IllustrisTNG in the HSC-SSP: image data release and the major role of mini mergers as drivers of asymmetry and star formation
Connor Bottrell, Hassen M. Yesuf, Gerg\"o Popping, Kiyoaki Christopher, Omori, Shenli Tang, Xuheng Ding, Annalisa Pillepich, Dylan Nelson, Lukas, Eisert, Hua Gao, Andy D. Goulding, Boris S. Kalita, Wentao Luo, Jenny E., Greene, Jingjing Shi, and John D. Silverman

TL;DR
This study uses the TNG50 simulation to show that mini mergers significantly influence star formation and asymmetry in star-forming galaxies, surpassing major and minor mergers due to their frequency and long-lasting effects.
Contribution
It reveals the major role of mini mergers in driving galaxy asymmetry and star formation, supported by synthetic HSC-SSP images and analysis of merger histories.
Findings
Mini mergers account for 55% of merger-driven star formation.
Mini mergers cause 70% of merger-driven asymmetry.
Mini mergers have prolonged effects lasting at least 3 Gyr.
Abstract
At fixed galaxy stellar mass, there is a clear observational connection between structural asymmetry and offset from the star forming main sequence, SFMS. Herein, we use the TNG50 simulation to investigate the relative roles of major mergers (stellar mass ratios ), minor (), and mini mergers () in driving this connection amongst star forming galaxies (SFGs). We use dust radiative transfer post-processing with SKIRT to make a large, public collection of synthetic Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program (HSC-SSP) images of simulated TNG galaxies over with (k images). Using their instantaneous SFRs, known merger histories/forecasts, and HSC-SSP asymmetries, we show (1) that TNG50 SFGs qualitatively reproduce the observed trend between SFMS and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
