The diversity of assembly histories leading to disc galaxy formation in a LambdaCDM model
Andreea S. Font, Ian G. McCarthy, Amandine M. C. Le Brun, Robert A., Crain, Lee S. Kelvin

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations within a LambdaCDM framework to show that disc galaxies can survive and reform after massive mergers, highlighting diverse formation pathways and the importance of gas-rich environments.
Contribution
It demonstrates that disc galaxies can endure significant mergers and re-form through diverse pathways, challenging the notion that quiescent histories are necessary for disc formation.
Findings
Approximately half of disc galaxies experienced major mergers.
Discs often temporarily decrease in prominence after mergers.
High gas fractions post-merger facilitate disc re-growth.
Abstract
[Abridged] Typical disc galaxies forming in a LambdaCDM cosmology encounter a violent environment, where they often experience mergers with massive satellites. The fact that disc galaxies are ubiquitous in the local Universe suggests that a quiescent history is not necessary for their formation. Modern cosmological simulations can now obtain relatively realistic populations of disc galaxies, but it still remains to be clarified how discs manage to survive massive mergers. Here we use a suite of high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations set in a LambdaCDM cosmology to elucidate the fate of discs encountering massive mergers. We extract a sample of approximately 100 disc galaxies and follow the changes in their post-merger morphologies, as tracked by their disc-to-total ratios (D/T). We also examine the relations between their present-day morphology, assembly history and gas fractions.…
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