Evolutionary tracks of tidally stirred disky dwarf galaxies
Ewa L. Lokas, Stelios Kazantzidis, Lucio Mayer

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations to explore how dwarf galaxies evolve under tidal forces, transforming from late-type to early-type galaxies with observable properties influenced by observational biases.
Contribution
It provides detailed simulation-based evidence supporting the tidal stirring model for dwarf galaxy transformation, including effects on photometry and kinematics.
Findings
Dwarfs undergo significant mass loss and morphological transformation.
Observed properties are biased by viewing angles and tidal tail orientations.
Simulated properties match those of Local Group dwarf spheroidals.
Abstract
Using collisionless N-body simulations, we investigate the tidal evolution of late-type, rotationally supported dwarfs inside Milky Way-sized host galaxies. Our study focuses on a wide variety of dwarf orbital configurations and initial structures. During the evolution, the disky dwarfs undergo strong mass loss, the stellar disks are transformed into spheroids, and rotation is replaced by random motions of the stars. Thus, the late-type progenitors are transformed into early-type dwarfs as envisioned by the tidal stirring model for the formation of dwarf spheroidal (dSph) galaxies in the Local Group. We determine the photometric properties of the dwarfs, including the total visual magnitude, the half-light radius and the central surface brightness as they would be measured by an observer near the galactic center. Special emphasis is also placed on studying their kinematics and shapes.…
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