Massive spheroids can form in single minor mergers
R. A. Jackson, G. Martin, S. Kaviraj, C. Laigle, J. E. G. Devriendt,, Y. Dubois, C. Pichon

TL;DR
This study reveals that some massive spheroids can form rapidly from a single minor merger with specific orbital conditions, challenging the traditional view that major mergers are necessary for such transformations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that massive spheroids can form without major mergers, specifically through a single minor merger with particular orbital configurations, in contrast to previous assumptions.
Findings
Massive spheroids can form from a single minor merger.
Such mergers can induce rapid morphological change within a few hundred Myrs.
This formation channel accounts for about 5% of massive spheroids in simulations.
Abstract
Understanding how rotationally-supported discs transform into dispersion-dominated spheroids is central to our comprehension of galaxy evolution. Morphological transformation is largely merger-driven. While major mergers can efficiently create spheroids, recent work has highlighted the significant role of other processes, like minor mergers, in driving morphological change. Given their rich merger histories, spheroids typically exhibit large fractions of `ex-situ' stellar mass, i.e. mass that is accreted, via mergers, from external objects. This is particularly true for the most massive galaxies, whose stellar masses typically cannot be attained without a large number of mergers. Here, we explore an unusual population of extremely massive (M* > 10^11 MSun) spheroids, in the Horizon-AGN simulation, which exhibit anomalously low ex-situ mass fractions, indicating that they form without…
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