The Andromeda galaxy's most important merger about 2 billion years ago as M32's likely progenitor
Richard D'Souza, Eric F. Bell

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological models to identify a major merger event in M31's history about 2 billion years ago, explaining various observed features and the formation of M32 as its likely remnant.
Contribution
It demonstrates that a single large merger explains multiple features of M31, including its stellar halo, stellar stream, and the origin of M32, refining understanding of galaxy merger impacts.
Findings
A major merger about 2 Gyr ago shaped M31's halo and stellar structures.
M32 is likely the stripped core of the merging galaxy.
The merger triggered a significant star formation burst in M31.
Abstract
Although the proximity of the Andromeda galaxy (M31) offers an opportunity to understand how mergers affect galaxies, uncertainty remains about M31's most important mergers. Previous studies focused individually on the giant stellar stream or the impact of M32 on M31's disk, thereby suggesting many substantial satellite interactions. Yet models of M31's disk heating and the similarity between the stellar populations of different tidal substructures in M31's outskirts both suggested a single large merger. M31's stellar halo (its outer low-surface-brightness regions) is built up from the tidal debris of satellites and provides information about its important mergers. Here we use cosmological models of galaxy formation to show that M31's massive and metal-rich stellar halo, containing intermediate-age stars, dramatically narrows the range of allowed interactions, requiring a single…
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