Thin disc, Thick Disc and Halo in a Simulated Galaxy
C. B. Brook, G. S. Stinson, B. K. Gibson, D. Kawata, E. L. House, M., S. Miranda, A. V. Macci\`o, K. Pilkington, R. Ro\v{s}kar, J. Wadsley, T. R., Quinn

TL;DR
This study uses a cosmological simulation to analyze the formation and properties of thin disc, thick disc, and halo components in a galaxy, highlighting their distinct characteristics and formation histories.
Contribution
It provides a detailed chemical and kinematic decomposition of galaxy components in a simulation, linking formation processes to observed properties.
Findings
Thin disc stars are young, metal-rich, with low velocity dispersion.
Thick disc stars are older, metal-poor, with higher velocity dispersion.
The halo is formed mainly in-situ during early mergers, with low metallicity.
Abstract
Within a cosmological hydrodynamical simulation, we form a disc galaxy with sub- components which can be assigned to a thin stellar disc, thick disk, and a low mass stellar halo via a chemical decomposition. The thin and thick disc populations so selected are distinct in their ages, kinematics, and metallicities. Thin disc stars are young (<6.6 Gyr), possess low velocity dispersion ({\sigma}U,V,W = 41, 31, 25 km/s), high [Fe/H], and low [O/Fe]. The thick disc stars are old (6.6<age<9.8 Gyrs), lag the thin disc by \sim21 km/s, possess higher velocity dispersion ({\sigma}U,V,W = 49, 44, 35 km/s), relatively low [Fe/H] and high [O/Fe]. The halo component comprises less than 4% of stars in the "solar annulus" of the simulation, has low metallicity, a velocity ellipsoid defined by ({\sigma}U,V,W = 62, 46, 45 km/s) and is formed primarily in-situ during an early merger epoch. Gas-rich mergers…
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