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On the effect of cosmological inflow on turbulence and instability in galactic discs

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 425, Issue 1, Pages 788-800

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2012.21652.x

Keywords

methods: analytical; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: formation; galaxies: high-redshift; galaxies: kinematics and dynamics; galaxies: star formation

Funding

  1. ISF [6/08]
  2. GIF [G-1052-104.7/2009]
  3. DIP
  4. NSF at UCSC [AST-1010033]
  5. Minerva fellowship (Max-Planck Gesellschaft)

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We analyse the evolution of turbulence and gravitational instability of a galactic disc in a quasi-steady state governed by cosmological inflow. We focus on the possibility that the coupling between the in-streaming gas and the disc is maximal, e.g. via dense clumps, and ask whether the streams could be the driver of turbulence in an unstable disc with a Toomre parameter Q similar to 1. Our fiducial model assumes an efficiency of similar to 0.5 per dynamical time for the decay of turbulence energy, and similar to 0.02 for each of the processes that depletes the disc gas, i.e. star formation, outflow and inflow within the disc into a central bulge. In this case, the in-streaming drives a ratio of turbulent to rotation velocity s/V similar to 0.20.3, which at z similar to 2 induces an instability with Q similar to 1, both as observed. However, in conflict with observations, this model predicts that s/V remains constant with time, independent of the cosmological accretion rate, because mass and turbulence have the same external source. Such strongly coupled cosmological inflow tends to stabilize the disc at low z, with Q similar to a few, which may be consistent with observations. The instability could instead be maintained for longer, with a properly declining s/V, if it is self-regulated to oscillations about Q similar to 1 by a duty cycle for disc depletion. However, the off phases of this duty cycle become long at low z, which may be hard to reconcile with observations. Alternatively, the coupling between the in-streaming gas and the disc may weaken in time, reflecting an evolving nature of the accretion. If, instead, that coupling is weak at all times, the likely energy source for self-regulated stirring up of the turbulence is the inflow within the disc down the potential gradient (studied in a companion paper).

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