An EAGLE's View of Ex-situ Galaxy Growth
Thomas A. Davison, Mark A. Norris, Joel L. Pfeffer, Jonathan J., Davies, Robert A. Crain

TL;DR
This paper extends theoretical predictions of galaxy assembly by calculating ex-situ star fractions as functions of galaxy properties, enabling direct comparison with new observational techniques and providing insights into galaxy growth mechanisms.
Contribution
It offers tailored predictions of ex-situ stellar mass fractions for different galaxy types and environments, improving the comparability of simulations with observational data.
Findings
Ex-situ fraction increases with stellar mass across a wide range.
More extended galaxies at fixed mass have higher ex-situ fractions.
Ex-situ fraction decreases with increasing host halo mass for satellites.
Abstract
Modern observational and analytic techniques now enable the direct measurement of star formation histories and the inference of galaxy assembly histories. However, current theoretical predictions of assembly are not ideally suited for direct comparison with such observational data. We therefore extend the work of prior examinations of the contribution of ex-situ stars to the stellar mass budget of simulated galaxies. Our predictions are specifically tailored for direct testing with a new generation of observational techniques by calculating ex-situ fractions as functions of galaxy mass and morphological type, for a range of surface brightnesses. These enable comparison with results from large FoV IFU spectrographs, and increasingly accurate spectral fitting, providing a look-up method for the estimated accreted fraction. We furthermore provide predictions of ex-situ mass fractions as…
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