How cosmological merger histories shape the diversity of stellar haloes
Martin P. Rey, Tjitske K. Starkenburg

TL;DR
This study uses controlled simulations to explore how different cosmological merger histories influence the diversity of stellar haloes in Milky Way-like galaxies, revealing the impact of merger timing and galaxy formation physics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach combining dark matter-only simulations with semi-empirical modeling to systematically study merger history effects on stellar halo diversity.
Findings
Late major mergers create more in-situ dominated haloes.
Inner regions are affected by early major mergers, reducing outer halo scatter.
Shallower stellar mass--halo mass relations decrease halo diversity.
Abstract
We introduce and apply a new approach to probe the response of galactic stellar haloes to the interplay between cosmological merger histories and galaxy formation physics. We perform dark matter-only, zoomed simulations of two Milky Way-mass hosts and make targeted, controlled changes to their cosmological histories using the genetic modification technique. Populating each history's stellar halo with a semi-empirical, particle tagging approach then enables a controlled study, with all instances converging to the same large-scale structure, dynamical and stellar mass at as their reference. These related merger scenarios alone generate an extended spread in stellar halo mass fractions (1.5 dex) comparable to the observed population, with the largest scatter achieved by growing late () major mergers that spread out existing stars to create massive, in-situ dominated stellar…
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