On the Efficiency of the Tidal Stirring Mechanism for the Origin of Dwarf Spheroidals: Dependence on the Orbital and Structural Parameters of the Progenitor Disky Dwarfs
Stelios Kazantzidis (CCAPP/OSU), Ewa L. Lokas (Nicolaus Copernicus, Astronomical Center), Simone Callegari (U.Zurich), Lucio Mayer (U.Zurich),, Leonidas A. Moustakas (JPL/Caltech)

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations to show that tidal interactions with host galaxies can transform disky dwarf galaxies into spheroidals, depending on orbital and structural parameters, supporting the tidal stirring model.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of how orbital configurations and progenitor structures influence the efficiency of tidal transformations in dwarf galaxies.
Findings
Tidal shocks at pericenters drive morphological transformation.
Short orbital times and small pericenters induce stronger transformations.
Transformed dwarfs follow a specific velocity dispersion relation.
Abstract
(Abridged) The tidal stirring model posits the formation of dSph galaxies via the tidal interactions between rotationally-supported dwarfs and MW-sized host galaxies. Using a set of collisionless N-body simulations, we investigate the efficiency of the tidal stirring mechanism. We explore a wide variety of dwarf orbital configurations and initial structures and demonstrate that in most cases the disky dwarfs experience significant mass loss and their stellar components undergo a dramatic morphological and dynamical transformation: from disks to bars and finally to pressure-supported spheroidal systems with kinematic and structural properties akin to those of the classic dSphs in the Local Group (LG). Our results suggest that such tidal transformations should be common occurrences within the currently favored cosmological paradigm and highlight the key factor responsible for an effective…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
