How do minor mergers promote inside-out growth of ellipticals, transforming the size, density profile and dark matter fraction?
Michael Hilz, Thorsten Naab, Jeremiah P. Ostriker

TL;DR
This study investigates how minor dry mergers drive the inside-out growth of elliptical galaxies, leading to increased size, altered density profiles, and higher dark matter fractions, consistent with observational evidence.
Contribution
It demonstrates that minor mergers, especially with dark matter halos, can explain the rapid size and profile evolution of ellipticals, a novel insight into galaxy growth mechanisms.
Findings
Minor mergers with dark matter halos accelerate size growth.
Size scales as r ∝ M^α with α > 2 for minor mergers.
Dark matter fraction within half-mass radius increases significantly.
Abstract
There is observational evidence for inside-out growth of elliptical galaxies since , which is not driven by in-situ star formation. Many systems at high redshift have small sizes and surface brightness profiles with low Sersic indices n. The most likely descendants have, on average, grown by a factor of two in mass and a factor of four in size, indicating with . They also have surface brightness profiles with . This evolution can be qualitatively explained on the basis of two assumptions: compact ellipticals predominantly grow by collisionless minor or intermediate 'dry' mergers, and they are embedded in massive dark matter halos. We draw these conclusions from idealized collisionless mergers spheroidal galaxies - with and without dark matter - with mass ratios of 1:1, 1:5, and 1:10. The sizes evolve as $r…
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