The Two Phases of Galaxy Formation
Ludwig Oser, Jeremiah P. Ostriker, Thorsten Naab, Peter H. Johansson,, Andreas Burkert

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution cosmological simulations to reveal that galaxy formation occurs in two main phases: an early in-situ star formation phase and a later ex-situ accretion-dominated growth phase, varying with galaxy mass.
Contribution
It provides detailed simulation-based evidence for the two-phase galaxy formation model, highlighting the increasing role of stellar accretion in massive galaxies and reconciling hierarchical assembly with observed stellar ages.
Findings
Lower mass galaxies accrete about 60% of their stars since z=1.
High mass galaxies acquire about 80% of their stars through accretion and merging.
Massive galaxies contain the oldest stars, consistent with archaeological downsizing.
Abstract
Cosmological simulations of galaxy formation appear to show a two-phase character with a rapid early phase at z>2 during which in-situ stars are formed within the galaxy from infalling cold gas followed by an extended phase since z<3 during which ex-situ stars are primarily accreted. In the latter phase massive systems grow considerably in mass and radius by accretion of smaller satellite stellar systems formed at quite early times (z>3) outside of the virial radius of the forming central galaxy. These tentative conclusions are obtained from high resolution re-simulations of 39 individual galaxies in a full cosmological context with present-day virial halo masses ranging from 7e11 M_sun h^-1 < M_vir < 2.7e13 M_sun h^-1 and central galaxy masses between 4.5e10 M_sun h^-1 < M_* < 3.6e11 M_sun h^-1. The simulations include the effects of a uniform UV background, radiative cooling, star…
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