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The In-situ Origins of Dwarf Stellar Outskirts in FIRE-2

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arxiv 2109.05034 v2 pith:IQDGRPIR submitted 2021-09-10 astro-ph.GA

The In-situ Origins of Dwarf Stellar Outskirts in FIRE-2

classification astro-ph.GA
keywords stellardwarfsdiskdwarffeedbackfire-2formationgalaxies
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Extended, old, and round stellar halos appear to be ubiquitous around high-mass dwarf galaxies ($10^{8.5}<M_\star/M_\odot<10^{9.6}$) in the observed universe. However, it is unlikely that these dwarfs have undergone a sufficient number of minor mergers to form stellar halos that are composed of predominantly accreted stars. Here, we demonstrate that FIRE-2 (Feedback in Realistic Environments) cosmological zoom-in simulations are capable of producing dwarf galaxies with realistic structure, including both a thick disk and round stellar halo. Crucially, these stellar halos are formed in-situ, largely via the outward migration of disk stars. However, there also exists a large population of "non-disky" dwarfs in FIRE-2 that lack a well-defined disk/halo and do not resemble the observed dwarf population. These non-disky dwarfs tend to be either more gas poor or to have burstier recent star formation histories than the disky dwarfs, suggesting that star formation feedback may be preventing disk formation. Both classes of dwarfs underscore the power of a galaxy's intrinsic shape -- which is a direct quantification of the distribution of the galaxy's stellar content -- to interrogate the feedback implementation in simulated galaxies.

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