Dark matter mass loss in galaxy flybys: dependence on impact parameter
A. Mitra\v{s}inovi\'c

TL;DR
This study investigates how the impact parameter affects dark matter mass loss in galaxy flybys through N-body simulations, revealing universal functional relationships and implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It establishes a quantitative relationship between impact parameter and dark matter mass loss in galaxy flybys, highlighting the universality and sensitivity of these interactions.
Findings
Dark matter halo mass loss follows a logarithmic growth law with impact parameter.
The lost dark matter mass exhibits exponential decay with impact parameter.
Stellar components stretch faster at smaller impact parameters.
Abstract
Galaxy flybys, interactions where two independent halos inter-penetrate but detach at a later time and do not merge, occur frequently at lower redshifts. These interactions can significantly impact the evolution of individual galaxies - from the mass loss and shape transformation to the emergence of tidal features and formation of morphological disc structures. The main focus of this paper is on the dark matter mass loss of the secondary, intruder galaxy, with the goal of determining a functional relationship between the impact parameter and dark matter mass loss. Series of N-body simulations of typical galaxy flybys (10:1 mass ratio) with differing impact parameters show that the dark matter halo leftover mass of the intruder galaxy follows a logarithmic growth law with impact parameter, regardless of the way the total halo mass is estimated. The lost mass then, clearly, follows the…
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