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SMART: a new implementation of Schwarzschild's Orbit Superposition technique for triaxial galaxies and its application to an N-body merger simulation

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Naab,  T.
Computational Structure Formation, MPI for Astrophysics, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Neureiter, B., Thomas, J., Saglia, R., Bender, R., Finozzi, F., Krukau, A., et al. (2020). SMART: a new implementation of Schwarzschild's Orbit Superposition technique for triaxial galaxies and its application to an N-body merger simulation. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 500(1), 1437-1465. doi:10.1093/mnras/staa3014.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0007-E907-B
Abstract
We present SMART, a new 3D implementation of the Schwarzschild Method and its application to a triaxial N-body merger simulation. SMART fits full line-of-sight velocity distributions to determine the viewing angles, black hole, stellar and dark matter (DM) masses, and the stellar orbit distribution of galaxies. Our model uses a 5D orbital starting space to ensure a representative set of stellar trajectories adaptable to the integrals-of-motion space and it is designed to deal with non-parametric stellar and DM densities. SMART’s efficiency is demonstrated by application to a realistic N-body merger simulation including supermassive black holes that we model from five different projections. When providing the true viewing angles, 3D stellar luminosity profile and normalized DM halo, we can (i) reproduce the intrinsic velocity moments and anisotropy profile with a precision of ∼1 per cent and (ii) recover the black hole mass, stellar mass-to-light ratio and DM normalization to better than a few per cent accuracy. This precision is smaller than the currently discussed differences between initial-stellar-mass functions and scatter in black hole scaling relations. Further tests with toy models suggest that the recovery of the anisotropy in triaxial galaxies is almost unique when the potential is known and full LOSVDs are fitted. We show that orbit models even allow the reconstruction of full intrinsic velocity distributions, which contain more information than the classical anisotropy parameter. Surprisingly, the orbit library for the analysed N-body simulation’s gravitational potential contains orbits with net rotation around the intermediate axis that is stable over some Gyrs.