On the Origin of Dwarf Elliptical Galaxies: The Fundamental Plane
J. A. L. Aguerri, C. Gonzalez-Garcia

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to show that harassment and tidal stripping can transform bright disc galaxies into dwarf ellipticals, explaining their different positions on the fundamental plane.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates through simulations that galaxy harassment can account for the origin and properties of dwarf elliptical galaxies in the fundamental plane.
Findings
Tidal stripping efficiently removes stars and dark matter from galaxies.
Galaxies with higher bulge-to-disc ratios resemble bright ellipticals.
Lower B/D ratio galaxies after tidal interactions resemble dwarf ellipticals.
Abstract
Early-type dwarf galaxies are the most common type of galaxies observed in the Universe. The origin of this kind of systems is still not well understood. The aim of this paper is to investigate whether the different locations of dwarf galaxies with respect to ellipticals in the face-on view of the fundamental plane could be due to the transformation of bright disc galaxies in low-mass systems by harassment. We have run high-resolution N-body numerical simulations to test the tidal stripping scenario of the dE galaxies. The present simulations modelled several individual tidal stripping events on initial disc-like galaxy models with different bulge-to-disc mass ratios. Tidal stripping is a very efficient mechanism for removing stars and dark matter particles from galaxies. The particles of the disc and halo components were easily stripped, while the bulge not. Thus, the scale length of…
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