scholarly journals How galaxies gain and lose their angular momentum

2007 ◽  
Vol 3 (S245) ◽  
pp. 51-54
Author(s):  
Elena D'Onghia

AbstractSpiral, fast-rotating galaxies like the Milky Way are the most common type in the Universe. One of the most pressing challenges faced by current models of galaxy formation is the origin of their angular momentum and disk. According to the standard tidal-torque theory the galactic spin is originated by tidal interactions between dark halos around galaxies and neighboring structures in the expanding Universe. We use a large cosmological N-body simulation to study the origin of possible correlations between the merging history and spin of cold dark matter halos. In particular, we examine claims that remnants of major mergers tend to have higher-than-average spins, and find that the effect is driven largely by unrelaxed systems: equilibrium dark matter halos show no significant correlation between spin and merging history. Out-of-equilibrium halos have, on average, higher spin than relaxed systems, suggesting that the virialization process leads to a net decrease in the value of the spin parameter. We present also high-resolution N-body/SPH cosmological simulations including cold gas and dark matter to investigate the processes by which gas loses its angular momentum during the protogalactic collapse phase, leading to simulated disk galaxies that are too compact with respect to the observations. We show that the gas and the dark matter have similar specific angular momenta until a merger event occurs at redshift 2. All the gas involved in the merger loses a substantial fraction of its specific angular momentum due to tidal torques and falls quickly into the center. Dynamical friction by small infalling substructures plays a minor role, in contrast to previous claims.

2006 ◽  
Vol 2 (S235) ◽  
pp. 104-104
Author(s):  
Stéphane Herbert-Fort ◽  
Dennis Zaritsky ◽  
Yeun Jin Kim ◽  
Jeremy Bailin ◽  
James E. Taylor

AbstractThe degree to which outer dark matter halos of spiral galaxies rotate with the disk is sensitive to their accretion history and may be probed with associated satellite galaxies. We use the Steward Observatory Bok telescope to measure the sense of rotation of nearby isolated spirals and combine these data with those of their associated satellites (drawn from SDSS) to directly test predictions from numerical simulations. We aim to constrain models of galaxy formation by measuring the projected component of the halo angular momentum that is aligned with that of spiral galaxy disks, Jz. We find the mean bulk rotation of the ensemble satellite system to be co-rotating with the disk with a velocity of 22 ± 13 km/s, in general agreement with previous observational studies and suggesting that galaxy disks could be formed by halo baryons collapsing by a factor of ≈10. We also find a prograde satellite fraction of 51% and Jz, of the satellite system to be positively correlated with the disk, albeit at low significance (2655 ± 2232 kpc km/s).


2003 ◽  
Vol 208 ◽  
pp. 391-392
Author(s):  
Andreea S. Font ◽  
Julio F. Navarro

We investigate recent suggestions that substructure in cold dark matter (CDM) halos has potentially destructive effects on galactic disks. N-body simulations of disk/bulge models of the Milky Way, embedded in a dark matter halo with substructure similar to that found in cosmological simulations, show that tides from substructure halos play only a minor role in the dynamical heating of the stellar disk. This suggests that substructure might not preclude CDM halos from being acceptable hosts of thin stellar disks.


2017 ◽  
Vol 118 (16) ◽  
Author(s):  
Aaron D. Ludlow ◽  
Alejandro Benítez-Llambay ◽  
Matthieu Schaller ◽  
Tom Theuns ◽  
Carlos S. Frenk ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (S344) ◽  
pp. 455-463
Author(s):  
Julio F. Navarro

AbstractThe Lambda Cold Dark Matter (LCDM) paradigm makes specific predictions for the abundance, structure, substructure and clustering of dark matter halos, the sites of galaxy formation. These predictions can be directly tested, in the low-mass halo regime, by dark matter-dominated dwarf galaxies. A number of potential challenges to LCDM have been identified when confronting the expected properties of dwarfs with observation. I review our understanding of a few of these issues, including the “missing satellites” and the “too-big-to-fail” problems, and argue that neither poses an insurmountable challenge to LCDM. Solving these problems requires that most dwarf galaxies inhabit halos of similar mass, and that there is a relatively sharp minimum halo mass threshold to form luminous galaxies. These predictions are eminently falsifiable. In particular, LCDM predicts a large number of “dark” low-mass halos, some of which should have retained enough primordial gas to be detectable in deep 21 cm or Hα surveys. Detecting this predicted population of “mini-halos” would be a major discovery and a resounding success for LCDM on small scales.


1987 ◽  
Vol 117 ◽  
pp. 280-280
Author(s):  
C. S. Frenk

A flat universe dominated by cold dark matter (CDM) is an attractive arena for the formation of galaxies and large scale structure. Current upper limits on anisotropies of the cosmic microwave background and the standard theory of primordial nucleosynthesis are both compatible with such a universe. Furthermore a flat CDM model in which galaxy formation is biased towards high density regions provides a good match to the observed distribution of galaxies on Megaparsec scales. In collaboration with M. Davis, G. Efstathiou and S.D.M. White, we have carried out a high resolution N-body simulation which shows that this model can also account for the abundance and characteristic properties of galactic halos. The initial conditions for this simulation were based on the results of our previous work which gave both the scaling and overall normalisation of the initial CDM fluctuation spectrum appropriate to the biased galaxy formation model. We simulated a cubic region of present size 14 Mpc (H0 = 50km/s/Mpc) from a redshift of 6 to the present day, with a resolution of 2kpc initially and 14 kpc at the end. We found that by a redshift of 2.5 about 20 clumps with circular speeds exceeding 100 km/s had collapsed near high peaks of the initial linear density field. Between Z = 2.5 and the present most of them remained isolated and accreted extensive outer halos, while others merged into larger systems. The rotation curves of the final smooth systems were impressively flat at large radii resembling the measured rotation curves of spiral galaxies. Furthermore, the abundance of clumps with circular velocities larger than 150 km/s was about the same as the abundance of galaxies brighter than M33 expected in a volume the size of our simulation. Significant transfer of angular momentum to surrounding material occurred as large subclumps merged. Most of this angular momentum was originally invested in the orbital motions of the subclumps. As a result, the central regions of merged objects showed little rotation.


Author(s):  
R J J Poulton ◽  
C Power ◽  
A S G Robotham ◽  
P J Elahi ◽  
C D P Lagos

Abstract Predicting the merger timescale (τmerge) of merging dark matter halos, based on their orbital parameters and the structural properties of their hosts, is a fundamental problem in gravitational dynamics that has important consequences for our understanding of cosmological structure formation and galaxy formation. Previous models predicting τmerge have shown varying degrees of success when compared to the results of cosmological N-body simulations. We build on this previous work and propose a new model for τmerge that draws on insights derived from these simulations. We find that published predictions can provide reasonable estimates for τmerge based on orbital properties at infall, but tend to underpredict τmerge inside the host virial radius (R200) because tidal stripping is neglected, and overpredict it outside R200 because the host mass is underestimated. Furthermore, we find that models that account for orbital angular momentum via the circular radius Rcirc underpredict (overpredict) τmerge for bound (unbound) systems. By fitting for the dependence of τmerge on various orbital and host halo properties, we derive an improved model for τmerge that can be applied to a merging halo at any point in its orbit. Finally, we discuss briefly the implications of our new model for τmerge for semi-analytical galaxy formation modelling.


2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (A30) ◽  
pp. 197-202
Author(s):  
Francoise Combes

AbstractAngular momentum (AM) is a key parameter to understand galaxy formation and evolution. AM originates in tidal torques between proto-structures at turn around, and from this the specific AM is expected to scale as a power-law of slope 2/3 with mass. However, subsequent evolution re-shuffles this through matter accretion from filaments, mergers, star formation and feedback, secular evolution and AM exchange between baryons and dark matter. Outer parts of galaxies are essential to study since they retain most of the AM and the diagnostics of the evolution. Galaxy IFU surveys have recently provided a wealth of kinematical information in the local universe. In the future, we can expect more statistics in the outer parts, and evolution at high z, including atomic gas with SKA.


2004 ◽  
Vol 220 ◽  
pp. 467-476 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joel R. Primack

Cold Dark Matter with a large cosmological constant (ACDM) appears to fit large scale structure observations well. of the possible small scale problems, the Central Cusps and Too Many Satellites problems now appear to be at least partly solved, so Angular Momentum has become the most serious remaining CDM problem. There are actually at least two different angular momentum problems: A. Too much transfer of angular momentum to the dark halo to make big disks, and B. Wrong distribution of specific angular momentum to make spiral galaxies, if the baryonic material has the same angular momentum distribution as the dark matter. the angular momentum of dark matter halos, and presumably that of the galaxies they host, appears to arise largely from the orbital angular momentum of the satellites that they accrete. Since the dark and baryonic matter behave very differently in such accretion events, it is possible that the resulting angular momentum distribution of the baryons is different from that of the dark matter, as required to make the sort of galactic disks that are observed. the latest hydrodynamical simulations give some grounds for hope on this score, but much higher resolution simulations are needed.


2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (S344) ◽  
pp. 17-26
Author(s):  
Laura V. Sales

AbstractWe present a summary of the predictions from numerical simulations to our understanding of dwarf galaxies. It centers the discussion around the Λ Cold Dark Matter scenario (ΛCDM) but discusses also implications for alternative dark matter models. Four key predictions are identified: the abundance of dwarf galaxies, their dark matter content, their relation with environment and the existence of dwarf satellites orbiting dwarf field galaxies. We discuss tensions with observations and identify the most exciting predictions expected from simulations in the future, including i) the existence of “dark galaxies” (dark matter halos without stars), ii) the ability to resolve the structure (size, morphology, dark matter distribution) in dwarfs and iii) the number of ultra-faint satellites around dwarf galaxies. All of these predictions shall inform future observations, not only the faintest galaxies to be discovered within the Local Volume but also distant dwarfs driving galaxy formation in the early universe.


2008 ◽  
Vol 4 (S254) ◽  
pp. 19-20
Author(s):  
Simon D. M. White

AbstractTogether with the discovery of the accelerated expansion of the present Universe and measurements of large-scale structure at low redshift, observations of the cosmic microwave background have established a standard paradigm in which all cosmic structure grew from small fluctuations generated at very early times in a flat universe which today consists of 72% dark energy, 23.5% dark matter and 4.5% ordinary baryons. The CMB sky provides us with a direct image of this universe when it was 400,000 years old and very nearly uniform. The galaxy formation problem is then to understand how observed galaxies with all their regularity and diversity arose from these very simple initial conditions. Although gravity is the prime driver, many physical processes appear to play an important role in this transformation, and direct numerical simulation has become the principal tool for detailed investigation of the complex and strongly nonlinear interactions between them.The evolution of structure in the gravitationally dominant Cold Dark Matter distribution can now be simulated in great detail, provided the effects of the baryons are ignored, and there is general consensus for the results on scales relevant to the formation of galaxies like our own. The basic nonlinear units are so-called “dark matter halos”, slowly rotating, triaxial, quasi-equilibrium systems with a universal cusped density profile and substantial substructure in the form of a host of much less massive subhalos which are concentrated primarily in their outer regions.Attempts to include the baryons, and so to model the formation of the visible parts of galaxies, have given much more diverse results. It has been known for 30 years that substantial feedback, presumably from stellar winds and supernovae, is required to prevent overcooling of gas and excessive star formation in the early stages of galaxy assembly. When realistic galaxy formation simulations first became possible in the early 1990's, this problem was immediately confirmed. Without effective feedback, typical halos produced galaxies which were too massive, too concentrated and had too little disk to be consistent with observation.Simple models for disk formation from the mid 1990's show that the angular momentum predicted for collapsing dark halos is sufficient for them to build a disk population similar to that observed. Direct simulations have repeatedly failed to confirm this picture, however, because nonlinear effects lead to substantial transfer of angular momentum between the various components. In most cases the condensing baryonic material loses angular momentum to the dark matter, and the final galaxy ends up with a disk that is too compact or contains too small a fraction of the stars.These problems have been reduced as successive generations of simulations have dramatically improved the numerical resolution and have introduced “better” implementations of feedback (i.e. more successful at building disks). Despite this, no high-resolution simulation has so far been able to produce a present-day disk galaxy with a bulge-to-disk mass ratio much less than one in a proper ΛCDM context. Such galaxies are common in the real Universe; our own Milky Way is a good example. The variety of results obtained by different groups show that this issue is very sensitive to how star formation and feedback are treated, and all implementations of these processes to date have been much too schematic to be confident of their predictions.The major outstanding issues I see related to disk galaxies and their formation are the following: Do real disk galaxies have the NFW halos predicted by the ΛCDM cosmology? If not, could the deviations have been produced by the formation of the observed baryonic components, or must the basic structure formation picture be changed? How are Sc and later type galaxies made? Why don't our simulations produce them? What determines which galaxies become barred and which not? Can we demonstrate that secular evolution produces the observed population of (pseudo)bulges from pre-existing disks? How does the observed population of thin disks survive bombardment by substructure and the other transient potential fluctuations expected in ΛCDM halos? Is a better treatment of feedback really the answer? If so, can we demonstrate it using chemical abundances as fossil tracers? And how can we best use observations at high redshift to clarify these formation issues?


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