The Origin of Massive Compact Galaxies: Lessons from IllustrisTNG
F. S. Lohmann, A. Schnorr-M\"uller, M. Trevisan, T. V. Ricci, K., Slodkowski Clerici

TL;DR
This study uses the IllustrisTNG simulation to explore the formation, evolution, and unique properties of massive compact galaxies, revealing their early assembly, distinct accretion histories, and the role of SMBH growth and feedback in their quenching.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the formation pathways and evolutionary processes of massive compact galaxies, highlighting differences from median-sized quiescent galaxies through simulation analysis.
Findings
MCGs are predominantly old, metal-rich, and alpha-enhanced.
Most MCGs assemble early and grow mainly by accreting low angular momentum gas.
A subset of MCGs undergo size reduction via compaction events.
Abstract
We investigate the formation and evolution of z=0 massive compact galaxies (MCGs) in the IllustrisTNG cosmological simulation. We found that, as in observations, MCGs are mainly old (median age Gyr), have super-solar metallicities (median ) and are -enhanced (median ). The age distribution extends to younger ages, however, and a few MCGs are as young as Gyr. In general, MCGs assemble their mass early and accrete low angular momentum gas, significantly increasing their mass while growing their size much slower. A small fraction of MCGs follow another evolutionary path, going through a compaction event, with their sizes shrinking by 40% or more. The accretion of low angular momentum gas leads to enhanced SMBH growth, and MCGs reach the threshold SMBH mass of - when kinetic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · History and Developments in Astronomy · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
