The influence of external environment at cosmic noon on the subsequent evolution of galaxy stellar mass
Authors
Tianmu Gao
J. Trevor Mendel
Lucas C. Kimmig
Claudia del P. Lagos
Rhea-Silvia Remus
Emily Wisnioski
Kathryn Grasha
Abstract
Connecting high-redshift galaxies to their low-redshift descendants is one of the most important and challenging tasks of galaxy evolution studies. In this work, we investigate whether incorporating high-redshift environmental factors improves the accuracy of matching high-redshift galaxies to their $z\sim0$ descendants, using data from the EAGLE and MAGNETICUM simulations. Using random forest regression, we evaluate the relative importance of a set of environmental metrics at $z\sim3$ in determining the stellar mass of descendant galaxies at $z\sim0$. We identify the spherical overdensity within 1 cMpc ($δ_{1,\mathrm{sp}}$) as the most important environmental predictor. Tracking galaxies at $z\sim3$ with similar initial stellar masses but different $δ_{1,\mathrm{sp}}$ values, we find that, across all mass bins in both simulations, high-density environments produce $z\sim0$ descendants with median stellar masses up to eight times higher than the descendants of galaxies in low-density environments. For galaxies with $M_{*}\lesssim10^{10}M_{\odot}$, the difference is attributable to more merger-induced mass growth in high-density environments, whereas for higher-mass galaxies, it results from a combination of enhanced in-situ star formation and greater external mass accretion. By assessing the importance of overdensity across multiple scales and redshifts, we find that at $z\gtrsim2$, environmental factors become as important as stellar mass in predicting the stellar mass of $z\sim0$ descendants. Compared to using stellar mass at $z\sim3$ alone, incorporating $δ_{1,\mathrm{sp}}$ reduces the scatter in the residuals between the predicted and actual stellar masses by approximately 20% in EAGLE and 35% in MAGNETICUM.