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We present a cosmological hydrodynamical simulation of a representative volume of the Universe, as part of the Making Galaxies in a Cosmological Context (MaGICC) project. MaGICC uses a thermal implementation for supernova and early stellar feedback. This work tests the feedback model at lower resolution across a range of galaxy masses, morphologies and merger histories. The simulated sample compares well with observations of high-redshift galaxies (z 2) including the stellar mass-halo mass (M -M h ) relation, the galaxy stellar mass function (GSMF) at low masses (M < 5 10 10 M ) and the number density evolution of low-mass galaxies. The poor match of M -M h and the GSMF at high masses (M 5 10 10 M ) indicates that supernova feedback is insufficient to limit star formation in these haloes. At z = 0, our model produces too many stars in massive galaxies and slightly underpredicts the stellar mass around L mass galaxy. Altogether our results suggest that early stellar feedback, in conjunction with supernova feedback, plays a major role in regulating the properties of low-mass galaxies at high redshift.
Kannan et al. (Fri,) studied this question.