Evaluating Galactic Habitability Using High Resolution Cosmological Simulations of Galaxy Formation
Duncan Forgan, Pratika Dayal, Charles Cockell, Noam Libeskind

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution cosmological simulations to map the three-dimensional, evolving galactic habitable zones of the Milky Way and M33, revealing how galaxy formation history influences habitability potential across different regions.
Contribution
It introduces the first model coupling detailed galaxy formation simulations with galactic habitable zone calculations, highlighting the importance of asymmetric and temporal evolution in habitability assessments.
Findings
Habitability probability increases towards the galaxy edges.
Tidal streams and satellite galaxies are promising for habitable planets.
Galaxies reach similar GHZs through different evolutionary paths.
Abstract
We present the first model that couples high-resolution simulations of the formation of Local Group galaxies with calculations of the galactic habitable zone (GHZ), a region of space which has sufficient metallicity to form terrestrial planets without being subject to hazardous radiation. These simulations allow us to make substantial progress in mapping out the asymmetric three-dimensional GHZ and its time evolution for the Milky Way (MW) and Triangulum (M33) galaxies, as opposed to works that generally assume an azimuthally symmetric GHZ. Applying typical habitability metrics to MW and M33, we find that while a large number of habitable planets exist as close as a few kiloparsecs from the galactic centre, the probability of individual planetary systems being habitable rises as one approaches the edge of the stellar disc. Tidal streams and satellite galaxies also appear to be fertile…
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