Pericentric passage-driven star formation in satellite galaxies and their hosts: CLUES from Local Group simulations
Arianna Di Cintio (ULL/IAC), Robert Mostoghiu (UAM), Alexander Knebe, (UAM/ICRAR), Julio Navarro (UVic)

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to show that pericentric passages of satellite galaxies can trigger star formation bursts, especially when satellites have sufficient cold gas and specific orbital parameters, affecting both satellites and hosts.
Contribution
It reveals the conditions under which satellite galaxies experience star formation enhancement after infall, highlighting the role of cold gas and orbital distance, which was not fully understood before.
Findings
Star formation peaks correlate with satellite pericentric passages.
Satellites with enough cold gas and larger pericentric distances show SF enhancement.
Pericentric passages also induce star formation bursts in host galaxies.
Abstract
Local Group satellite galaxies show a wide diversity of star formation histories (SFHs) whose origin is yet to be fully understood. Using hydrodynamical simulations from the Constrained Local UniversE project, we study the SFHs of satellites of Milky Way-like galaxies in a cosmological context: while in the majority of the cases the accretion onto their host galaxy causes the satellites to lose their gas, with a subsequent suppression in SF, in about 25 of our sample we observe a clear enhancement of SF after infall. Peaks in SF clearly correlate with the satellite pericentric passage around its host and, in one case, with a satellite-satellite interaction. We identify two key ingredients that result in enhanced SF after infall: galaxies must enter the host's virial radius with a reservoir of cold gas and with a minimum pericentric…
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