4.7 Article

Stellar feedback and bulge formation in clumpy discs

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 427, Issue 2, Pages 968-978

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2012.21981.x

Keywords

stars: formation; galaxies: active; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: formation; cosmology: theory

Funding

  1. NASA through Chandra X-ray Observatory Center [PF1-120083]
  2. NASA [NAS8-03060, HSTHF-51276.01-A]
  3. David and Lucile Packard Foundation
  4. NSERC
  5. Canada Research Chairs programme

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We use numerical simulations of isolated galaxies to study the effects of stellar feedback on the formation and evolution of giant star-forming gas 'clumps' in high-redshift, gas-rich galaxies. Such galactic discs are unstable to the formation of bound gas-rich clumps whose properties initially depend only on global disc properties, not the microphysics of feedback. In simulations without stellar feedback, clumps turn an order-unity fraction of their mass into stars and sink to the centre, forming a large bulge and kicking most of the stars out into a much more extended stellar envelope. By contrast, strong radiative stellar feedback disrupts even the most massive clumps after they turn similar to 10-20 per cent of their mass into stars, in a time-scale of similar to 10-100 Myr, ejecting some material into a superwind and recycling the rest of the gas into the diffuse interstellar medium (ISM). This suppresses the bulge formation rate by direct 'clump coalescence' by a factor of several. However, the galactic discs do undergo significant internal evolution in the absence of mergers: clumps form and disrupt continuously and torque gas to the galactic centre. The resulting evolution is qualitatively similar to bar/spiral evolution in simulations with a more homogeneous ISM.

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