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Article

Decoding Galactic Merger Histories

1
Department of Astronomy, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA
2
Departamento de Física y Astronomía, Universidad de La Serena, La Serena 1720236, Chile
3
Vatican Observatory, Piazza Sabatini, 4B/5, 00041 Albano Laziale RM, Italy
4
Leibniz-Institut für Astrophysik Potsdam (AIP), 14482 Potsdam, Germany
5
Department of Astronomy, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA
6
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487, USA
7
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY 40292, USA
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Galaxies 2017, 5(4), 95; https://doi.org/10.3390/galaxies5040095
Submission received: 30 June 2017 / Revised: 30 November 2017 / Accepted: 1 December 2017 / Published: 8 December 2017
(This article belongs to the Special Issue On the Origin (and Evolution) of Baryonic Galaxy Halos)

Abstract

:
Galaxy mergers are expected to influence galaxy properties, yet measurements of individual merger histories are lacking. Models predict that merger histories can be measured using stellar halos and that these halos can be quantified using observations of resolved stars along their minor axis. Such observations reveal that Milky Way-mass galaxies have a wide range of stellar halo properties and show a correlation between their stellar halo masses and metallicities. This correlation agrees with merger-driven models where stellar halos are formed by satellite galaxy disruption. In these models, the largest accreted satellite dominates the stellar halo properties. Consequently, the observed diversity in the stellar halos of Milky Way-mass galaxies implies a large range in the masses of their largest merger partners. In particular, the Milky Way’s low mass halo implies an unusually quiet merger history. We used these measurements to seek predicted correlations between the bulge and central black hole (BH) mass and the mass of the largest merger partner. We found no significant correlations: while some galaxies with large bulges and BHs have large stellar halos and thus experienced a major or minor merger, half have small stellar halos and never experienced a significant merger event. These results indicate that bulge and BH growth is not solely driven by merger-related processes.

1. Introduction

The cold dark matter paradigm predicts that the gravitational collapse and merger of dark matter halos is the prime driver of galaxy formation and growth. However, the response of stars and gas to these mergers is complex to model, and predictions of their effects on galaxy bulges, disks, and supermassive black holes are uncertain (e.g., [1,2]). Direct knowledge of the merger histories of galaxies would therefore be valuable in providing direct empirical tests of how a given merger affected a particular galaxy. Sadly, dark matter is, well... dark, and direct measurement of the merger history is impossible. Yet, because the largest dark matter subhalos are predicted to host visible satellite galaxies, we can use these satellites as visible tracers of the growth of the central galaxy’s dark matter halo. The tidal disruption of these satellites is predicted to form a diffuse stellar halo (e.g., [3,4,5,6]). Consequently, study of these stellar halos gives unique—and perhaps the only available—insight into the merger and growth history of actual galaxies, and offers the possibility of understanding what mergers do to galaxies. Here we summarize the findings of [7,8,9,10] and give a brief overview of the progress that has been made towards measuring the stellar halos around nearby Milky Way mass galaxies, using them to infer the most prominent event in their merger and accretion histories, and using this knowledge to explore the role of merging in bulge and supermassive black hole growth.
This issue is the most urgent for Milky Way (MW) peers—galaxies with M * 6 × 10 10 M . In addition to holding most of the stellar mass in the present-day Universe [11], MW peers are diverse (e.g., [12]), spanning from bulgeless star-forming disks like the Milky Way or M101 to elliptical or lenticular galaxies like Centaurus A or the Sombrero galaxy. It is thought that much of this diversity should be driven by merger history (e.g., [1,2]). Galaxy merging plays an important role in the creation of elliptical galaxies (e.g., [13,14]). It is commonly argued that mergers are an important driver of the formation of at least the large “classical” galaxy bulges (e.g., [1,2,15]), although other mechanisms such as early bulge formation through chaotic collapse (e.g., [16]), violent disk instabilities (e.g., [17]), or dramatic changes in gas angular momentum [18] have been suggested. Further, given that feedback from supermassive black holes (BHs) may suppress star formation on galactic scales (e.g., [19,20]) and that merging appears to drive at least some BH growth [21,22], it is important to test the relationship between BH mass and merger history directly.
In order to assess what mergers do to galaxies (do mergers grow BHs, bulges, elliptical galaxies?), an independent and robust probe of the merger history of individual galaxies is urgently needed. Stellar halos appear to be just such a probe (see [7,8,9,10] for more details).

2. Stellar Halos Measure Merger History

Galactic outskirts are predicted to give powerful insight into their merger and accretion histories. Stars in merging galaxies are collisionless, and are torn by tides from their parent galaxy and spread out into a diffuse stellar halo (e.g., [4,6]). Because the stellar mass of satellites is a very strong function of dark matter subhalo mass, these stellar halos are predicted to accrete most of their mass from the few largest, and in most cases the single largest, satellite(s) (e.g., [5,10,23]).
This is illustrated in Figure 1. We use the Illustris hydrodynamical simulation [10,24] to predict the fraction of the accreted mass given by the single-most massive disrupted satellite ( frac Dom , on the x-axis) and the ratio of the second-most massive to the most massive progenitor (on the y-axis) for a sample of simulated galaxies with dark matter halo masses similar to the Milky Way (12.05 < log M D M / M < 12.15). A wide range of growth histories are predicted, from (relatively uncommon) stellar halos built up from multiple smaller accretions (top left) through to halos completely dominated by a single massive accretion (bottom right). The growth history broadly correlates with total accreted mass, where low-mass stellar halos are often built up from many smaller accretions, while typical and large stellar halos are dominated by a single accretion (in agreement with [23]). Most MW peer stellar halos are predicted to have more than half of their total halo mass come from the most massive progenitor, and usually this most massive progenitor is substantially more massive than the second-most massive progenitor. Because the only model ingredients required to robustly predict global stellar halo properties are realistic galaxy metallicity–mass relations and mass functions of accreted satellites [5,25], these predictions are robust and other models [23,26] give very similar results.
This framework makes an important prediction. Since galaxies show a strong relationship between their metallicity and stellar mass [27], and because stellar halos tend to be dominated by the most massive progenitor (see Figure 1 and references [10,23]), the metallicity and mass of accreted stellar halos are predicted to correlate strongly [8,10,23]. This offers a clear observational test of the accretion-driven growth of stellar halos, and we will return to it in Figure 2 and Figure 3.
While it is not the focus of this contribution, in addition to the accreted stellar halo, there is considerable discussion about the extent to which stars formed in the main galaxy itself will exist at large radius—an in situ stellar halo. Simulators report that the prominence and origin of in situ stars varies considerably as a function of the parameters of simulations (e.g., the parameterization of stellar feedback, [28,29]). At the level of comparing observations with simulated total stellar halo masses, many simulations appear to over-produce in situ stellar halos (e.g., [8,10]).
While we await a clearer understanding of in situ stars, we have chosen to focus on the minor axis of galaxies with prominent disks. High-resolution hydrodynamical simulations predict that at minor axis distances > 15 kpc in MW peers, most stars should be accreted [30,31]. Estimates of total accreted mass and median metallicity can be inferred from minor axis measurements [10]. Using these estimates, one can measure the mass of the most massive merger partner (e.g., Figure 1 and reference [10]) and possibly when this merger occurred [10,23]. Consequently, it is important to carefully characterize the diffuse stellar halos—ideally along their minor axes—for a representative sample of galaxies.
The astronomical community is starting to assemble just such a sample. Aside from prominent individual stellar streams (e.g., [32,33]), the characterization of stellar halos has been very challenging owing to their extremely low surface brightnesses >30 V-band mag/arcsec2. Recent deep diffuse light imaging has permitted detection of relatively massive halos (e.g., [34,35,36]). In parallel, studies of resolved red giant branch (RGB) stars in the outskirts of nearby galaxies reach fainter equivalent surface brightness limits and give estimates of both stellar halo masses and typical metallicities [7,8,37,38,39,40,41].

3. MW Peer Stellar Halos Are Diverse, Reflecting a Diversity in Merger and Accretion Histories

These observations show that MW peer stellar halos are diverse, spanning an order of magnitude or more in total mass and more than 1 dex in typical metallicity. This diversity is illustrated in Figure 2 (adapted from Figure 16 in [8]). Estimates of total stellar halo masses, metallicities at minor axis distances of 30 kpc, inferred 3D minor axis density gradients between 10 and 40 kpc, and minor axis metallicity gradients are shown in black for studies using resolved stars [7,8,38,39,42,43,44]. Gray symbols denote stellar halo masses or limits from integrated light studies [36,45]. Stellar halo masses have been extrapolated to give an estimate of total stellar halo masses. For this purpose, we use simulations of stellar halos including only accreted stars (e.g., [4,24,46]). For this particular analysis, we used the cosmologically-motivated particle-tagging models of [4], although we found that we recovered similar results with a particle-tagging model with more diverse accretion histories [26] and the accreted particles from two very different hydrodynamical simulations, Auriga and Illustris [9,10,24,31,47]. In these model accreted halos, most of the stellar halo mass lies at less than 10 kpc galactocentric radius. The typical correction to estimate a total stellar halo mass from “aperture” measurements (at e.g., 10–40 kpc) is a factor of several [8], with an estimated accuracy of around 40% with little systematic dependence on stellar halo properties (see also [9,10]).
Panel a of Figure 2 shows that MW peers with a factor of 4 range in total stellar mass ( 3 × 10 10 M < M * < 1.2 × 10 11 M ) show a factor of ∼20 range in stellar halo fraction. We note that the correction of “aperture” stellar halo mass to a best estimate of total stellar halo mass is important, and brings the otherwise somewhat low “aperture” masses and limits presented by [36] into excellent agreement with [8,45], and in accord with predictions from accretion-only models for stellar halo formation. Panels c and d show a range in power law density profile and metallicity gradients, respectively, with little clear correlation of either with stellar halo mass (or other quantities, as discussed in [8]). Importantly, panel b shows that stellar halo metallicity (as measured on the minor axis at 30 kpc distance) and total stellar halo mass appear to correlate strongly—in agreement with the expectations of models of stellar halo formation through accretion only (as foreshadowed by [48] and explored by e.g., [10,23,49])—a result only accessible using resolved stellar populations.
This observational characterization of halos and confirmation of the predicted stellar halo metallicity–mass relation is important for a number of reasons.
  • Following Section 2, it strongly suggests that the observations have indeed quantified the accreted stellar halo of galaxies.
  • It shows that MW peers have a wide range of merger histories, where the Milky Way’s low-mass stellar halo is very unusual. This is important because it tells us that the intuition that we have built about stellar halos from study of the Milky Way is incomplete.
  • These accreted stellar halos can be used as a tool to quantify the properties of the most massive merger to have affected galaxies. The astronomical community now has quantitative access to the most massive event in individual galaxy’s merger and accretion history.
The first and last of these ideas deserve some discussion.
We discuss the first point quantitatively in Figure 3 (adapted from Figure 1 of [9]), where we compare the observed stellar halo metallicity–mass relation with a set of modeled stellar halos in 10 12 M dark matter halos from ([23], squares). The free parameters in these models are set only by the halo mass–stellar mass relation and metallicity–stellar mass relations of galaxies. When input model galaxies are realistic, the output accreted stellar halos closely reproduce the stellar halo metallicity–mass relation with appropriate normalization, slope, and scatter (see also [10] for an independent analysis using the Illustris hydrodynamical models with very similar results).
The relationship between stellar halo properties and the most massive accreted satellite have been articulated by [9,10,23]. In Figure 3, the models of [23] are color-coded by the mass-weighted mean stellar mass of all of the contributing satellites to the halo (termed “typical” satellite mass hereafter). The “typical” satellite mass is a strong function of the stellar halo mass (and metallicity). We provide an approximate mapping on the ordinate in blue in Figure 3. We also give an approximate merger ratio assuming a main galaxy mass at the time of merger of 3 × 10 10 M in green. Figure 3 suggests that one can broadly infer the masses of the largest satellites that were accreted by or merged into our nearby neighbors.

4. Bulges and Central Black Holes in Disk-Dominated Galaxies Correlate Poorly with Merger History

With a quantitative estimate of the most massive merger to have affected a galaxy in hand, we can now explore for the first time how MW peer merger history correlates with bulge and BH prominence. Figure 4 (Figure 2 of [9]) shows the bulge mass (left) and BH mass (right) as a function of stellar halo mass (∼ mass of the most massive merger/accretion partner). No significant correlations between bulge/BH masses and stellar halo masses are detected in this dataset. Galaxies with M s t e l l a r h a l o , t o t > 10 9 M have an order of magnitude spread in B/T ratio or bulge mass and two orders of magnitude spread in BH mass.
“Classical” bulges (black and grey) could have been expected to have been formed in major or minor mergers (e.g., [15]). Three galaxies with classical bulges (M31, NGC 3115, Cen A1) indeed have massive metal-rich stellar halos—carrying > 20% of the total galaxy stellar mass—indicative of a minor or major merger. Yet, another three galaxies with classical bulges (M81, NGC 4258, NGC 7814) have less-massive stellar halos. Most notable among these is M81, with a large classical bulge and an anemic stellar halo containing only 2 ± 0.9 % of its total stellar mass. M81 shows no sign of any significant past major or minor merging activity that was expected to drive the formation of its classical bulge. A naïve one-to-one association between bulge and BH prominence and merging is ruled out, and places important constraints on models of bulge and BH formation and growth. In particular, such systems may be an excellent testing ground for models in which bulge and BH growth is driven by other merger-independent processes.

5. Conclusions

A central goal of observational astrophysics is to measure the merger history of individual galaxies. Models predict that stellar halos provide such a measurement and allow us to explore how merger history—and in particular the most massive merger—affects galaxy properties.
Hubble Space Telescope and ground-based observations resolve individual stars in diffuse halos along the minor axes of nearby galaxies with total stellar masses similar to the Milky Way. The mass and metallicity of these stellar halos show a considerable range and correlate with each other, agreeing with models where they are formed by the disruption of dwarf galaxies alone. These models predict that stellar halo mass and metallicity constrain the mass of the largest accreted satellite galaxy. Consequently, the range in stellar halo mass and metallicity implies a range in the mass of the largest merged/accreted satellite galaxy. Intriguingly, in having a low mass and metallicity stellar halo, the Milky Way is not normal and likely experienced an unusually quiet merger history.
Motivated by models in which bulges and their central black holes (BHs) form or grow through galaxy merging, we then explore the relationship between these features and merger history. Bulge and central BH mass correlate poorly with stellar halo mass and therefore merger history. While half of the galaxies with the largest bulges and BHs have large stellar halos and thus have experienced a major or minor merger, half have small stellar halos and have never experienced a significant merger event. These systems may be an excellent testing ground for models where bulge and BH growth are driven by merger-independent processes.

Acknowledgments

This work benefited from the support from NSF grants AST 1008342 and AST 1514835 and HST grants GO-11613, GO-12213 and GO-13696 provided by NASA through a grant from the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA contract NAS5-26555. We appreciate the useful feedback from the two referees, and helpful conversations and insights from Sarah Loebman, Monica Valluri, Kohei Hattori, Ian Roederer, Adam Smercina, Bryan Terrazas, Denija Crnojevic, Duncan Forbes, Andrei Kravtsov, Nicolas Martin, and Oleg Gnedin.

Author Contributions

D.J.R.-S., R.S.dJ. and A.M. led the data reduction and photometry; B.H., A.M., E.F.B. and R.D’S. led the analysis; E.F.B. wrote the paper with contributions from all coauthors.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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1
While Cen A’s minor axis metallicity at 30 kpc suggests that it has a large stellar halo mass, no published estimate exists, and so it is not shown in Figure 4.
Figure 1. Stellar halos are predicted to have accreted their mass from the few largest, and in many cases the single largest, satellite(s). The x-axis shows frac Dom , the fraction of the accreted mass given by the single-most massive disrupted satellite as predicted by the Illustris hydrodynamical simulation [10,24] for a sample of simulated galaxies with dark matter halo masses similar to the Milky Way (12.05 < log M D M / M < 12.15). The y-axis shows the ratio of the second-most massive to the most massive progenitor. Symbols are color-coded by the total accreted mass. Marginalized distributions of each quantity are shown, along with the 16, 50, and 84 percentiles of the distributions. The stellar halos of Milky Way (MW) peers are expected to show a wide range of properties, from the less-common halos built up from multiple smaller accretions (top left) through to the more common halos completely dominated by a single massive accretion (bottom right).
Figure 1. Stellar halos are predicted to have accreted their mass from the few largest, and in many cases the single largest, satellite(s). The x-axis shows frac Dom , the fraction of the accreted mass given by the single-most massive disrupted satellite as predicted by the Illustris hydrodynamical simulation [10,24] for a sample of simulated galaxies with dark matter halo masses similar to the Milky Way (12.05 < log M D M / M < 12.15). The y-axis shows the ratio of the second-most massive to the most massive progenitor. Symbols are color-coded by the total accreted mass. Marginalized distributions of each quantity are shown, along with the 16, 50, and 84 percentiles of the distributions. The stellar halos of Milky Way (MW) peers are expected to show a wide range of properties, from the less-common halos built up from multiple smaller accretions (top left) through to the more common halos completely dominated by a single massive accretion (bottom right).
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Figure 2. Both resolved star (black; [7,8,38,39,42,43,44]) and integrated light studies (gray; [36,45]) reveal a diversity of stellar halo masses, metallicities, density profiles, and metallicity gradients. These observational properties are in good agreement with models in which stellar halos are predominantly formed by the disruption of dwarf satellites (in colors). (a) Ratio of “total” stellar halo mass and total stellar mass, as a function of total stellar mass. Error bars include the uncertainty in extrapolating to “total” stellar halo mass; limits are shown with arrows. (b) Stellar halo metallicity at 30 kpc as a function of “total” stellar halo mass. (c) Inferred 3D minor axis stellar halo density power-law slope in the range 10–40 kpc as a function of “total” stellar halo mass. (d) Stellar halo color gradient (a proxy for metallicity gradient) as a function of “total” stellar halo mass. The observational data are shown in black and grey. Models: brick red area: [4]; light green+line: [5,25]; blue: [6]; magenta: [26]; orange: [23]. Adapted from Figure 16 from [8], reproduced with permission.
Figure 2. Both resolved star (black; [7,8,38,39,42,43,44]) and integrated light studies (gray; [36,45]) reveal a diversity of stellar halo masses, metallicities, density profiles, and metallicity gradients. These observational properties are in good agreement with models in which stellar halos are predominantly formed by the disruption of dwarf satellites (in colors). (a) Ratio of “total” stellar halo mass and total stellar mass, as a function of total stellar mass. Error bars include the uncertainty in extrapolating to “total” stellar halo mass; limits are shown with arrows. (b) Stellar halo metallicity at 30 kpc as a function of “total” stellar halo mass. (c) Inferred 3D minor axis stellar halo density power-law slope in the range 10–40 kpc as a function of “total” stellar halo mass. (d) Stellar halo color gradient (a proxy for metallicity gradient) as a function of “total” stellar halo mass. The observational data are shown in black and grey. Models: brick red area: [4]; light green+line: [5,25]; blue: [6]; magenta: [26]; orange: [23]. Adapted from Figure 16 from [8], reproduced with permission.
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Figure 3. Circles show the observed correlation between stellar halo mass and metallicity. Galaxies with “classical” bulges are shown in black, galaxies with “pseudobulges” are shown in red. Squares show simulated stellar halo masses and metallicities from the accretion-only models of Deason et al. [23]. The squares are color-coded according to the mass weighted mean stellar mass of the contributing satellites to the halo; we indicate the approximate run of mass weighted mean accreted satellite mass in blue and corresponding approximate merger ratios for a main galaxy mass at the time of merger of 3 × 10 10 M in green. Adapted from Figure 1 of [9], reproduced with permission of the American Astronomical Society (AAS).
Figure 3. Circles show the observed correlation between stellar halo mass and metallicity. Galaxies with “classical” bulges are shown in black, galaxies with “pseudobulges” are shown in red. Squares show simulated stellar halo masses and metallicities from the accretion-only models of Deason et al. [23]. The squares are color-coded according to the mass weighted mean stellar mass of the contributing satellites to the halo; we indicate the approximate run of mass weighted mean accreted satellite mass in blue and corresponding approximate merger ratios for a main galaxy mass at the time of merger of 3 × 10 10 M in green. Adapted from Figure 1 of [9], reproduced with permission of the American Astronomical Society (AAS).
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Figure 4. Bulge mass (left) and BH mass (right) as a function of stellar halo mass. Red denotes galaxies with low-mass “pseudobulges”, black shows galaxies with higher-mass “classical” bulges; observational limits are shown with lighter shading. As argued in Figure 3, stellar halo mass reflects merger history, and approximate merger ratios are given in green. The shaded area in the left panel schematically illustrates what would be expected if there were a 1:1 correlation between stellar halo mass and bulge mass, as broadly expected in some simple modeling contexts (e.g., [1]). Figure 2 from [9], reproduced with permission of the AAS.
Figure 4. Bulge mass (left) and BH mass (right) as a function of stellar halo mass. Red denotes galaxies with low-mass “pseudobulges”, black shows galaxies with higher-mass “classical” bulges; observational limits are shown with lighter shading. As argued in Figure 3, stellar halo mass reflects merger history, and approximate merger ratios are given in green. The shaded area in the left panel schematically illustrates what would be expected if there were a 1:1 correlation between stellar halo mass and bulge mass, as broadly expected in some simple modeling contexts (e.g., [1]). Figure 2 from [9], reproduced with permission of the AAS.
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MDPI and ACS Style

Bell, E.F.; Monachesi, A.; D’Souza, R.; Harmsen, B.; De Jong, R.S.; Radburn-Smith, D.; Bailin, J.; Holwerda, B.W. Decoding Galactic Merger Histories. Galaxies 2017, 5, 95. https://doi.org/10.3390/galaxies5040095

AMA Style

Bell EF, Monachesi A, D’Souza R, Harmsen B, De Jong RS, Radburn-Smith D, Bailin J, Holwerda BW. Decoding Galactic Merger Histories. Galaxies. 2017; 5(4):95. https://doi.org/10.3390/galaxies5040095

Chicago/Turabian Style

Bell, Eric F., Antonela Monachesi, Richard D’Souza, Benjamin Harmsen, Roelof S. De Jong, David Radburn-Smith, Jeremy Bailin, and Benne W. Holwerda. 2017. "Decoding Galactic Merger Histories" Galaxies 5, no. 4: 95. https://doi.org/10.3390/galaxies5040095

APA Style

Bell, E. F., Monachesi, A., D’Souza, R., Harmsen, B., De Jong, R. S., Radburn-Smith, D., Bailin, J., & Holwerda, B. W. (2017). Decoding Galactic Merger Histories. Galaxies, 5(4), 95. https://doi.org/10.3390/galaxies5040095

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