Using Action Space Clustering to Constrain the Accretion History of Milky Way like Galaxies
Youjia Wu, Monica Valluri, Nondh Panithanpaisal, Robyn E. Sanderson,, Katherine Freese, Andrew Wetzel, Sanjib Sharma

TL;DR
This study uses action space clustering to identify and analyze accreted satellite galaxies in Milky Way-like galaxies from cosmological simulations, demonstrating the method's robustness even with contamination by in-situ stars.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel application of action space clustering to recover accreted satellites in simulated galaxies, assessing its effectiveness and robustness.
Findings
Enlink successfully recovers satellites in simulations.
High significance groups are more likely to be real satellites.
Method remains effective with up to 50% in-situ star contamination.
Abstract
In the currently favored cosmological paradigm galaxies form hierarchically through the accretion of numerous satellite galaxies. Since the satellites are much less massive than the host halo, they occupy a small fraction of the volume in action space defined by the potential of the host halo. Since actions are conserved when the potential of the host halo changes adiabatically, stars from an accreted satellite are expected to remain clustered in action space as the host halo evolves. In this paper, we identify accreted satellites in three Milky Way like disk galaxies from the cosmological baryonic FIRE-2 simulations by tracking satellite galaxies through simulation snapshots. We then try to recover these satellites by applying the cluster analysis algorithm Enlink to the orbital actions of accreted star particles in the present-day snapshot. We define several metrics to quantify the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
