Star-Gas Misalignment in Galaxies: II. Origins Found from the Horizon-AGN Simulation
Donghyeon J. Khim, Sukyoung K. Yi, Christophe Pichon, Yohan Dubois,, Julien Devriendt, Hoseung Choi, Julia J. Bryant, Scott M. Croom

TL;DR
This study investigates the origins and lifetimes of star-gas misalignment in galaxies using Horizon-AGN simulation, identifying four main formation channels and analyzing their impact on galaxy dynamics and environment.
Contribution
It identifies and quantifies four main formation channels of misalignment and analyzes their effects on galaxy properties and lifetimes, providing new insights into galaxy evolution.
Findings
Gas is more vulnerable to disturbances than stars.
Misalignment lifetime correlates with galaxy morphology and gas content.
Environmental density influences the duration of misalignment.
Abstract
There have been many studies aiming to reveal the origins of the star-gas misalignment found in galaxies, but there still is a lack of understanding of the contribution from each formation channel candidate. We aim to answer the question by investigating the misaligned galaxies in Horizon-AGN, a cosmological large-volume simulation of galaxy formation. There are 27,903 galaxies of stellar mass in our sample, of which 5,984 are in a group of the halo mass of . We have identified four main formation channels of misalignment and quantified their level of contribution: mergers (35%), interaction with nearby galaxies (23%), interaction with dense environments or their central galaxies (21%), and secular evolution including smooth accretion from neighboring filaments (21%). We found in the simulation that the gas, rather than stars, is…
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