The stellar structure and kinematics of dwarf spheroidal galaxies formed by tidal stirring
Ewa L. Lokas, Stelios Kazantzidis, Jaroslaw Klimentowski, Lucio Mayer, and Simone Callegari

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to explore how tidal interactions transform disky dwarf galaxies into spheroidals, affecting their stellar structure and kinematics, with implications for interpreting observational data.
Contribution
It demonstrates how different viewing angles and initial orientations influence the observed properties and mass estimates of tidally transformed dwarf spheroidal galaxies.
Findings
Final stellar density profiles can be approximated by a modified Plummer law.
Line-of-sight orientation significantly affects measured velocity dispersions.
Non-sphericity introduces at most 60% bias in mass estimates.
Abstract
Using high-resolution N-body simulations we study the stellar properties of dwarf spheroidal galaxies resulting from the tidally induced morphological transformation of disky dwarfs on a cosmologically motivated eccentric orbit around the Milky Way. Dwarf galaxy models initially consist of an exponential stellar disk embedded in an extended spherical dark matter halo. Depending on the initial orientation of the disk with respect to the orbital plane, different final configurations are obtained. The least evolved dwarf is triaxial and retains a significant amount of rotation. The more evolved dwarfs are prolate spheroids with little rotation. We show that the final density distribution of stars can be approximated by a simple modification of the Plummer law. The kinematics of the dwarfs is significantly different depending on the line of sight which has important implications for mapping…
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