One-Two Quench: A Double Minor Merger Scenario
N. Nicole Sanchez, Michael Tremmel, Jessica K. Werk, Andrew Pontzen,, Charlotte Christensen, Thomas Quinn, Sarah Loebman, Akaxia Cruz

TL;DR
This study shows that two closely-timed minor mergers can jointly trigger galaxy quenching by fueling SMBH activity and disrupting the gas disk, leading to long-term star formation cessation in Milky Way-like galaxies.
Contribution
It demonstrates that a double minor merger scenario can effectively quench star formation in MW-mass galaxies, a process validated through controlled simulations and observed in cosmological data.
Findings
Minor mergers can trigger SMBH feedback leading to quenching.
Timing of mergers determines whether a galaxy is quenched.
The mechanism is observed in both controlled and cosmological simulations.
Abstract
Using the N-body+Smoothed particle hydrodynamics code, ChaNGa, we identify two merger-driven processes\textemdash disk disruption and supermassive black hole (SMBH) feedback\textemdash which work together to quench L galaxies for over 7 Gyr. Specifically, we examine the cessation of star formation in a simulated Milky Way (MW) analog, driven by an interaction with two minor satellites. Both interactions occur within 100 Myr of each other, and the satellites both have masses 5 to 20 times smaller than that of their MW-like host galaxy. Using the genetic modification process of \cite{Roth2016}, we generate a set of four zoom-in, MW-mass galaxies all of which exhibit unique star formation histories due to small changes to their assembly histories. In two of these four cases, the galaxy is quenched by . Because these are controlled modifications, we are able to isolate the…
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