Global structure and kinematics of stellar haloes in cosmological hydrodynamic simulations
Ian G. McCarthy, Andreea S. Font, Robert A. Crain, Alis J. Deason,, Joop Schaye, Tom Theuns

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological hydrodynamical simulations to analyze the structure and kinematics of stellar haloes in Milky Way-like galaxies, highlighting the roles of in situ star formation and accretion in halo formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that in situ star formation in proto-discs significantly shapes the stellar halo's structure and kinematics, supporting the dual stellar halo model.
Findings
Simulated spheroids are oblate with median axis ratio ~0.6.
In situ stars show prograde rotation and flattened distribution.
Halo components from in situ and accreted stars exhibit distinct kinematics.
Abstract
We use the Galaxies-Intergalactic Medium Interaction Calculation (GIMIC) suite of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations to study the global structure and kinematics of stellar spheroids of Milky Way mass disc galaxies. Font et al. have recently demonstrated that these simulations are able to successfully reproduce the satellite luminosity functions and the metallicity and surface brightness profiles of the spheroids of the Milky Way and M31. A key to the success of the simulations is a significant contribution to the spheroid from stars that formed in situ. While the outer halo is dominated by accreted stars, stars formed in the main progenitor of the galaxy dominate at r < ~30 kpc. In the present study we show that this component was primarily formed in a proto-disc at high redshift and was subsequently liberated from the disc by dynamical heating associated with mass accretion. As a…
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