Formation of In Situ Stellar Haloes in Milky Way-Mass Galaxies
Andrew P. Cooper (1), Owen H. Parry (2), Ben Lowing (1), Shaun Cole, (1), Carlos Frenk (1) ((1) ICC Durham, (2) University of Maryland)

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to analyze the formation of in situ stellar haloes in Milky Way-mass galaxies, revealing that most in situ halo stars originate from gas-rich accretion events and are categorized into three distinct formation pathways.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed classification of in situ halo stars based on their origin and demonstrates the significant role of gas-rich accretion in their formation within cosmological simulations.
Findings
In situ halo stars constitute 30-40% of the stellar halo mass.
Most in situ halo stars originate from stripped gas during accretion.
The properties of in situ halo components vary across different simulated galaxies.
Abstract
We study the formation of stellar haloes in three Milky Way-mass galaxies using cosmological smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations, focusing on the subset of halo stars that form in situ, as opposed to those accreted from satellites. In situ stars in our simulations dominate the stellar halo out to 20 kpc and account for 30-40 per cent of its total mass. We separate in situ halo stars into three straightforward, physically distinct categories according to their origin: stars scattered from the disc of the main galaxy ('heated disc'), stars formed from gas smoothly accreted on to the halo ('smooth' gas) and stars formed in streams of gas stripped from infalling satellites ('stripped' gas). We find that most belong to the stripped gas category. Those originating in smooth gas outside the disc tend to form at the same time and place as the stripped-gas population, suggesting that…
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