The SLUGGS Survey: The Assembly Histories of Individual Early-type Galaxies
Duncan A. Forbes, Aaron J. Romanowsky, Nicola Pastorello, Caroline, Foster, Jean P. Brodie, Jay Strader, Christopher Usher, Vincenzo Pota

TL;DR
This study analyzes the assembly histories of 24 early-type galaxies using stellar kinematics and compares them with hydrodynamical simulations to understand their evolutionary pathways.
Contribution
It provides a detailed classification of galaxy assembly histories based on kinematic diagnostics and compares observational data with simulations to identify dominant formation processes.
Findings
Most galaxies grew via minor mergers and gas accretion.
Some galaxies experienced recent gas-rich major mergers.
Accreted star fraction correlates with age and metallicity gradients.
Abstract
Early-type (E and S0) galaxies may have assembled via a variety of different evolutionary pathways. Here we investigate these pathways by comparing the stellar kinematic properties of 24 early-type galaxies from the SLUGGS survey with the hydrodynamical simulations of Naab et al. (2014). In particular, we use the kinematics of starlight up to 4 effective radii (R) as diagnostics of galaxy inner and outer regions, and assign each galaxy to one of six Naab et al. assembly classes. The majority of our galaxies (14/24) have kinematic characteristics that indicate an assembly history dominated by gradual gas dissipation and accretion of many gas-rich minor mergers. Three galaxies, all S0s, indicate that they have experienced gas-rich major mergers in their more recent past. One additional elliptical galaxy is tentatively associated with a gas-rich merger which results in a remnant…
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