Galaxies in the Illustris simulation as seen by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II. Size-luminosity relations and the deficit of bulge-dominated galaxies in Illustris at low mass

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Abstract

The interpretive power of the newest generation of large-volume hydrodynamical simulations of galaxy formation rests upon their ability to reproduce the observed properties of galaxies. In this second paper in a series, we employ bulge+disc decompositions of realistic dust-free galaxy images from the Illustris simulation in a consistent comparison with galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). Examining the size-luminosity relations of each sample, we find that galaxies in Illustris are roughly twice as large and 0.7 mag brighter on average than galaxies in the SDSS. The trend of increasing slope and decreasing normalization of size-luminosity as a function of bulge fraction is qualitatively similar to observations. However, the size-luminosity relations of Illustris galaxies are quantitatively distinguished by higher normalizations and smaller slopes than for real galaxies. We show that this result is linked to a significant deficit of bulge-dominated galaxies in Illustris relative to the SDSS at stellar masses log M/M 11. We investigate this deficit by comparing bulge fraction estimates derived from photometry and internal kinematics. We show that photometric bulge fractions are systematically lower than the kinematic fractions at low masses, but with increasingly good agreement as the stellar mass increases.

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Bottrell, C., Torrey, P., Simard, L., & Ellison, S. L. (2017). Galaxies in the Illustris simulation as seen by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II. Size-luminosity relations and the deficit of bulge-dominated galaxies in Illustris at low mass. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 467(3), 2879–2895. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stx276

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