scholarly journals The Challenge of Modelling Galactic Disks

2008 ◽  
Vol 4 (S254) ◽  
pp. 437-444
Author(s):  
Andreas Burkert

AbstractDetailed models of galactic disk formation and evolution require knowledge about the initial conditions under which disk galaxies form, the boundary conditions that affect their secular evolution and the microphysical processes that drive the multi-phase interstellar medium and regulate star formation. Unfortunately, up to now, most of these ingredients are still poorly understood. The challenge therefore is to still construct realistic models of galactic disks with predictive power.

2006 ◽  
Vol 2 (S235) ◽  
pp. 114-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Franziska Köckert ◽  
Matthias Steinmetz

Simulating disk galaxies within the current paradigm of galaxy formation has been a long standing problem. In comparison with observations, the simulated disks were too small and too centrally concentrated, due to a large loss of angular momentum during formation. This is known as the angular momentum catastrophe (Navarro & Benz (1991)). Recently, some progress has been made in reducing this effect by changing the cosmology, including various feedback mechanisms, improving numerical resolution and carefully selecting initial conditions with a quiet merging history after z≈2. Unfortunately, it remains unclear which of these effects, or which combination, has resulted in more realistic disk formation. In order to address this problem, we conduct a systematical study using the N-body code GADGET2 (Springel (2005)). We adopt a flat ΛCDM cosmology with Ωm=0.3, ΩΛ=0.7, Ωbar=0.04 and h=0.65. Using a softening of 0.5 kpc we find disks with a very compact unresolved gas clump in the center and a thin, extended disk (R≈10kpc) of very low mass around it.


1996 ◽  
Vol 171 ◽  
pp. 426-426
Author(s):  
M. Noguchi

A unified picture is presented of the formation of bar structures in disk galaxies of various morphological types. In order to discuss bar formation in the context of galactic disk formation, a simple analytic model is constructed of the growth of galactic disks by infall of primordial gas from haloes and subsequent star formation in the disks. It is monitored during the course of disk growth whether or not the condition for spontaneous bar formation (i.e., bar instability) is fulfilled for the stellar disk component.


2012 ◽  
Vol 10 (H16) ◽  
pp. 348-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
X.-W. Liu ◽  
H.-B. Yuan ◽  
Z.-Y. Huo ◽  
M.-S. Xiang ◽  
H.-H. Zhang ◽  
...  

AbstractAs an integral component of the LAMOST Experiment for Galactic Understanding and Evolution (LEGUE; Deng et al. 2012), the LAMOST Galactic anti-center spectroscopic survey (Liu et al. in preparation) will survey over three thousand square degree sky area centered on the Galactic anti-center (150d ≤ l ≤ 210d, −30d ≤ b ≤ +30d) and obtain low resolution (R ~ 1800) optical spectra for a statistically complete sample of more than three million stars down to a limiting magnitude of 18.5 in r band, distributed in a spatially contiguous area and probing a significant volume of the Galactic thin/thick disks, halo and their interface. Sample stars of the LAMOST survey of the Galactic anti-center are derived from a recently completed CCD imaging photometric survey utilizing the newly built 1.0/1.2m Schmidt Telescope at the Xuyi Station of the Purple Mountain Observatory. The Xuyi imaging survey (Yuan et al., in preparation; Zhang et al. 2012) provides high quality photometry (~2 per cent) in the SDSS g, r and i bands and astrometry (~0.1 arcsec) for about a hundred million stars down to a limiting magnitude of about 19 (10 sigma) for over six thousand square degree sky area (3h ≤ RA ≤ 9h, −10d ≤ Dec ≤ +60d) that envelopes the LAMOST spectroscopic survey area of the Galactic anti-center, plus an extension to the M 31 and M 33 region.This Digital Sky Survey of the Galactic Anti-center (DSS-GAC) with the Xuyi Schmidt and LAMOST telescopes will yield for the first time optical photometry and spectra for millions of stars in the Galactic disk(s), the defining component of the Milky Way as a typical spiral galaxy that contains most Galactic baryonic material and angular momentum. DSS-GAC will deliver classification, extinction, radial velocity and stellar parameters (Teff, log g, [Fe/H], probably also [α/Fe], and in some cases, [C/Fe]), for each sample star. Together with the accurate proper motions and distances to be obtained with the forthcoming GAIA mission, DSS-GAC offers a unique opportunity for major breakthroughs in studies of the Galactic structure, formation and evolution. In particular, DSS-GAC will generate a huge data set to 1) study the stellar populations, chemical composition and kinematics of the thin and thick disks and their interface with the halo; 2) Understand how resilient galaxy disks are to gravitational interactions/perturbations and study the temporal and secular evolution of the disks; 3) identify tidal streams and debris of disrupted dwarfs and clusters; 4) probe the gravitational potential and dark matter distribution; 5) map the three-dimensional distribution and extinction of the interstellar medium; 6) search for rare objects (e.g. stars of peculiar chemical composition, hyper-velocity stars); and 7) ultimately advance our understanding of the formation and evolution of stars and galaxies.Following a two-year commissioning, the LAMOST pilot survey was initiated in October, 2011 and completed in June, 2012. In total, about 370,000 spectra of 270,000 stars have been obtained for DSS-GAC, with 70 per cent of the spectra reaching a spectral S/N ratio per resolution element at 7150 Å higher than 20. The formal LAMOST DSS-GAC survey will commence in September, 2012, and is expected to complete in five years.


2012 ◽  
Vol 10 (H16) ◽  
pp. 363-363
Author(s):  
Eric Emsellem ◽  
Renaud Florent

AbstractWe have performed state-of-the-art high resolution simulations of early-type galaxies with bars, including (multi-phase) gas, star formation and feedback. The aim of this programme is to better understand the observed morphology, kinematical structures, (2D) metallicity distribution, observed in fast rotators with bars. Our simulations were designed via a newly developed code allowing us to build a library of initial conditions closely mimicking barred galaxies in the Atlas3D sample. We will present the role and importance of bars on the gas fueling, redistribution of angular momentum, and overall secular evolution of fast rotators. These results are compared with actual observations (IFU, CO maps, stellar population distributions) obtained in the course of the Atlas3D project. The results from these “early-type“ simulations will also be compared in the context of recently conducted simulations of later-type barred galaxies, including one of a Milky-Way type object with a resolution down to 0.05 parsec.


2008 ◽  
Vol 679 (2) ◽  
pp. L69-L72 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Azzollini ◽  
I. Trujillo ◽  
J. E. Beckman

2020 ◽  
Vol 493 (1) ◽  
pp. 427-436
Author(s):  
F Marzari ◽  
M Nagasawa

ABSTRACT Pairs of planets in a system may end up close to their host star on eccentric orbits as a consequence of planet–planet scattering, Kozai, or secular migration. In this scenario, general relativity and secular perturbations have comparable time-scales and may interfere with each other with relevant effects on the eccentricity and pericenter evolution of the two planets. We explore, both analytically and via numerical integration, how the secular evolution is changed by general relativity for a wide range of different initial conditions. We find that when the faster secular frequency approaches the general relativity precession rate, which typically occurs when the outer planet moves away from the inner one, it relaxes to it and a significant damping of the proper eccentricity of the inner planet occurs. The proper eccentricity of the outer planet is reduced as well due to the changes in the secular interaction of the bodies. The lowering of the peak eccentricities of the two planets during their secular evolution has important implications on their stability. A significant number of two-planet systems, otherwise chaotic because of the mutual secular perturbations, are found stable when general relativity is included.


2020 ◽  
Vol 896 (1) ◽  
pp. 14
Author(s):  
Doo Ri Han ◽  
Young Sun Lee ◽  
Young Kwang Kim ◽  
Timothy C. Beers

2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (S351) ◽  
pp. 216-219
Author(s):  
Steven Rieder ◽  
Clare Dobbs ◽  
Thomas Bending

AbstractWe present a model for hydrodynamic + N-body simulations of star cluster formation and evolution using AMUSE. Our model includes gas dynamics, star formation in regions of dense gas, stellar evolution and a galactic tidal spiral potential, thus incorporating most of the processes that play a role in the evolution of star clusters.We test our model on initial conditions of two colliding molecular clouds as well as a section of a spiral arm from a previous galaxy simulation.


2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (S321) ◽  
pp. 134-134
Author(s):  
R. Chang ◽  
Shuhui Zhang ◽  
Shiyin Shen ◽  
Jun Yin ◽  
Jinliang Hou

CALIFA data show that isolated disk galaxies present a common gas-phase metallicity gradient, with a characteristic slope of -0.1dex/re between 0.3 and 2 disk effective radius re (Sanchez et al. 2014). Here we construct a simple model to investigate which processes regulate the formation and evolution.


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