scholarly journals Stellar bars in counter-rotating dark matter haloes: the role of halo orbit reversals

2019 ◽  
Vol 489 (3) ◽  
pp. 3102-3115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angela Collier ◽  
Isaac Shlosman ◽  
Clayton Heller

Abstract Disc galaxies can exchange angular momentum and baryons with their host dark matter (DM) haloes. These haloes possess internal spin, λ, which is insignificant rotationally but does affect interactions between the baryonic and DM components. While statistics of prograde and retrograde spinning haloes in galaxies is not available at present, the existence of such haloes is important for galaxy evolution. In the previous works, we analysed dynamical and secular evolution of stellar bars in prograde spinning haloes and the DM response to the bar perturbation, and found that it is modified by the resonant interactions between the bar and the DM halo orbits. In this work, we follow the evolution of stellar bars in retrograde haloes. We find that this evolution differs substantially from evolution in rigid unresponsive haloes, discussed in the literature. First, we confirm that the bar instability is delayed progressively along the retrograde λ sequence. Secondly, the bar evolution in the retrograde haloes differs also from that in the prograde haloes, in that the bars continue to grow substantially over the simulation time of 10 Gyr. The DM response is also substantially weaker compared to this response in the prograde haloes. Thirdly, using orbital spectral analysis of the DM orbital structure, we find a phenomenon we call the orbit reversal – when retrograde DM orbits interact with the stellar bar, reverse their streaming and precession, and become prograde. This process dominates the inner halo region adjacent to the bar and allows these orbits to be trapped by the bar, thus increasing efficiency of angular momentum transfer by the inner Lindblad resonance. We demonstrate this reversal process explicitly in a number of examples.

2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (S271) ◽  
pp. 119-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francoise Combes

AbstractRecent results are reviewed on galaxy dynamics, bar evolution, destruction and re-formation, cold gas accretion, gas radial flows and AGN fueling, minor mergers. Some problems of galaxy evolution are discussed in particular, exchange of angular momentum, radial migration through resonant scattering, and consequences on abundance gradients, the frequency of bulgeless galaxies, and the relative role of secular evolution and hierarchical formation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 488 (4) ◽  
pp. 5788-5801 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angela Collier ◽  
Isaac Shlosman ◽  
Clayton Heller

ABSTRACT We study non-linear response of spinning dark matter (DM) haloes to dynamic and secular evolution of stellar bars in the embedded galactic discs, using high-resolution numerical simulations. For a sequence of haloes with the cosmological spin parameter λ = 0–0.09, and a representative angular momentum distribution, we analyse evolution of induced DM bars amplitude and quantify parameters of the response as well as trapping of DM orbits and angular momentum transfer by the main and secondary resonances. We find that (1) maximal amplitude of DM bars depends strongly on λ, while that of the stellar bars is indifferent to λ; (2) efficiency of resonance trapping of DM orbits by the bar increases with λ, and so is the mass and the volume of DM bars; (3) contribution of resonance transfer of angular momentum to the DM halo increases with λ, and for larger spin, the DM halo ‘talks’ to itself, by moving the angular momentum to larger radii – this process is maintained by resonances; and (4) prograde and retrograde DM orbits play different roles in angular momentum transfer. The ‘active’ part of the halo extends well beyond the bar region, up to few times the bar length in equatorial plane and away from this plane. (5) We model evolution of discless DM haloes and haloes with frozen discs, and found them to be perfectly stable to any Fourier modes. Finally, further studies adopting a range of mass and specific angular momentum distributions of the DM halo will generalize the dependence of DM response on the halo spin and important implications for direct detection of DM and that of the associated stellar tracers, such as streamers.


1993 ◽  
Vol 153 ◽  
pp. 275-282
Author(s):  
Ortwin E. Gerhard ◽  
James Binney

Observations of cold gas in the inner galactic disk show a clumpy, highly asymmetric distribution, with large non-circular velocities. Recent work has shown that the flow of gas in the inner few kpc is dominated by a rapidly rotating bar, with corotation at R ≃ 2.4 kpc and oriented at an angle of θincl = 16 ± 2° with the line-of-sight to the Galactic Center. From the kinematical model the gravitational potential in the inner Galaxy can be determined. Gas falls inwards through the bar's inner Lindblad resonance at a rate of ∼ 0.1M⊙/ yr; this suggests that in episodic star formation significant mass and angular momentum may be added to the inner bulge.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (S353) ◽  
pp. 184-185
Author(s):  
Sandeep Kumar Kataria ◽  
Mousumi Das ◽  
Stacy Mcgaugh

AbstractOne of the major and widely known small scale problem with the Lambda CDM model of cosmology is the “core-cusp” problem. In this study we investigate whether this problem can be resolved using bar instabilities. We see that all the initial bars are thin (b/a < 0.3) in our simulations and the bar becomes thick ( b /a > 0.3) faster in the high resolution simulations. By increasing the resolution, we mean a larger number of disk particles. The thicker bars in the high resolution simulations transfer less angular momentum to the halo. Hence, we find that in the high resolution simulations it takes around 7 Gyr for the bar to remove inner dark matter cusp which is too long to be meaningful in galaxy evolution timescales. Physically, the reason is that as the resolution increases, the bar buckles faster and becomes thicker much earlier on.


2008 ◽  
Vol 4 (T27A) ◽  
pp. 12-22
Author(s):  
Joseph A. Burns ◽  
Zoran Knežević ◽  
Andrea Milani ◽  
David Vokrouhlický ◽  
Evangelia Athanassoula ◽  
...  

The interplay of the disc and the dark halo resonances governs the secular evolution of disc galaxies, and the properties of their bar component (Athanassoula 2002). Martinez-Valpuestaet al. (2006), Ceverino & Klypin (2007) and Athanassoula (2007b) confirm and extend this work. Ceverino & Klypin (2007) calculate the orbital frequencies of each particle over the whole temporal evolution, and thus find much broader frequency peaks. In all cases, it is the same resonances that come into play, and, as in Athanassoula 2002, the angular momentum is emitted by near-resonant material in the bar region and absorbed by near-resonant material in the halo and the outer disc. The relative importance of each resonance, however, varies from one case to another. Furthermore, the second and third of the above mentioned studies examine the location of resonant orbits in configuration space and find compatible results.


2017 ◽  
Vol 32 (19) ◽  
pp. 1730013
Author(s):  
Paul H. Frampton

We discuss the hypothesis that the constituents of dark matter in the galactic halo are primordial intermediate-mass black holes (PIMBHs). The status of axions and weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) is discussed, as are the methods for detecting PIMBHs with emphasis on microlensing. The role of the angular momentum [Formula: see text] of the PIMBHs in their escaping previous detection is considered.


2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (S311) ◽  
pp. 31-35
Author(s):  
Ortwin Gerhard ◽  
Magda Arnaboldi ◽  
Alessia Longobardi

AbstractThe outer halos of massive early-type galaxies (ETGs) are dark matter dominated and may have formed by accretion of smaller systems during galaxy evolution. Here a brief report is given of some recent work on the kinematics, angular momentum, and mass distributions of simulated ETG halos, and of corresponding properties of observed halos measured with planetary nebulae (PNe) as tracers. In the outermost regions of the Virgo-central galaxy M87, the PN data show that the stellar halo and the co-spatial intracluster light are distinct kinematic components.


2012 ◽  
Vol 10 (H16) ◽  
pp. 316-317
Author(s):  
John Kormendy

AbstractThis Special Session is devoted to the secular evolution of disk galaxies. Here ‘secular’ means ‘slow’; i.e., evolution on time scales that are generally much longer than the galaxy crossing or rotation time. Internal and environmentally driven evolution both are covered.I am indebted to Albert Bosma for reminding me at the 2011 Canary Islands Winter School on Secular Evolution that our subject first appeared in print in a comment made by Ivan King (1977) in his introductory talk at the Yale University meeting on The Evolution of Galaxies and Stellar Populations: ‘John Kormendy would like us to consider the possibility that a galaxy can interact with itself.. . . I'm not at all convinced, but John can show you some interesting pictures.’ Two of the earliest papers that followed were Kormendy (1979a, b); the first discusses the interaction of galaxy components with each other, and the second studies these phenomena in the context of a morphological survey of barred galaxies. The earliest modeling paper that we still use regularly is Combes & Sanders (1981), which introduces the now well known idea that box-shaped bulges in edge-on galaxies are side-on, vertically thickened bars.It is gratifying to see how this subject has grown since that time. Hundreds of papers have been written, and the topic features prominently at many meetings (e.g., Block et al. 2004; Falcoń-Barroso & Knapen 2012, and this Special Session). My talk here introduces both internal and environmental secular evolution; a brief abstract follows. My Canary Islands Winter School review covers both subjects in more detail (Kormendy 2012). Kormendy & Kennicutt (2004) is a comprehensive review of internal secular evolution, and Kormendy & Bender (2012) covers environmental evolution. Both of these subject make significant progress at this meeting.Secular evolution happens because self-gravitating systems evolve toward the most tightly bound configuration that is reachable by the evolution processes that are available to them. They do this by spreading – the inner parts shrink while the outer parts expand. Significant changes happen only if some process efficiently transports energy or angular momentum outward. The consequences are very general: evolution by spreading happens in stars, star clusters, protostellar and protoplanetary disks, black hole accretion disks and galaxy disks. This meeting is about disk galaxies, so the evolution most often involves the redistribution of angular momentum.We now have a good heuristic understanding of how nonaxisymmetric structures rearrange disk gas into outer rings, inner rings and stuff dumped onto the center. Numerical simulations reproduce observed morphologies very well. Gas that is transported to small radii reaches high densities that are seen in CO observations. Star formation rates measured (e.g.) in the mid-infrared show that many barred and oval galaxies grow, on timescales of a few Gyr, dense central ‘pseudobulges’ that are frequently mistaken for classical (elliptical-galaxy-like) bulges but that were grown slowly out of the disk (not made rapidly by major mergers). Our resulting picture of secular evolution accounts for the richness observed in morphological classification schemes such as those of de Vaucouleurs (1959) and Sandage (1961). State-of-the art morphology discussions include the de Vaucouleurs Atlas of Galaxies (Buta et al. 2007) and Buta (2012, 2013).Pseudobulges as disk-grown alternatives to merger-built classical bulges are important because they impact many aspects of our understanding of galaxy evolution. For example, they are observed to contain supermassive black holes (BHs), but they do not show the well known, tight correlations between BH mass and host properties (Kormendy et al. 2011). We can distinguish between classical and pseudo bulges because the latter retain a ‘memory’ of their disky origin. That is, they have one or more characteristics of disks: (1) flatter shapes than those of classical bulges, (2) correspondingly large ratios of ordered to random velocities, (3) small velocity dispersions σ with respect to the Faber-Jackson correlation between σ and bulge luminosity, (4) spiral structure or nuclear bars in the ‘bulge’ part of the light profile, (5) nearly exponential brightness profiles and (6) starbursts. None of the above classification criteria are 100% reliable. Published disagreements on (pseudo)bulge classifications usually result from the use of diffferent criteria. It is very important to use as many classification criteria as possible. When two or more criteria are used, the probability of misclassification becomes very small.I also review environmental secular evolution – the transformation of gas-rich, star-forming spiral and irregular galaxies into gas-poor, ‘red and dead’ S0 and spheroidal (‘Sph’) galaxies. I show that Sph galaxies such as NGC 205 and Draco are not the low-luminosity end of the structural sequence (the ‘fundamental plane’) of elliptical galaxies. Instead, Sph galaxies have structural parameters like those of low-luminosity S+Im galaxies. Spheroidals are continuous in their structural parameters with the disks of S0 galaxies. They are bulgeless S0s. S+Im → S0+Sph transformation involves a variety of internal (supernova-driven baryon ejection) and environmental processes (e.g., ram-pressure gas stripping, harassment, and starvation). Improved evidence for galaxy transformation is presented in several papers at this meeting.


2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (A30) ◽  
pp. 191-196
Author(s):  
Danail Obreschkow

AbstractThe 6th Focus Meeting (FM6) at the XXXth IAU GA 2018 aimed at overviewing the rise in angular momentum (AM) science seen in the last 10 years and debating new emerging views on galaxy evolution. The foundational works on galaxy formation of the 1970s and 80s clearly exposed the fundamental role of AM, suspected since the time of Kant. However, quantitative progress on galactic AM remained hampered by observational and theoretical obstacles. Only in the last 10 years, numerical simulations began to produce galactic disks with realistic AM. Simultaneously, the fast rise of Integral Field Spectroscopy (IFS) and millimetre/radio interferometry have opened the door for systematic AM measurements, across representative samples and cosmic volumes. The FM bridged between cutting-edge observational programs and leading simulations in order to review, debate and resolve core issues on AM science, ranging from galactic substructure (e.g. gas fraction, turbulence, clumps) to global properties (e.g. size evolution, morphologies) and cosmology (spin alignment, cosmic origin of AM). The co-chairs and SOC members strived to assemble a representative selection of leading scientists in the field, while adhering to principles of equal opportunity and inclusivity.


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