Orbital structure of merger remnants: Trends with gas fraction in 1:1 mergers
Loren Hoffman, Thomas J. Cox, Suvendra Dutta, Lars Hernquist

TL;DR
This study investigates how varying gas fractions in 1:1 galaxy mergers influence the orbital structures of the resulting elliptical galaxies, revealing trends from prolate-triaxial to oblate shapes and the formation of kinematically distinct cores.
Contribution
It provides a detailed simulation-based analysis of orbital structures in merger remnants across different gas fractions, highlighting the impact of gas on galaxy shape and kinematic features.
Findings
Higher gas fractions lead to more oblate and round remnants.
Remnants with 15-20% gas often have kinematically distinct cores.
Remnants with 30-40% gas exhibit rapid rotation and embedded disks.
Abstract
Since the violent relaxation in hierarchical merging is incomplete, elliptical galaxies retain a wealth of information about their formation pathways in their present-day orbital structure. A variety of evidence indicates that gas-rich major mergers play an important role in the formation of elliptical galaxies. We simulate 1:1 disk mergers at seven different initial gas fractions ranging from 0 to 40%, using the TreeSPH code Gadget-2. We classify the stellar orbits in each remnant and construct radial profiles of the orbital content, intrinsic shape, and orientation. The dissipationless remnants are typically prolate-triaxial, dominated by box orbits within r_c ~ 1.5Reff, and by tube orbits in their outer parts. As the gas fraction increases, the box orbits within r_c are increasingly replaced by a population of short axis tubes (z-tubes) with near zero net rotation, and the remnants…
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