The slowing down of galaxy disks in dissipationless minor mergers
Yan Qu, Paola Di Matteo, Matthew Lehnert, Wim van Driel, Chanda J. Jog

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to show that dissipationless minor galaxy mergers generally decrease the stellar angular momentum and slow down the primary galaxy's disk rotation, affecting galaxy dynamics and observable properties.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how minor mergers influence galaxy angular momentum redistribution and rotational properties, highlighting a steady decrease rather than a random walk.
Findings
Stellar specific angular momentum always decreases after minor mergers.
The rotation speed of the primary galaxy's disk slows down post-merger.
Dark matter halos consistently gain angular momentum during mergers.
Abstract
We have investigated the impact of dissipationless minor galaxy mergers on the angular momentum of the remnant. Our simulations cover a range of initial orbital characteristics and the system consists of a massive galaxy with a bulge and disk merging with a much less massive (one-tenth or one-twentieth) gasless companion which has a variety of morphologies (disk- or elliptical-like) and central baryonic mass concentrations. During the process of merging, the orbital angular momentum is redistributed into the internal angular momentum of the final system; the internal angular momentum of the primary galaxy can increase or decrease depending on the relative orientation of the orbital spin vectors (direct or retrograde), while the initially non-rotating dark matter halo always gains angular momentum. The specific angular momentum of the stellar component always decreases independent of the…
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