Galaxy mergers and disk angular momentum evolution: stellar halos as a critical test
Eric F. Bell, Richard D'Souza, Monica Valluri, Katya Gozman

TL;DR
This study uses the TNG-50 simulation to show that satellite accretion causes galaxy reorientation and that stellar halos encode this history, providing observable signatures for galaxy angular momentum evolution.
Contribution
It demonstrates that satellite accretion significantly influences galaxy reorientation and stellar halo kinematics, offering new observational tests for galaxy formation models.
Findings
80+% of galaxies show alignment between galaxy and merger orbital angular momentum.
Reorientation causes about 50% change in galaxies' specific angular momentum.
Most stellar halos (81+%) rotate prograde relative to their galaxies.
Abstract
We investigate the role of hierarchical assembly in the angular momentum (AM) evolution of galaxies using a sample of 471 Milky Way-mass galaxies from the TNG-50 simulation. While galaxy orientation is often attributed to tidal torques and the cooling of gas within halos, we demonstrate that galaxy reorientation (tilting) is a common consequence of satellite accretion. Specifically, 80+/-2% of galaxies show alignment between their present-day AM and the orbital AM of their most massive (dominant) merger progenitor. This reorientation typically results in changes of around 50% in the galaxies' specific AM, with the most significant shifts occurring in galaxies that were initially highly misaligned. We find only a weak influence from the second most massive merger, and negligible impacts from surviving satellites. We show that accreted stellar halos encode the history of this…
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