Galaxies with prolate rotation in Illustris
Ivana Ebrova, Ewa L. Lokas

TL;DR
This study uses the Illustris simulation to identify and analyze galaxies with prolate rotation, revealing its correlation with specific merger histories and evolutionary paths, and highlighting the role of gas-rich mergers in its formation.
Contribution
First comprehensive analysis of prolate rotators in a cosmological simulation, linking their emergence to merger characteristics and galaxy evolution.
Findings
Prolate rotators are more common in massive galaxies.
Their formation is strongly linked to recent significant mergers.
Gas-rich mergers often produce prolate rotation with stars supporting the rotation.
Abstract
Tens of early type galaxies have been recently reported to possess prolate rotation, i.e. significant amount of rotation around the major axis, including two cases in the Local Group. Although expected theoretically, this phenomenon is rarely observed and remains elusive. In order to explore its origin we study the population of well-resolved galaxies in the Illustris cosmological simulation. We identify 59 convincing examples of prolate rotators at the present time, more frequently among more massive galaxies, with the number varying very little with redshift. We follow their evolution back in time using the main progenitor branch galaxies of the Illustris merger trees. We find that the emergence of prolate rotation is strongly correlated with the time of the last significant merger the galaxy experienced, although other evolutionary paths leading to prolate rotation are also possible.…
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