The Formation and Survival of Discs in a Lambda-CDM Universe
Cecilia Scannapieco (1), Simon D.M. White (1), Volker Springel (1),, Patricia B. Tissera (2) ((1) Max-Planck Institute for Astrophysics -, Garching; (2) Institute for Astronomy, Space Physics - Buenos Aires)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations to explore how galaxy discs form and survive in a Lambda-CDM universe, revealing that disc presence at z=0 is not solely determined by halo spin or merger history.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the complex formation and survival mechanisms of galactic discs, emphasizing the role of individual formation histories over halo spin parameters.
Findings
Some galaxies have well-formed discs despite low halo spin.
Discs are generally present at high redshift (z > 2).
Disc survival depends on merger history and gas accretion misalignment.
Abstract
We study the formation of galaxies in a Lambda-CDM Universe using high resolution hydrodynamical simulations with a multiphase treatment of gas, cooling and feedback, focusing on the formation of discs. Our simulations follow eight haloes similar in mass to the Milky Way and extracted from a large cosmological simulation without restriction on spin parameter or merger history. This allows us to investigate how the final properties of the simulated galaxies correlate with the formation histories of their haloes. We find that, at z = 0, none of our galaxies contain a disc with more than 20 per cent of its total stellar mass. Four of the eight galaxies nevertheless have well-formed disc components, three have dominant spheroids and very small discs, and one is a spheroidal galaxy with no disc at all. The z = 0 spheroids are made of old stars, while discs are younger and formed from the…
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