The stellar accretion origin of stellar population gradients in massive galaxies at large radii
Michaela Hirschmann, Thorsten Naab, Jeremiah P. Ostriker, Duncan A., Forbes, Pierre-Alain Duc, Romeel Dav\'e, Ludwig Oser, Emin Karabal

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to show that stellar accretion, especially through minor mergers, significantly influences the metallicity and color gradients in massive galaxies at large radii, aligning with observational data.
Contribution
It demonstrates that stellar accretion, particularly via minor mergers, steepens metallicity and color gradients, emphasizing its role in galaxy evolution models.
Findings
Steeper metallicity and color gradients in models with winds match observations.
Stellar accretion from minor mergers steepens existing metallicity gradients.
Galaxies with major mergers have flatter gradients.
Abstract
We investigate the evolution of stellar population gradients from to in massive galaxies at large radii () using ten cosmological zoom simulations of halos with . The simulations follow metal cooling and enrichment from SNII, SNIa and AGB winds. We explore the differential impact of an empirical model for galactic winds that reproduces the mass-metallicity relation and its evolution with redshift. At larger radii the galaxies, for both models, become more dominated by stars accreted from satellite galaxies in major and minor mergers. In the wind model, fewer stars are accreted, but they are significantly more metal poor resulting in steep global metallicity ( dex/dex) and color (e.g. dex/dex)…
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