2,076 research outputs found
Numerical simulations of galaxy evolution in cosmological context
Large volume cosmological simulations succeed in reproducing the large-scale
structure of the Universe. However, they lack resolution and may not take into
account all relevant physical processes to test if the detail properties of
galaxies can be explained by the CDM paradigm. On the other hand, galaxy-scale
simulations could resolve this in a robust way but do not usually include a
realistic cosmological context.
To study galaxy evolution in cosmological context, we use a new method that
consists in coupling cosmological simulations and galactic scale simulations.
For this, we record merger and gas accretion histories from cosmological
simulations and re-simulate at very high resolution the evolution of baryons
and dark matter within the virial radius of a target galaxy. This allows us for
example to better take into account gas evolution and associated star
formation, to finely study the internal evolution of galaxies and their disks
in a realistic cosmological context.
We aim at obtaining a statistical view on galaxy evolution from z = 2 to 0,
and we present here the first results of the study: we mainly stress the
importance of taking into account gas accretion along filaments to understand
galaxy evolution.Comment: 6 pages - Proceedings of IAU Symposium 254 "The Galaxy disk in
cosmological context", Copenhagen, June 2008 - Movies available at
http://aramis.obspm.fr/~bournaud/stargas35small.avi and
http://aramis.obspm.fr/~bournaud/stargasZ35_small.av
Tidal Debris posing as Dark Galaxies
Debris sent into the intergalactic medium during tidal collisions can tell us
about several fundamental properties of galaxies, in particular their missing
mass, both in the form of cosmological Dark Matter and so-called Lost Baryons.
High velocity encounters, which are common in clusters of galaxies, are able to
produce faint tidal debris that may appear as star-less, free floating HI
clouds. These may be mistaken for Dark Galaxies, a putative class of gaseous,
dark matter dominated, objects which for some reason never managed to form
stars. VirgoHI21 is by far the most spectacular and most discussed Dark Galaxy
candidate so far detected in HI surveys. We show here that it is most likely
made out of material expelled 750 Myr ago from the nearby spiral galaxy NGC
4254 during its fly--by at about 1000 km/s by a massive intruder. Our numerical
model of the collision is able to reproduce the main characteristics of the
system: in particular the absence of stars, and its prominent velocity
gradient. Originally attributed to the gas being in rotation within a massive
dark matter halo, we find it instead to be consistent with a combination of
simple streaming motion plus projection effects (Duc & Bournaud, 2007). We
discuss several ways to identify a tidal origin in a Dark Galaxy candidate and
illustrate the method using another HI system in Virgo, VCC 2062, which is most
likely a Tidal Dwarf Galaxy (Duc et al., 2007). Now, whereas tidal debris
should not contain any dark matter from the halo of their parent galaxies, it
may exhibit missing mass in the form of dark baryons, unaccounted for by
classical observations, as recently found in the collisional ring of NGC 5291
(Bournaud et al., 2007) and probably in the TDG VCC 2062. These "Lost Baryons"
must originally have been located in the disks of their parent galaxies.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, to appear in IAU symposium 244 "Dark Galaxies
and Lost Baryons
Tidal Dwarf Galaxies and missing baryons
Tidal dwarf galaxies form during the interaction, collision or merger of
massive spiral galaxies. They can resemble "normal" dwarf galaxies in terms of
mass, size, and become dwarf satellites orbiting around their massive
progenitor. They nevertheless keep some signatures from their origin, making
them interesting targets for cosmological studies. In particular, they should
be free from dark matter from a spheroidal halo. Flat rotation curves and high
dynamical masses may then indicate the presence of an unseen component, and
constrain the properties of the "missing baryons", known to exist but not
directly observed. The number of dwarf galaxies in the Universe is another
cosmological problem that can be significantly impacted if tidal dwarf galaxies
formed frequently at high redshift, when the merger rate was high, and many of
them survived until today.Comment: Tutorial Review for the special issue "Dwarf galaxies and Cosmology"
in Advances in Astronomy. (10 pages, 4 figures
Galaxy mergers at high resolution: From elliptical galaxies to tidal dwarfs and globular clusters
Numerical simulations of galaxy mergers are a powerful tool to study these
fundamental events in the hierarchical built-up of galaxies. Recent progress
have been made owing to improved modeling, increased resolution and large
statistical samples. We present here the highest-resolution models of mergers
performed so far. The formation of a variety of substructures ranging from
kinematically decoupled cores to globular-like clusters is directly resolved.
In a resolution study, we show that the large-scale structure of
elliptical-like merger remnants can be affected by the resolution, and a too
modest resolution may affect the numerical predictions on the properties of
major merger remnants: understanding precisely which kind of event or
succession of events has formed the various types of elliptical galaxies
remains an open challenge.Comment: To be published in the proceedings of the "Galactic and Stellar
Dynamics 2008" conference. 4 page
Polar ring galaxies: formation and properties
Formation scenarios for polar ring galaxies are studied through N-body
simulatio ns that are compared with existing observations. It is shown that
polar rings ar e likely to be formed by tidal accretion of the polar material
from a gas rich d onor galaxy. The distribution of dark matter in polar ring
galaxies is studied: dark halos seem to be flattened towards the polar rings.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, Proceedings SF2A-2002, Paris, ed. F. Combes and D.
Barret, EDP-Science
Delayed star formation in high-redshift stream-fed galaxies
We propose that star formation is delayed relative to the inflow rate in
rapidly-accreting galaxies at very high redshift (z > 2) because of the energy
conveyed by the accreting gas. Accreting gas streams provide fuel for star
formation, but they stir the disk and increase turbulence above the usual
levels compatible with gravitational instability, reducing the star formation
efficiency in the available gas. After the specific inflow rate has
sufficiently decreased - typically at z < 3 - galaxies settle in a
self-regulated regime with efficient star formation. An analytic model shows
that this interaction between infalling gas and young galaxies can
significantly delay star formation and maintain high gas fractions (>40%) down
to z = 2, in contrast to other galaxy formation models. Idealized hydrodynamic
simulations of infalling gas streams onto primordial galaxies confirm the
efficient energetic coupling at z > 2, and suggest that this effect is largely
under-resolved in existing cosmological simulations.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters. 5 pages, 3 figure
Gaseous Flows in Galaxies
The gas component plays a major role in the dynamics of spiral galaxies,
because of its dissipative character, and its ability to exchange angular
momentum with stars in the disk. Due to its small velocity dispersion, it
triggers gravitational instabilities, and the corresponding non-axisymmetric
patterns produce gravity torques, which mediate these angular momentum
exchanges. When a srong bar pattern develops with the same pattern speed all
over the disk, only gas inside corotation can flow towards the center. But
strong bars are not long lived in presence of gas, and multiple-speed spiral
patterns can develop between bar phases, and help the galaxy to accrete
external gas flowing from cosmic filaments. The gas is then intermittently
driven to the galaxy center, to form nuclear starbursts and fuel an active
nucleus. The various time-scales of these gaseous flows are described.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, review paper in the Proceedings of the IAU
Symposium 245, "Formation and Evolution of Galaxy Bulges", held at Oxford,
U.K., July 2007, Eds. M. Bureau, E. Athanassoula, B. Barbu
- …