4.7 Article

Idealized models for galactic disc formation and evolution in 'realistic' ΛCDM haloes

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 428, Issue 2, Pages 1055-1076

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/sts083

Keywords

galaxies: evolution; galaxies: formation; galaxies: kinematics and dynamics; galaxies: structure; dark matter

Funding

  1. DFG Excellence Cluster 'Origin and Structure of the Universe'

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We study the dynamics of galactic disc formation and evolution in 'realistic' Lambda cold dark matter haloes with idealized baryonic initial conditions. We add rotating spheres of hot gas at z = 1.3 to two fully cosmological dark-matter-only halo (re)simulations. The gas cools according to an artificial and adjustable cooling function to form a rotationally supported galaxy. The simulations evolve in the full cosmological context until z = 0. We vary the angular momentum and density profiles of the initial gas sphere, the cooling time and the orientation of the angular momentum vector to study the effects on the formation and evolution of the disc. The final discs show exponential radial and (double)-exponential vertical stellar density profiles, and stellar velocity dispersions that increase with age of the stars, as in real disc galaxies. The slower the cooling/accretion processes, the higher the kinematic disc-to-bulge (D/B) ratio of the resulting system. We find that the initial orientation of the baryonic angular momentum with respect to the halo has a major effect on the resulting D/B. The most stable systems result from orientations parallel to the halo minor axis. Despite the spherical and coherently rotating initial gas distribution, the orientation of the central disc and of the outer gas components, and the relative angle between the components can all change by more than 90 degrees over several billion years. Initial orientations perpendicular to the major axis tend to align with the minor axis during their evolution, but the sign of the spin can have a strong effect. Discs can form from initial conditions oriented parallel to the major axis, but there is often strong misalignment between inner and outer material. The more the orientation of the baryonic angular momentum changes during the evolution, the lower the final D/B. The behaviour varies strongly from halo to halo. Even our very simple initial conditions can lead to strong bars, dominant bulges, massive, misaligned rings and counter-rotating components. We discuss how our results may relate to the failure or success of fully cosmological disc formation simulations.

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