The Origin of Stars in the Inner 500 Parsecs in TNG50 Galaxies
Alina Boecker, Nadine Neumayer, Annalisa Pillepich, Neige Frankel,, Rahul Ramesh, Ryan Leaman, Lars Hernquist

TL;DR
This study uses the TNG50 simulation to analyze the origins of stars in the central 500 parsecs of galaxies, revealing the roles of in-situ, migrated, and ex-situ stars in galaxy centers across different masses and types.
Contribution
It provides a detailed, cosmological simulation-based analysis of star origins in galaxy centers, highlighting the importance of galaxy assembly history and stellar migration.
Findings
In-situ and migrated stars dominate the central stellar mass.
Ex-situ stars are more common in massive galaxies (>10^{11} M_sun).
Migrated stars are young, rotationally supported, and originate close to the center.
Abstract
We investigate the origin of stars in the innermost of galaxies spanning stellar masses of at using the cosmological magnetohydrodynamical TNG50 simulation. Three different origins of stars comprise galactic centers: 1) in-situ (born in the center), 2) migrated (born elsewhere in the galaxy and ultimately moved to the center), 3) ex-situ (accreted from other galaxies). In-situ and migrated stars dominate the central stellar mass budget on average with 73% and 23% respectively. The ex-situ fraction rises above 1% for galaxies . Yet, only 9% of all galaxies exhibit no ex-situ stars in their centers and the scatter of ex-situ mass is significant (). Migrated stars predominantly originate closely from the center (), but if they travelled together…
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