Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published February 10, 2019 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Effects of Gas on Formation and Evolution of Stellar Bars and Nuclear Rings in Disk Galaxies

Abstract

We run self-consistent simulations of Milky Way-sized, isolated disk galaxies to study the formation and evolution of a stellar bar as well as a nuclear ring in the presence of gas. We consider two sets of models with cold or warm disks that differ in the radial velocity dispersions, and vary the gas fraction f_(gas) by fixing the total disk mass. A bar forms earlier and more strongly in the cold disks with larger f_(gas), while gas progressively delays the bar formation in the warm disks. The bar formation enhances a central mass concentration, which in turn causes the bar to decay temporarily, after which it regrows in size and strength, eventually becoming stronger in models with smaller f_(gas). Although all bars rotate fast in the beginning, they rapidly turn to slow rotators. In our models, only the gas-free, warm disk undergoes rapid buckling instability, while other disks thicken more gradually via vertical heating. The gas driven inward by the bar potential readily forms a star-forming nuclear ring. The ring is very small when it first forms and grows in size over time. The ring star formation rate is episodic and bursty due to feedback, and is well correlated with the mass inflow rate to the ring. Some expanding shells produced by star formation feedback are sheared out in the bar regions and collide with dust lanes to appear as filamentary interbar spurs. The bars and nuclear rings formed in our simulations have properties similar to those in the Milky Way.

Additional Information

© 2019 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2018 October 1; revised 2019 January 2; accepted 2019 January 6; published 2019 February 6. We gratefully acknowledge a thoughtful report from the referee, and helpful discussions with Eve Ostriker. This work was supported by grant (2017R1A4A1015178) of the National Research Foundation of Korea. The computation of this work was supported by the Supercomputing Center/Korea Institute of Science and Technology Information with supercomputing resources including technical support (KSC-2018-C3-0015). Software: GIZMO (Hopkins 2015), GalIC (Yurin & Springel 2014), additional data analyses and visualizations were made using IDL version 8.6 and IPython (Pérez & Granger 2007).

Attached Files

Published - Seo_2019_ApJ_872_5.pdf

Submitted - 1901.02021.pdf

Files

Seo_2019_ApJ_872_5.pdf
Files (32.9 MB)
Name Size Download all
md5:2db656a28b7567bb39749b7fd45ffd0d
21.3 MB Preview Download
md5:f9c6e351f79839479872f0e4572db4e8
11.5 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023