Can Gas prevent the Destruction of Thin Stellar Discs by Minor Mergers?
Benjamin P. Moster, Andrea V. Maccio', Rachel S. Somerville, Peter H., Johansson, Thorsten Naab

TL;DR
This study investigates how gas in galactic discs influences their vertical thickening during minor mergers, showing that gas reduces thickening and supports the survival of thin discs consistent with observations.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that including gas physics in simulations significantly reduces disc thickening during minor mergers, aligning models with observed thin disc structures.
Findings
Gas reduces disc thickening by up to 50%.
Final scale heights match observed spiral galaxy structures.
No conflict with Milky Way thin disc measurements.
Abstract
We study the effect of dissipational gas physics on the vertical heating and thickening of disc galaxies during minor mergers. We produce a suite of minor merger simulations for Milky Way-like galaxies. This suite consists of collisionless simulations as well as hydrodynamical runs including a gaseous component in the galactic disc. We find that in dissipationless simulations minor mergers cause the scale height of the disc to increase by up to a factor of ~2. When the presence of gas in the disc is taken into account this thickening is reduced by 25% (50%) for an initial disc gas fraction of 20% (40%), leading to a final scale height z0 between 0.6 and 0.7 kpc, regardless of the initial scale height. We argue that the presence of gas reduces disc heating via two mechanisms: absorption of kinetic impact energy by the gas and/or formation of a new thin stellar disc that can cause heated…
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