best fit parameters allows us to reproduce the halo mass function to a precision better than 5 per cent, and the two point correlation function at a precision better than 10 per cent.
The sterile neutrino is a viable dark matter candidate that can be produced in the early Universe via non-equilibrium processes, and would therefore possess a highly non-thermal spectrum of primordial velocities. In this paper we analyse the process
We study the correlation between the specific star formation rate of central galaxies and neighbour galaxies, also known as galactic conformity, out to 20 Mpc/h using three semi-analytic models (SAMs, one from L-GALAXIES and other two from GALFORM).
We forecast the abilities of the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and the Square Kilometer Array (SKA) to detect CO and HI emission lines in galaxies at redshift z=3. A particular focus is set on Milky Way (MW) progenitors at z=3 f
We present a direct comparison between the observed star formation rate functions (SFRF) and the state-of-the-art predictions of semi-analytic models (SAM) of galaxy formation and evolution. We use the PACS Evolutionary Probe Survey (PEP) and Hersche
We present results for a galaxy formation model that includes a simple treatment for the disruption of dwarf galaxies by gravitational forces and galaxy encounters within galaxy clusters. This is implemented a posteriori in a semi-analytic model by c