Growth of galactic bulges by mergers. II. Low-density satellites
M. C. Eliche-Moral, M. Balcells, J. A. L. Aguerri, A. C., Gonzalez-Garcia

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations to investigate how satellite accretion events contribute to the growth of galactic bulges, analyzing structural and dynamical changes and their alignment with observed scaling relations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of bulge growth via satellite accretion, emphasizing the role of external processes in secular bulge evolution.
Findings
Bulge-to-disc ratio and Sersic index increase after accretion.
Bulge growth occurs regardless of satellite disruption outcome.
Remnants exhibit bulge-disc structure consistent with observations.
Abstract
Satellite accretion events have been invoked for mimicking the internal secular evolutionary processes of bulge growth. However, N-body simulations of satellite accretions have paid little attention to the evolution of bulge photometric parameters, to the processes driving this evolution, and to the consistency of this evolution with observations. We want to investigate whether satellite accretions indeed drive the growth of bulges, and whether they are consistent with global scaling relations of bulges and discs. We perform N-body models of the accretion of satellites onto disc galaxies. A Tully-Fisher (M \propto V_{rot}^ {alpha_TF}) scaling between primary and satellite ensures that density ratios, critical to the outcome of the accretion, are realistic. We carry out a full structural, kinematic and dynamical analysis of the evolution of the bulge mass, bulge central concentration,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
