The Sensitivity of Harassment to Orbit: Mass Loss from Early-Type Dwarfs in Galaxy Clusters
Rory Smith, Ruben Sanchez-Janssen, Michael A. Beasley, Graeme N., Candlish, Brad K. Gibson, Thomas H. Puzia, Joachim Janz, Alexander Knebe, J., Alfonso L. Aguerri, Thorsten Lisker, Gerhard Hensler, Michael Fellhauer,, Laura Ferrarese, and Sukyoung K. Yi

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations to analyze how galaxy harassment affects early-type dwarf galaxies in clusters, finding that most are not significantly stripped unless they pass very close to the cluster core.
Contribution
It provides a detailed orbital dependence analysis of harassment effects on dwarf galaxies, highlighting that most are not heavily affected in typical cluster environments.
Findings
Most orbits cause no stellar mass loss.
Significant effects occur only for deep core passages.
Phase-space diagrams can indicate harassment levels.
Abstract
We conduct a comprehensive numerical study of the orbital dependence of harassment on early-type dwarfs consisting of 168 different orbits within a realistic, Virgo-like cluster, varying in eccentricity and pericentre distance. We find harassment is only effective at stripping stars or truncating their stellar disks for orbits that enter deep into the cluster core. Comparing to the orbital distribution in cosmological simulations, we find that the majority of the orbits (more than three quarters) result in no stellar mass loss. We also study the effects on the radial profiles of the globular cluster systems of early-type dwarfs. We find these are significantly altered only if harassment is very strong. This suggests that perhaps most early-type dwarfs in clusters such as Virgo have not suffered any tidal stripping of stars or globular clusters due to harassment, as these components are…
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