Mass of the dynamically hot inner stellar halo predicts the ancient accreted stellar mass
Ling Zhu, Annalisa Pillepich, Glenn van de Ven, Ryan Leaman, Lars, Hernquist, Dylan Nelson, Ruediger Pakmor, Mark Vogelsberger, Le Zhang

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the mass of the hot inner stellar halo in galaxies, characterized by stars on dynamically hot orbits, strongly correlates with the total accreted stellar mass, providing a method to infer galaxy assembly history.
Contribution
The paper introduces the hot inner stellar halo as a robust dynamical indicator of accreted stellar mass, validated across multiple simulations and applicable to real galaxy observations.
Findings
Strong correlation between hot inner stellar halo mass and accreted stellar mass.
Method applicable to real galaxies using integral-field-unit spectroscopy.
Predictions consistent across different simulations and galaxy models.
Abstract
Galactic dynamical structures are fossil records of the assembly histories of galaxies. By analyzing the cosmological hydrodynamical simulation TNG50, we find that a dynamical structure that we call the "hot inner stellar halo," defined by stars on dynamically hot orbits with circularity at , is a strong indicator of the mass of accreted satellite galaxies. We find a strong correlation between the mass of this hot inner stellar halo and the total ex situ stellar mass. There is a similarly strong correlation with the stellar mass of the most massive secondary galaxy ever merged. These TNG50 correlations are compatible with those predicted by other simulations, for example by TNG100 across the whole mass range under study (galaxy stellar masses, , in the \,\Msun\, range) and by EAGLE for $M_* \gtrsim 10^{10.6}…
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