No Assembly Required: Mergers are Mostly Irrelevant for the Growth of Low-mass Dwarf Galaxies
Alex Fitts, Michael Boylan-Kolchin, James S. Bullock, Daniel R. Weisz,, Kareem El-Badry, Coral Wheeler, Claude-Andr\'e Faucher-Gigu\`ere, Eliot, Quataert, Philip F. Hopkins, Du\v{s}an Kere\v{s}, Andrew Wetzel, Chris, Hayward

TL;DR
This study shows that low-mass dwarf galaxies mainly grow through in situ star formation, with mergers playing a minimal role, which impacts how we interpret their star formation histories.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that mergers are largely irrelevant for the growth of low-mass dwarf galaxies, emphasizing the dominance of in situ star formation in their evolution.
Findings
Over 90% of stellar mass formed in situ in all but two cases.
Most mergers occurred before redshift z~3, involving small mass ratios.
Mergers have minimal impact on observable properties of dwarf galaxies.
Abstract
We investigate the merger histories of isolated dwarf galaxies based on a suite of 15 high-resolution cosmological zoom-in simulations, all with masses of (and M) at , from the Feedback in Realistic Environments (FIRE) project. The stellar populations of these dwarf galaxies at are formed essentially entirely "in situ": over 90 of the stellar mass is formed in the main progenitor in all but two cases, and all 15 of the galaxies have >70 of their stellar mass formed in situ. Virtually all galaxy mergers occur prior to , meaning that accreted stellar populations are ancient. On average, our simulated dwarfs undergo 5 galaxy mergers in their lifetimes, with typical pre-merger galaxy mass ratios that are less than 1:10. This merger frequency is generally comparable to what has…
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