The origin of the atomic and molecular gas contents of early-type galaxies. II. Misaligned gas accretion
Claudia del P. Lagos (ESO), N. D. Padilla (PUC), T. A. Davis (ESO,, Hertfordshire), C. G. Lacey (Durham), C. M. Baugh (Durham), V. Gonzalez-Perez, (Durham), M. Zwaan (ESO), S. Contreras (PUC)

TL;DR
This study investigates the origins of misaligned gas in early-type galaxies, finding that smooth gas accretion after stellar mass assembly explains the high observed misalignment fraction better than galaxy mergers alone.
Contribution
It demonstrates that smooth gas accretion is the primary driver of gas-stellar misalignments in early-type galaxies, supported by modeling and observational data analysis.
Findings
Approximately 42% of ETGs have misaligned gas and stars, matching observations.
Galaxy mergers alone cannot account for the high misalignment fraction.
Smooth gas accretion explains the majority of observed misalignments.
Abstract
We study the origin of the wide distribution of angles between the angular momenta of the stellar and gas components, , in early-type galaxies (ETGs). We use the GALFORM model of galaxy formation, set in the cold dark matter framework, and coupled it with a Monte-Carlo simulation to follow the angular momenta flips driven by matter accretion onto haloes and galaxies. We consider a gas disk to be misaligned with respect to the stellar body if ~degrees. By assuming that the only sources of misaligments in galaxies are galaxy mergers, we place a lower limit of per cent on the fraction of ETGs with misaligned gas/stellar components. These low fractions are inconsistent with the observed value of per cent in ATLAS. In the more general case, in which smooth gas accretion in addition to galaxy mergers can drive…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
