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EGG: hatching a mock Universe from empirical prescriptions

Authors :
Schreiber, C.
Elbaz, D.
Pannella, M.
Merlin, E.
Castellano, M.
Fontana, A.
Bourne, N.
Boutsia, K.
Cullen, F.
Dunlop, J.
Ferguson, H. C.
Michalowski, M. J.
Okumura, K.
Santini, P.
Shu, X. W.
Wang, T.
White, C.
Source :
A&A 602, A96 (2017)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

This paper introduces EGG, the Empirical Galaxy Generator, a tool designed within the ASTRODEEP collaboration to generate mock galaxy catalogs for deep fields with realistic fluxes and simple morphologies. The simulation procedure is based exclusively on empirical prescriptions -- rather than first principles -- to provide the most accurate match with observations at 0<z<7. In particular, we consider that galaxies can be either quiescent or star-forming, and use their stellar mass (M*) and redshift (z) as the fundamental properties from which all the other observables can be statistically derived. Drawing z and M* from the observed galaxy stellar mass functions, we associate a star formation rate (SFR) to each galaxy from the tight SFR-M* main sequence, while dust attenuation, optical colors and morphologies (including bulge-to-total ratios, sizes and aspect ratios) are obtained from empirical relations that we establish from the high quality Hubble and Herschel observations available in the CANDELS fields. Random scatter is introduced in each step to reproduce the observed distributions of each parameter. Based on these observables, a panchromatic spectral energy distribution (SED) is selected for each galaxy and synthetic photometry is produced by integrating the redshifted SED in common broad-band filters. Finally, the mock galaxies are placed on the sky at random positions with a fixed angular two-point correlation function to implement basic clustering. The resulting flux catalogs reproduce accurately the observed number counts in all broad bands from the ultraviolet up to the sub-millimeter, and can be directly fed to image simulators such as Skymaker. The images can then be used to test source extraction softwares and image-based techniques such as stacking. EGG is open-source, and is made available to the community together with a set of pre-generated catalogs and images.<br />Comment: 24 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in A&A

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
A&A 602, A96 (2017)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1606.05354
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201629123