Project: A diagnosis of galaxy evolution with molecular gas
2021-11-01 – 2025-10-31
- Abstract
Understanding the evolution of galaxies is a fundamental but extremely complex topic in astrophysics. Cosmological hydrodynamical simulations have become powerful tools in this quest. Unfortunately, these simulations cannot resolve the physical processes at all scales, and important processes such as star formation feedback and AGN feedback are incorporated as sub-grid recipes. Molecular gas offers an excellent opportunity to observationally test the accuracy of these sub-grid physics recipes. Indeed, the molecular gas is directly affected by the feedback processes, and it can be traced observationally in different physical states through a variety of emission and absorption lines of the CO molecule. In this project, we will develop a novel and unique radiative transfer code that can generate synthetic CO observations for simulated galaxies. We will use this code to generate mock CO rotational emission line and rovibrational absorption line observations for a large suite of galaxies from the state-of-the-art TNG50 cosmological simulation. Comparing these mock data to observational data from Herschel, ALMA, AKARI, and Subaru, we will test the sub-grid recipes in TNG50, and determine the origin of CO excitation in different galaxies and different galactic regions.
-
- PhD Thesis
- open access
Multi-wavelength modeling of dust and emission lines in galaxies and AGN
(2025) -
- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Radial properties of dust in galaxies : comparison between observations and isolated galaxy simulations
-
- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Observational signatures of the dust size evolution in isolated galaxy simulations
-
- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Self-consistent dust and non-LTE line radiative transfer with SKIRT
-
- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Monte Carlo radiative transfer with explicit absorption to simulate absorption, scattering, and stimulated emission