Simulations of the accreted stellar halos of low-mass field galaxies
Andrew P. Cooper (1), Carlos S. Frenk (2), Wojciech A. Hellwing (3), Sownak Bose (2) ((1) National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan (2) Durham University (3) Center for Theoretical Physics, Polish Academy of Sciences)

TL;DR
This study models the properties of stellar halos in low-mass field galaxies using a combination of semi-analytic modeling, cosmological simulations, and particle tagging, revealing diverse halo characteristics and comparing predictions with observations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel integrated approach to predict stellar halo properties across a wide mass range, highlighting the diversity and prevalence of 'failed Milky Way' galaxies.
Findings
Low mass halos have accreted mass fractions < 10%.
Accreted stellar halos are smaller than in situ stellar disks but remain diffuse.
Predictions suggest a significant population of 'failed Milky Way' galaxies.'
Abstract
We predict the properties of stellar halos in galaxies of present-day virial mass by combining the GALFORM semi-analytic model of galaxy formation, the COCO cosmological N-body simulation, and the STINGS particle tagging technique. Galaxies in low mass halos have a wide range of stellar halo properties. Their diversity is much greater at fixed stellar mass than fixed virial mass. In the least massive DM halos capable of supporting galaxy formation, accreted mass fractions are < 10 per cent, and the typical density profile of accreted stars is similar to that of stars formed in situ. In low mass galaxies, the radial scale lengths of accreted stellar halos are smaller than those of stellar disks formed in situ, but the accreted component is still diffuse, not bulge-like. At the scale of galaxies like M33, the surface density of accreted stars…
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