Local variations of the Stellar Velocity Ellipsoid-I: the disc of galaxies in the Auriga simulations
Metadatos
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Oxford University Press
Materia
Galaxies: evolution Galaxies: formation Galaxies: general Galaxies: kinematics and dynamics Galaxies: spiral
Fecha
2021-06-11Referencia bibliográfica
Daniel Walo-Martín... [et al.]. Local variations of the Stellar Velocity Ellipsoid-I: the disc of galaxies in the Auriga simulations, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 506, Issue 2, September 2021, Pages 1801–1814, [https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stab1664]
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (MCIU) PID2019-107427GB-C32; Consejería de Economía, Industria, Comercio y Conocimiento of the Canary Islands Autonomous CommunityResumen
The connection between the Stellar Velocity Ellipsoid (SVE) and the dynamical evolution of galaxies has been a matter of
debate in the last years and there is no clear consensus whether different heating agents (e.g. spiral arms, giant molecular clouds,
bars and mergers) leave clear detectable signatures in the present day kinematics. Most of these results are based on a single
and global SVE and have not taken into account that these agents do not necessarily equally affect all regions of the stellar
disc. We study the two-dimensional (2D) spatial distribution of the SVE across the stellar discs of Auriga galaxies, a set of
high resolution magnetohydrodynamical cosmological zoom-in simulations, to unveil the connection between local and global
kinematic properties in the disc region.We find very similar, global, σz/σr = 0.80 ± 0.08 values for galaxies of different Hubble
types. This shows that the global properties of the SVE at z = 0 are not a good indicator of the heating and cooling events
experienced by galaxies.We also find that similar σz/σr radial profiles are obtained through different combinations of σz and σr
trends: at a local level, the vertical and radial components can evolve differently, leading to similar σz/σr profiles at z = 0. By
contrast, the 2D spatial distribution of the SVE varies a lot more from galaxy to galaxy. Present day features in the SVE spatial
distribution may be associated with specific interactions such as fly-by encounters or the accretion of low mass satellites even
in the cases when the global SVE is not affected. The stellar populations decomposition reveals that young stellar populations
present colder and less isotropic SVEs and more complex 2D distributions than their older and hotter counterparts.
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