A First Look at Galaxy Flyby Interactions. II. Do Flybys matter?
Abstract
In the second paper of this series, we present results from cosmological simulations on the demographics of flyby interactions to gauge their potential impact on galaxy evolution. In a previous paper, we demonstrated that flybys -- an interaction where two independent halos inter-penetrate but detach at a later time and do not merge -- occur much more frequently than previously believed. In particular, we found that the frequency of flybys increases at low redshift and is comparable to or even greater than the frequency of mergers for halos 1011 M/h. In this paper, we classify flybys according to their orbits and the level of perturbation exacted on both the halos involved. We find that the majority of flybys penetrate deeper than Rhalf of the primary and have an initial relative speed 1.6× Vvir of the primary. The typical flyby mass-ratio is 0.1 at high z for all halos, while at low z, massive primary halos undergo flybys with small secondary halos. We estimate the perturbation from the flyby on both the primary and the secondary and find that a typical flyby is mostly non-perturbative for the primary halo. However, since a massive primary experiences so many flybys at any given time, they are nearly continually a victim of a perturbative event. In particular, we find flybys that cause 1\% change in the binding energy of a primary halo occurs 1 Gyr-1 for halos > 1010 M/h for z 4. Secondary halos, on the other hand, are highly perturbed by the typical encounter, experiencing a change in binding energy of nearly order unity. Our results imply that flybys can drive a significant part of galaxy transformation at moderate to lower redshifts (z 4). We touch on implications for observational surveys, mass-to-light ratios, and galaxy assembly bias.
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