On the survival of metallicity gradients to major dry-mergers
P. Di Matteo, A. Pipino, M. D. Lehnert, F. Combes, B. Semelin

TL;DR
This study investigates how dry galaxy mergers affect metallicity gradients, revealing that such mergers can preserve, flatten, or even steepen gradients depending on initial conditions, thus explaining observed diversity in elliptical galaxies.
Contribution
The paper provides the first systematic analysis of metallicity gradient evolution in dry mergers across a range of galaxy structures and initial gradients.
Findings
Dry mergers can preserve or flatten metallicity gradients.
The final gradient depends on the initial slopes of the merging galaxies.
Dry mergers can account for the observed scatter in metallicity gradients in ellipticals.
Abstract
Using a large suite of galaxies with a variety of concentrations and metallicity gradients, we study the evolution of non-dissipative ("dry") equal mass mergers. Our purpose in generating these simulations is to explore how the metallicity gradient in dry mergers depends on the structure and metallicity gradients of the galaxies involved in the merger. Specifically, we would like to answer: Could dry mergers lead to metallicity gradients as observed in elliptical galaxies in the local Universe? Do dry mergers always lead to a flattening of the initial (i.e., pre-merger) gradient? From this modeling, we conclude that: The ratio of the remnant and the initial galaxy slopes span a wide range of values, up to values greater than 1 (with values greater than one resulting only when companions have gradients twice the progenitor). For a merger between two ellipticals having identical initial…
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