Cold Dark Matter Substructure and Galactic Disks II: Dynamical Effects of Hierarchical Satellite Accretion
Stelios Kazantzidis (CCAPP/OSU), Andrew R. Zentner (U.Pittsburgh),, Andrey V. Kravtsov (KICP/U.Chicago), James S. Bullock (UC Irvine), V. P., Debattista (UCLAN)

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations to show that cold dark matter substructures can significantly thicken, heat, and distort galactic disks, influencing their evolution and observable features.
Contribution
First to incorporate cosmic evolution of satellite populations in simulations of disk perturbations, revealing their substantial impact on galaxy structure.
Findings
Disks experience thickening and heating, nearly doubling at the solar radius.
Flaring increases disk thickness by over four times in outer regions.
Surface density profiles develop antitruncated features similar to observed galaxies.
Abstract
(Abridged) We perform dissipationless N-body simulations to elucidate the dynamical response of thin disks to bombardment by cold dark matter (CDM) substructure. Our method combines (1) cosmological simulations of the formation of Milky Way (MW)-sized CDM halos to derive the properties of substructure and (2) controlled numerical experiments of consecutive subhalo impacts onto an initially-thin, fully-formed MW type disk galaxy. The present study is the first to account for the evolution of satellite populations over cosmic time in such an investigation of disk structure. We find that accretions of massive subhalos onto the central regions of host halos, where the galactic disks reside, since z~1 should be common. One host halo accretion history is used to initialize the controlled simulations of satellite-disk encounters. We show that these accretion events severely perturb the thin…
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