Loops formed by tidal tails as fossil records of a major merger
J. Wang (1,2), F. Hammer (1), E. Athanassoula (3), M. Puech (1), Y., Yang (1,2), and H. Flores (1) ((1) Laboratoire GEPI, Observatoire de Paris, (2) National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences (NAOC), (3) LAM Observatoire Astronomique de Marseille)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that faint, extended loops in galaxy haloes can be formed by gas-rich major mergers, providing an alternative to satellite infall scenarios and explaining various halo features.
Contribution
It shows that 3:1 major mergers can produce halo loops and galaxy features similar to those observed, challenging the minor merger paradigm.
Findings
Loops can result from major mergers, not just satellite infall.
Major mergers reproduce halo features like loops, warps, and extended discs.
The scenario explains halo properties and galaxy colors better than minor mergers.
Abstract
Many haloes of nearby disc galaxies contain faint and extended features, including loops, which are often interpreted as relics of satellite infall in the main galaxy's potential well. In most cases, however, the residual nucleus of the satellite is not seen, although it is predicted by numerical simulations. We test whether such faint and extended features can be associated to gas-rich, major mergers, which may also lead to disc rebuilding and thus be a corner stone for the formation of spiral galaxies. Using the TreeSPH code GADGET-2, we model the formation of an almost bulge-less galaxy similar to NGC 5907 (B/T 0.2) after a gas-rich major merger. We indeed find that 3:1 major mergers can form features similar to the loops found in many galactic haloes, including in NGC 5907, and can reproduce an extended thin disc, a bulge, as well as the pronounced warp of the gaseous disc.…
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