The Origin of Disks and Spheroids in Simulated Galaxies
Laura V. Sales, Julio F. Navarro, Tom Theuns, Joop Schaye, Simon D. M., White, Carlos S. Frenk, Robert A. Crain, Claudio Dalla Vecchia

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to investigate how galaxy morphology, specifically disks and spheroids, relates to halo properties, gas accretion, and angular momentum alignment, revealing that accretion history and angular momentum coherence are key factors.
Contribution
It demonstrates that galaxy morphology is more influenced by angular momentum alignment and gas accretion patterns than by halo spin or merger history, challenging traditional assumptions.
Findings
Disks form from gas with aligned angular momentum to earlier accretion.
Spheroids form when accreted gas has misaligned angular momentum.
Halo spin and mergers are less influential than gas accretion dynamics.
Abstract
In the simplest scenario, disk galaxies form predominantly in halos with high angular momentum and quiet recent assembly history, whereas spheroids are the slowly-rotating remnants of repeated merging events. We explore these assumptions using one hundred systems with halo masses similar to that of the Milky Way, identified in a series of cosmological gasdynamical simulations GIMIC. At z=0, the simulated galaxies exhibit a wide variety of morphologies, from dispersion-dominated spheroids to pure disk galaxies. Surprisingly, these morphological features are very poorly correlated with their halo properties: disks form in halos with high and low net spin, and mergers play a negligible role in the formation of spheroid stars, most of which form in-situ. More important to morphology is the coherent alignment of the angular momentum of baryons that accrete over time to form a galaxy.…
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