Radial Migration Does Little for Galactic Disc Thickening
I. Minchev, B. Famaey, A. C. Quillen, W. Dehnen, M. Martig, A. Siebert

TL;DR
This study demonstrates through simulations that radial migration in galactic discs does not significantly contribute to disc thickening, challenging previous assumptions about its role in galaxy evolution.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed simulation-based evidence that radial migration does not thicken galactic discs, emphasizing the role of action conservation over energy.
Findings
Migrators do not increase disc thickness as expected.
Migration tends to suppress disc heating in certain regions.
Results are consistent across different simulation schemes.
Abstract
Non-axisymmetric components, such as spirals and central bars, play a major role in shaping galactic discs. An important aspect of the disc secular evolution driven by these perturbers is the radial migration of stars. It has been suggested recently that migration can populate a thick-disc component from inner-disc stars with high vertical energies. Since this has never been demonstrated in simulations, we study in detail the effect of radial migration on the disc velocity dispersion and disc thickness, by separating simulated stars into migrators and non-migrators. We apply this method to three isolated barred Tree-SPH N-body galaxies with strong radial migration. Contrary to expectations, we find that as stellar samples migrate, on the average, their velocity dispersion change (by as much as 50%) in such a way as to approximately match the non-migrating population at the radius at…
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