Stellar Halos in Illustris- Probing the Histories of Milky Way-Mass Galaxies
Lydia M. Elias, Laura V. Sales, Peter Creasey, Michael C. Cooper,, James S. Bullock, Michael R. Rich, Lars Hernquist

TL;DR
This study uses the Illustris simulation to explore the diversity of stellar halos in Milky Way-like galaxies, revealing correlations with galaxy morphology, star formation, and assembly history, and explaining the absence of halos in some cases.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the formation and properties of stellar halos, especially in galaxies with minimal halo components, through detailed simulation analysis.
Findings
Stellar halo fraction correlates with galaxy morphology and star formation rate.
Galaxies with low stellar halo fractions are disk-dominated and form earlier.
In situ stars dominate the halos of galaxies with the lowest stellar halo fractions.
Abstract
The existence of stellar halos around galaxies is a natural prediction of the hierarchical nature of the LambdaCDM model. Recent observations of Milky Way-like galaxies have revealed a wide range in stellar halo mass, including cases with no statistically significant detection of a stellar halo, as in the case of M101, NGC3351 and NGC1042. We use the Illustris simulation to investigate the scatter in stellar halo content and, in particular, to study the formation of galaxies with the smallest fraction of this diffuse component. Stellar halos are far from spherical, which diminishes the surface brightness of the stellar halo for face-on disks. Once accounting for projection effects, we find that the stellar halo fraction f_SH correlates strongly with galaxy morphology and star formation rate, but not with environment, in agreement with observations. Galaxies with the lowest stellar halo…
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