The diverse nature and formation paths of slow rotator galaxies in the EAGLE simulations
Claudia del P. Lagos (1,2), Eric Emsellem, Jesse van de Sande,, Katherine E. Harborne, Luca Cortese, Thomas Davison, Caroline Foster, Ruby J., Wright ((1) International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), M468,, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Australia

TL;DR
This study uses EAGLE simulations to analyze the formation, properties, and evolutionary paths of slow rotator galaxies, highlighting the roles of mergers, environment, and quenching in their diverse characteristics.
Contribution
It provides a detailed classification of slow rotators, linking their kinematic types to specific merger histories and environmental factors, advancing understanding of their formation mechanisms.
Findings
Major and minor mergers increase triaxiality and ex-situ stellar fractions.
No-merger SRs are more compact and quench later.
Quenching generally precedes kinematic transformation in SRs.
Abstract
We use a sample of galaxies visually classified as slow rotators (SRs) in the EAGLE hydrodynamical simulations to explore the effect of galaxy mergers on their formation, characterise their intrinsic galaxy properties, and study the connection between quenching and kinematic transformation. SRs that have had major or minor mergers (mass ratios and , respectively) tend to have a higher triaxiality parameter and ex-situ stellar fractions than those that had exclusively very minor mergers or formed in the absence of mergers ("no-merger" SRs). No-merger SRs are more compact, have lower black hole-to-stellar mass ratios and quenched later than other SRs, leaving imprints on their chemical composition. For the vast majority of SRs we find that quenching, driven by active galactic nuclei feedback, precedes kinematic transformation, except for satellite SRs, in…
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