Simulating the evolution of disc galaxies in a group environment. I. The influence of the global tidal field
\'Alvaro Villalobos, Gabriella De Lucia, Stefano Borgani, and Giuseppe, Murante

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations to analyze how disc galaxies evolve under the influence of a group environment's tidal field, revealing dependencies on orbit, inclination, and mass, with implications for galaxy morphology and bulge formation.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive simulation-based analysis of disc galaxy evolution in group environments, highlighting the effects of orbital parameters and mass ratios on morphological transformation.
Findings
Disc transformations occur only when group density exceeds a threshold.
Disc orientation significantly affects morphological retention.
More massive galaxies experience greater tidal stripping.
Abstract
We present the results of a series of numerical simulations aimed to study the evolution of a disc galaxy within the global tidal field of a group environment. Both the disc galaxy and the group are modelled as multi-component, collision-less, N-body systems, composed by both dark matter and stars. In our simulations, the evolution of disc galaxies is followed as their orbits sink towards the group centre, under the effect of dynamical friction. We explore a broad parameter space, covering several aspects of the galaxy-group interaction that are potentially relevant to galaxy evolution. Namely, prograde and retrograde orbits, orbital eccentricities, disc inclination, role of a central bulge in discs, internal disc kinematics, and galaxy-to-group mass ratios. We find that significant disc transformations occur only after the mean density of the group, measured within the orbit of the…
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