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Stellar orbits in cosmological galaxy simulations: the connection to formation history and line-of-sight kinematics

Abstract

We analyze orbits of stars and dark matter out to three effective radii for 42 galaxies formed in cosmological zoom simulations. Box orbits always dominate at the centers and zz-tubes become important at larger radii. We connect the orbital structure to the formation histories and specific features (e.g. disk, counter-rotating core, minor axis rotation) in two-dimensional kinematic maps. Globally, fast rotating galaxies with significant recent in situ star formation are dominated by zz-tubes. Slow rotators with recent mergers have significant box orbit and xx-tube components. Rotation, quantified by the λR\lambda_R-parameter often originates from streaming motion of stars on zz-tubes but sometimes from figure rotation. The observed anti-correlation of h3h_3 and V0/σV_0 / \sigma in rotating galaxies can be connected to a dissipative formation history leading to high zz-tube fractions. For galaxies with recent mergers in situ formed stars, accreted stars and dark matter particles populate similar orbits. Dark matter particles have isotropic velocity dispersions. Accreted stars are typically radially biased (β0.20.4\beta \approx 0.2 - 0.4). In situ stars become tangentially biased (as low as β1.0\beta \approx -1.0) if dissipation was relevant during the late assembly of the galaxy. We discuss the relevance of our analysis for integral field surveys and for constraining galaxy formation models.Comment: 21 pages, 19 figure

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