Stream on: Evolution of stellar shells and streams - A case study
Johannes Stoiber, Lucas M. Valenzuela, Rhea-Silvia Remus, Klaus Dolag

TL;DR
This case study uses cosmological simulations to analyze the formation and orbital characteristics of stellar shells and streams resulting from galaxy mergers.
Contribution
It provides detailed insights into the orbital dynamics and stellar distributions of shells and streams, expanding on previous simulation-based research.
Findings
Stream progenitors have more circular orbits than shell progenitors.
Stars in the stream are from the core of the progenitor galaxy.
Shell stars retain their original radial ordering within the satellite.
Abstract
Tidal stellar shells and streams are two of the most intriguing low-surface-brightness features within galaxies, consisting of stars accreted from satellite galaxies. A crucial ingredient in determining which type of feature will be formed is the orbit of the satellite galaxy. Additionally, the distribution of stars from these satellite galaxies within the merger remnant and the original location of these stars within the progenitor satellite galaxy provide important clues about the deposition of the stellar component in the resulting galaxy. We utilize the cosmological hydrodynamical simulation Magneticum Pathfinder and expand on the work by Valenzuela & Remus (2024) and Stoiber et al. (2025) to present a case study for the formation of a stream and a shell system. We analyze their orbits and the distributions of stellar particles within their host galaxy and compare them to their…
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