Bibcode
Naab, Thorsten; Trujillo, I.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 369, Issue 2, pp. 625-644.
Advertised on:
6
2006
Citations
111
Refereed citations
106
Description
We present a detailed surface density analysis of a large sample of
simulated collisionless mergers of disc galaxies with bulges (mass
ratios 1:1, 2:1, 3:1, 4:1 and 6:1) and without bulges (mass ratios 1:1
and 3:1). A dissipative component was not included. The randomly
projected remnants were fit with a single Sérsic function and a
Sérsic function plus an exponential. They were classified,
according to their bulge-to-total (B/T) ratio, either as a one-component
system or as a two-component system. In general, projection effects
change the classification of a remnant. Only merger remnants of discs
with bulges show properties similar to observed early-type galaxies.
Their B/T ratios are in the range 0.2 < B/T < 1. Surprisingly, the
initial mass ratio has a weak influence on the distributions of B/T,
effective radius and Sérsic index n. For all one-component
projections (~60 per cent of all projections), the Sérsic index
distribution peaks at 3 < n < 4. However, the mass ratio is
tightly linked to the properties of the outer exponential components
which resemble pressure-supported, spheroidal haloes for 1:1 and 2:1
remnants and elongated heated discs for 6:1 remnants. We found distinct
correlations between the fitting parameters which are very similar to
observed relations (e.g. larger bulges have lower effective surface
densities). No indications for a correlation between the surface density
profiles and other global parameters like remnant masses, isophotal
shapes or central velocity dispersions are found. The remnants have
properties similar to giant elliptical galaxies in the intermediate-mass
regime. A binary disc merger origin for all early-type galaxies,
especially the most massive ones, is unlikely. Observed nearby merger
remnants have properties similar to the simulated remnants. They can
have formed from binary disc mergers and might evolve into early-type
galaxies within a few Gyr.