Galactic accretion and the outer structure of galaxies in the CDM model
Andrew P. Cooper, Richard D'Souza, Guinevere Kauffmann, Jing Wang,, Michael Boylan-Kolchin, Qi Guo, Carlos S. Frenk, Simon D.M. White

TL;DR
This study combines galaxy formation models and N-body simulations to predict the outer stellar structures of galaxies, emphasizing the role of accreted stars from mergers across different halo masses.
Contribution
It introduces a method linking semi-analytic models with particle-tagging to accurately predict galaxy outer profiles and compares these with observational data.
Findings
Surface density of accreted stars follows a Sersic profile.
Break in stellar surface density profile depends on halo mass.
Model aligns well with SDSS observations.
Abstract
We have combined the semi-analytic galaxy formation model of Guo et al. (2011) with the particle-tagging technique of Cooper et al. (2010) to predict galaxy surface brightness profiles in a representative sample of ~1900 massive dark matter haloes (10^12--10^14 M_sol) from the Millennium II Lambda-CDM N-body simulation. Here we present our method and basic results focusing on the outer regions of galaxies, consisting of stars accreted in mergers. These simulations cover scales from the stellar haloes of Milky Way-like galaxies to the 'cD envelopes' of groups and clusters, and resolve low surface brightness substructure such as tidal streams. We find that the surface density of accreted stellar mass around the central galaxies of dark matter haloes is well described by a Sersic profile, the radial scale and amplitude of which vary systematically with halo mass (M_200). The total stellar…
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