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The stellar halo in Local Group Hestia simulations I. The in-situ component and the effect of mergers

Authors :
Khoperskov, Sergey
Minchev, Ivan
Libeskind, Noam
Haywood, Misha
Di Matteo, Paola
Belokurov, Vasily
Steinmetz, Matthias
Gomez, Facundo A.
Grand, Robert J. J.
Hoffman, Yehuda
Knebe, Alexander
Sorce, Jenny G.
Sparre, Martin
Tempel, Elmo
Vogelsberger, Mark
Source :
A&A 677, A89 (2023)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Theory suggests that mergers play an important role in shaping galactic discs and stellar haloes, which was observationally confirmed in the MW thanks to Gaia data. In this work, aiming to probe the contribution of mergers to the in situ stellar halo formation, we analyse six M31/MW analogues from the HESTIA suite of cosmological hydrodynamical zoom-in simulations of the LG. We found that all the HESTIA galaxies experience between one to four mergers with stellar mass ratios between 0.2 and 1 relative to the host at the time of the merger. These significant mergers, with a single exception, happened 7-11Gyr ago. The overall impact of the most massive mergers in HESTIA is clearly seen as a sharp increase in the orbital eccentricity (and a corresponding decrease in the rotational velocity Vphi of pre-existing disc stars of the main progenitor, thus nicely reproducing the Splash-, Plume-like feature that was discovered in the MW. We do find a correlation between mergers and close pericentric passages of massive satellites and bursts of star formation in the in situ component. Massive mergers sharply increase the disc velocity dispersion of the in situ stars; however, the latest significant merger often heats up the disc up to the numbers when the contribution of the previous ones is less prominent in the age-velocity dispersion relation. In HESTIA galaxies, the in situ halo is an important component of the inner stellar halo where its fraction is about 30-40%, while in the outer parts it typically does not exceed ~5% beyond 15 kpc. The simulations suggest that this component of the stellar haloes continues to grow well after mergers conclude; however, the most significant contribution comes from stars that formed recently before the merger. The orbital analysis of the HESTIA galaxies suggests that wedges in Rmax-Zmax space are mainly populated by the stars born between significant mergers.<br />Comment: Paper I in a series of III, 17 pages, 15 figures, A&A in press

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
A&A 677, A89 (2023)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2206.04521
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202244232