GAEA builds on the model published
in De
Lucia & Blaizot (2007), but many prescriptions have been
updated significantly over the past years. In particular, GAEA
features:
(i) a detailed treatment of chemical enrichment accounting finite
stellar life-times and differential chemical
yields (De
Lucia et al. 2014);
(ii) a stellar feedback scheme partially based on results from
hydro-dynamical simulations
(Hirschmann
et al. 2016);
(iii) a specific treatment for angular momentum exchanges between
galactic components, and prescriptions to partition the cold gas
into its molecular (star forming) and atomic components
(Xie
et al. 2017);
(iv) theoretical prescriptions for variations of the stellar
Initial Mass Function
(Fontanot
et
al. 2017; Fontanot
et al. 2018).
Our reference model reproduces a number of important observational
measurements including: the evolution of the galaxy stellar mass
function up to z~7 and the cosmic star formation rate density up
to z~10
(Fontanot
et al. 2017); the measured correlation between stellar
mass/luminosity and metal content of galaxies in the local
Universe, donw to the scale of Milky Way satellites
(De
Lucia et al. 2014;
Xie et
al. 2017), and the evolution of the galaxy mass-gas
metallicity relation up to z~2
(Hirschmann
et al. 2016;
Xie et
al. 2017); the size-mass relation and the specific angular
momentum-mass relation of late and early-type galaxies in the
local Universe
(Zoldan
et al. 2018); the quiescent satellite fraction in the local
Universe
(De
Lucia et al. 2019).