VINTERGATAN-GM: The cosmological imprints of early mergers on Milky-Way-mass galaxies
Martin P. Rey, Oscar Agertz, Tjitske K. Starkenburg, Florent Renaud,, Gandhali D. Joshi, Andrew Pontzen, Nicolas F. Martin, Diane K. Feuillet and, Justin I. Read

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution cosmological simulations to explore how different early merger histories of Milky-Way-like galaxies influence their present-day structure and halo star properties, revealing that similar chemodynamical features can arise from diverse past events.
Contribution
It introduces a new suite of simulations with varied early merger ratios, showing how these histories affect galaxy morphology and halo star characteristics at present.
Findings
Different early merger ratios lead to diverse galaxy morphologies.
Halo star chemodynamics can be similar despite different merger histories.
Multiple high-redshift histories can produce comparable present-day features.
Abstract
We present a new suite of cosmological zoom-in hydrodynamical ( spatial resolution) simulations of Milky-Way mass galaxies to study how a varying mass ratio for a Gaia-Sausage-Enceladus (GSE) progenitor impacts the chemodynamics of halo stars. Using the genetic modification approach, we create five cosmological histories for a Milky-Way-mass dark matter halo (), incrementally increasing the stellar mass ratio of a merger from 1:25 to 1:2, while fixing the galaxy's final dynamical, stellar mass and large-scale environment. We find markedly different morphologies at following this change in early history, with a growing merger resulting in increasingly compact and bulge-dominated galaxies. Despite this structural diversity, all galaxies show a radially-biased population of inner halo stars like…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
