# The prevalence of pseudo-bulges in the Auriga simulations

**Authors:** Ignacio D. Gargiulo, Antonela Monachesi, Facundo A. G\'omez, Robert J., J. Grand, Federico Marinacci, R\"udiger Pakmor, Simon D. M. White, Eric F., Bell, Francesca Fragkoudi, and Patricia Tissera

arXiv: 1907.02082 · 2019-09-25

## TL;DR

This study analyzes the formation and characteristics of galactic bulges in the Auriga simulations, revealing that most are pseudo-bulges formed mainly in-situ with diverse formation histories, and finds no correlation between bulge and halo mass.

## Contribution

It provides a detailed characterization of bulge types, formation mechanisms, and their relation to stellar haloes in a large suite of high-resolution cosmological simulations.

## Key findings

- Most bulges are pseudo-bulges based on observational criteria.
- Majority of bulges formed predominantly in-situ.
- Bulge mass correlates with accreted halo mass, but not with total bulge mass.

## Abstract

We study the galactic bulges in the Auriga simulations, a suite of thirty cosmological magneto-hydrodynamical zoom-in simulations of late-type galaxies in Milky Way-sized dark matter haloes performed with the moving-mesh code AREPO. We aim to characterize bulge formation mechanisms in this large suite of galaxies simulated at high resolution in a fully cosmological context. The bulges of the Auriga galaxies show a large variety in their shapes,sizes and formation histories. According to observational classification criteria, such as Sersic index and degree of ordered rotation, the majority of the Auriga bulges can be classified as pseudo-bulges, while some of them can be seen as composite bulges with a classical component; however, none can be classified as a classical bulge. Auriga bulges show mostly an in-situ origin, 21 percent of them with a negligible accreted fraction (facc < 0.01). In general,their in-situ component was centrally formed, with 75 percent of the bulges forming most of their stars inside the bulge region at z=0. Part of their in-situ mass growth is rapid and is associated with the effects of mergers, while another part is more secular in origin. In 90 percent of the Auriga bulges, the accreted bulge component originates from less than four satellites.We investigate the relation between the accreted stellar haloes and the bulges of the Auriga simulations. The total bulge mass shows no correlation with the accreted stellar halo mass, as in observations. However, the accreted mass of bulges tends to correlate with their respective accreted stellar halo mass.

## Full text

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## Figures

25 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.02082/full.md

## References

107 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.02082/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.02082