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Dive into the research topics where Dylan Tweed is active.

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Featured researches published by Dylan Tweed.


Scopus | 2011

Haloes gone MAD: The Halo-Finder Comparison Project

Alexander Knebe; Steffen R. Knollmann; Y. Ascasibar; Gustavo Yepes; Stuart I. Muldrew; Frazer R. Pearce; M. A. Aragon-Calvo; Bridget Falck; Peter Behroozi; Daniel Ceverino; S. Colombi; Jürg Diemand; Doug Potter; Joachim Stadel; K. Dolag; Francesca Iannuzzi; Michal Maciejewski; Patricia K. Fasel; Jeffrey P. Gardner; S. Gottlöber; C-H. Hsu; Anatoly Klypin; Zarija Lukić; Cameron K. McBride; Susana Planelles; Vicent Quilis; Yann Rasera; Fabrice Roy; Justin I. Read; Paul M. Ricker

We present a detailed comparison of fundamental dark matter halo properties retrieved by a substantial number of different halo finders. These codes span a wide range of techniques including friends-of-friends, spherical-overdensity and phase-space-based algorithms. We


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

Toy Models for Galaxy Formation versus Simulations

Avishai Dekel; Adi Zolotov; Dylan Tweed; Marcello Cacciato; Daniel Ceverino; Joel R. Primack

We describe simple useful toy models for key processes of galaxy formation in its most active phase, at z > 1, and test the approximate expressions against the typical behaviour in a suite of high-resolution hydro-cosmological simulations of massive galaxies at z = 4-1. We address in particular the evolution of (a) the total mass inflow rate from the cosmic web into galactic haloes based on the EPS approximation, (b) the penetration of baryonic streams into the inner galaxy, (c) the disc size, (d) the implied steady-state gas content and star-formation rate (SFR) in the galaxy subject to mass conservation and a universal star-formation law, (e) the inflow rate within the disc to a central bulge and black hole as derived using energy conservation and self-regulated Q ~ 1 violent disc instability (VDI), and (f) the implied steady state in the disc and bulge. The toy models provide useful approximations for the behaviour of the simulated galaxies. We find that (a) the inflow rate is proportional to mass and to (1+z)^5/2, (b) the penetration to the inner halo is ~50% at z = 4-2, (c) the disc radius is ~5% of the virial radius, (d) the galaxies reach a steady state with the SFR following the accretion rate into the galaxy, (e) there is an intense gas inflow through the disc, comparable to the SFR, following the predictions of VDI, and (f) the galaxies approach a steady state with the bulge mass comparable to the disc mass, where the draining of gas by SFR, outflows and disc inflows is replenished by fresh accretion. Given the agreement with simulations, these toy models are useful for understanding the complex phenomena in simple terms and for back-of-the-envelope predictions.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

Compaction and quenching of high-z galaxies in cosmological simulations: blue and red nuggets

Adi Zolotov; Avishai Dekel; Nir Mandelker; Dylan Tweed; Shigeki Inoue; Colin DeGraf; Daniel Ceverino; Joel R. Primack; Guillermo Barro; Sandra M. Faber

We use cosmological simulations to study a characteristic evolution pattern of high redshift galaxies. Early, stream-fed, highly perturbed, gas-rich discs undergo phases of dissipative contraction into compact, star-forming systems (blue nuggets) at z~4-2. The peak of gas compaction marks the onset of central gas depletion and inside-out quenching into compact ellipticals (red nuggets) by z~2. These are sometimes surrounded by gas rings or grow extended dry stellar envelopes. The compaction occurs at a roughly constant specific star-formation rate (SFR), and the quenching occurs at a constant stellar surface density within the inner kpc (


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012

Subhaloes going Notts: the subhalo-finder comparison project

Julian Onions; Alexander Knebe; Frazer R. Pearce; Stuart I. Muldrew; Hanni Lux; Steffen R. Knollmann; Y. Ascasibar; Peter Behroozi; Pascal J. Elahi; Jiaxin Han; Michal Maciejewski; Manuel E. Merchan; Andrés N. Ruiz; Mario Agustín Sgró; Volker Springel; Dylan Tweed

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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

The population of giant clumps in simulated high-z galaxies: in situ and ex situ migration and survival

Nir Mandelker; Avishai Dekel; Daniel Ceverino; Dylan Tweed; Christopher E. Moody; Joel R. Primack

). Massive galaxies quench earlier, faster, and at a higher


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

Sussing merger trees: the Merger Trees Comparison Project

Chaichalit Srisawat; Alexander Knebe; Frazer R. Pearce; Aurel Schneider; Peter A. Thomas; Peter Behroozi; K. Dolag; Pascal J. Elahi; Jiaxin Han; John C. Helly; Yipeng Jing; Intae Jung; Jaehyun Lee; Yao Yuan Mao; Julian Onions; Vicente Rodriguez-Gomez; Dylan Tweed; Sukyoung K. Yi

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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

Subhaloes gone Notts: spin across subhaloes and finders

Julian Onions; Y. Ascasibar; Peter Behroozi; Javier Casado; Pascal J. Elahi; Jiaxin Han; Alexander Knebe; Hanni Lux; Manuel E. Merchan; Stuart I. Muldrew; Lyndsay Old; Frazer R. Pearce; Doug Potter; Andrés N. Ruiz; Mario Agustín Sgró; Dylan Tweed; Thomas Yue

than lower-mass galaxies, which compactify and attempt to quench more than once. This evolution pattern is consistent with the way galaxies populate the SFR-radius-mass space, and with gradients and scatter across the main sequence. The compaction is triggered by an intense inflow episode, involving (mostly minor) mergers, counter-rotating streams or recycled gas, and is commonly associated with violent disc instability. The contraction is dissipative, with the inflow rate >SFR, and the maximum


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

SUSSING MERGER TREES: the influence of the halo finder

Santiago Avila; Alexander Knebe; Frazer R. Pearce; Aurel Schneider; Chaichalit Srisawat; Peter A. Thomas; Peter Behroozi; Pascal J. Elahi; Jiaxin Han; Yao Yuan Mao; Julian Onions; Vicente Rodriguez-Gomez; Dylan Tweed

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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

Subhaloes gone Notts: the clustering properties of subhaloes

Arnau Pujol; E. Gaztanaga; Carlo Giocoli; Alexander Knebe; Frazer R. Pearce; Ramin A. Skibba; Y. Ascasibar; Peter Behroozi; Pascal J. Elahi; Jiaxin Han; Hanni Lux; Stuart I. Muldrew; Julian Onions; Doug Potter; Dylan Tweed

anti-correlated with the initial spin parameter, as predicted by Dekel & Burkert (2014). The central quenching is triggered by the high SFR and stellar/supernova feedback (possibly also AGN feedback) due to the high central gas density, while the central inflow weakens as the disc vanishes. Suppression of fresh gas supply by a hot halo allows the long-term maintenance of quenching once above a threshold halo mass, inducing the quenching downsizing.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

Sussing merger trees: the impact of halo merger trees on galaxy properties in a semi-analytic model

Jaehyun Lee; Sukyoung K. Yi; Pascal J. Elahi; Peter A. Thomas; Frazer R. Pearce; Peter Behroozi; Jiaxin Han; John C. Helly; Intae Jung; Alexander Knebe; Yao Yuan Mao; Julian Onions; Vicente Rodriguez-Gomez; Aurel Schneider; Chaichalit Srisawat; Dylan Tweed

We present a detailed comparison of the substructure properties of a single Milky Way sized dark matter halo from the Aquarius suite at five different resolutions, as identified by a variety of different (sub)halo finders for simulations of cosmic structure formation. These finders span a wide range of techniques and methodologies to extract and quantify substructures within a larger non-homogeneous background density (e.g. a host halo). This includes real-space-, phase-space-, velocity-space- and time-space-based finders, as well as finders employing a Voronoi tessellation, Friends-of-Friends techniques or refined meshes as the starting point for locating substructure. A common post-processing pipeline was used to uniformly analyse the particle lists provided by each finder. We extract quantitative and comparable measures for the subhaloes, primarily focusing on mass and the peak of the rotation curve for this particular study. We find that all of the finders agree extremely well in the presence and location of substructure and even for properties relating to the inner part of the subhalo (e.g. the maximum value of the rotation curve). For properties that rely on particles near the outer edge of the subhalo the agreement is at around the 20 per cent level. We find that the basic properties (mass and maximum circular velocity) of a subhalo can be reliably recovered if the subhalo contains more than 100 particles although its presence can be reliably inferred for a lower particle number limit of 20. We finally note that the logarithmic slope of the subhalo cumulative number count is remarkably consistent and <1 for all the finders that reached high resolution. If correct, this would indicate that the larger and more massive, respectively, substructures are the most dynamically interesting and that higher levels of the (sub)subhalo hierarchy become progressively less important.

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Huiyuan Wang

University of Science and Technology of China

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Shijie Li

Shanghai Astronomical Observatory

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Xiaohu Yang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Youcai Zhang

Shanghai Astronomical Observatory

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Alexander Knebe

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Yi Lu

Shanghai Astronomical Observatory

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Peter Behroozi

University of California

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Julian Onions

University of Nottingham

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Pascal J. Elahi

University of Western Australia

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