102 research outputs found
Dry minor mergers and size evolution of high-z compact massive early-type galaxies
Recent observations show evidence that high-z (z\sim 2 - 3) early-type
galaxies (ETGs) are more compact than those with comparable mass at z\sim 0.
Such a size evolution is most likely explained by the `Dry Merger Sceanario'.
However, previous studies based on this scenario are not able to consistantly
explain both the properties of the high-z compact massive ETGs and the local
ETGs. We investigate the effect of multiple sequential dry minor mergers on the
size evolution of the compact massive ETGs. From an analysis of the Millennium
Simulation Database, we show that such minor (stellar mass ratio ) mergers are extremely common during hierarchical structure formation. We
perform N-body simulations of sequential minor mergers with parabolic and
head-on orbits, including a dark matter component and a stellar component.
Typical mass ratios of the minor mergers are . We
show that sequential minor mergers of compact satellite galaxies are the most
efficient at promoting size growth and decreasing the velocity dispersion of
the compact massive ETGs in our simulations. The change of stellar size and
density of the merger remnants is consistent with recent observations.
Furthermore, we construct the merger histories of candidates for the high-z
compact massive ETGs using the Millennium Simulation Database, and estimate the
size growth of the galaxies by the dry minor merger scenario. We can reproduce
the mean size growth factor between and , assuming the most
efficient size growth obtained during sequential minor mergers in our
simulations. However, we note that our numerical result is only valid for
merger histories with typical mass ratios between 1/20 and 1/10 with parabolic
and head-on orbits, and that our most efficient size growth efficiency is
likely to an upper limit.Comment: 23 pages, 15 figures, accepted for MNRAS, Fig. 5 is fixe
The Effect of Self-gravity of Gas on Gas Fueling in Barred Galaxies with a Supermassive Black Hole
In our previous paper, we have shown that a gas disk in the nuclear region of
a barred galaxy which contains a central supermassive black hole (SMBH) rapidly
evolves into a nuclear gas ring by the effect of an additional inner Lindblad
resonance caused by the SMBH. In this paper, we investigate the fate of the gas
ring, involving self-gravity of gas, using two-dimensional hydrodynamical
simulations. We find that the gas ring becomes gravitationally unstable for a
gas surface density of gas above a critical value, and fragments into several
gas clumps. Some denser clumps increase their mass via the accretion of the
surrounding gas and collisions with other clumps, and finally a very massive
gas clump (10^7 M_sun) is formed. Due to the torque from the most massive
clump, a part of the gas in the ring loses its angular momentum and falls into
the galactic center. As a result, a nuclear gas disk (50 pc) is formed around
the SMBH. The accretion rate for pc attains about 1 M_sun/yr for
3.5*10^7 yr. At the final phase of the bar-driven fueling, self-gravity is
crucial for the angular momentum transfer of the gas. This is a new mechanism
for gas fueling to the vicinity of the SMBH.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, AASTeX, submitted to Ap
Cosmic evolution of bars in simulations of galaxy formation
We investigate the evolution of two bars formed in fully self-consistent
hydrodynamic simulations of the formation of Milky Way-mass galaxies. One
galaxy shows higher central mass concentration and has a longer and stronger
bar than the other at . The stronger bar evolves by transferring its
angular momentum mainly to the dark halo. Consequently the rotation speed of
the bar decreases with time, while the amplitude of the bar increases with
time. These features qualitatively agree with the results obtained by idealized
simulations. The pattern speed of the stronger bar largely goes up and down
within a half revolution in its early evolutionary stage. These oscillations
occur when the bar is misaligned with the mode Fourier component. These
oscillations correlate with the oscillations in the triaxilality of the dark
matter halo, but differently from the way identified by idealized simulations.
The amplitude of the weaker bar does not increase despite the fact that its
rotation slows down with time.This result contradicts what is expected from
idealized simulations and is caused by the decline of the central density
associated with the mass loss and feedback from the stellar populations. The
amplitude of the weaker bar is further weakens by the angular momentum
injection by the interactions with stellar clumps in the disk. In the both
galaxies, the bars are terminated around the 4:1 resonance.Comment: 17 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
Does feedback help or hinder star formation? The effect of photoionisation on star formation in Giant Molecular Clouds
We investigated the effect of photoionising feedback inside turbulent
star-forming clouds, comparing the resultant star formation in both idealised
profiles and more realistic cloud structures drawn from a global galaxy
simulation. We performed a series of numerical simulations which compared the
effect of star formation alone, photoionisation and photoionisation plus
supernovae feedback. In the idealised cloud, photoionisation suppresses gas
fragmentation at early times, resulting in the formation of more massive stars
and an increase in the star formation efficiency. At later times, the dispersal
of the dense gas causes the radiative feedback effect to switch from positive
to negative as the star formation efficiency drops. In the cloud extracted from
the global simulation, the initial cloud is heavily fragmented prior to the
stellar feedback beginning and is largely structurally unaffected by the late
injection of radiation energy. The result is a suppression of the star
formation. We conclude that the efficiency of feedback is heavily dependent on
the gas structure, with negative feedback dominating when the density is high.Comment: Accepted to MNRA
Environmental dependence of star formation induced by cloud collisions in a barred galaxy
Cloud collision have been proposed as a way to link the small-scale star
formation process with the observed global relation between the surface star
formation rate and gas surface density. We suggest that this model can be
improved further by allowing the productivity of such collisions to depend on
the relative velocity of the two clouds. Our adjustment implements a simple
step function that results in the most successful collisions being at the
observed velocities for triggered star formation. By applying this to a high
resolution simulation of a barred galaxy, we successfully reproduce the
observational result that the star formation efficiency (SFE) in the bar is
lower than that in the spiral arms. This is not possible when we use an
efficiency dependent on the internal turbulence properties of the clouds. Our
results suggest that high velocity collisions driven by the gravitational pull
of the clouds are responsible for the low bar SFE.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
Effects of Minor Mergers on Coalescence of a Supermassive Black Hole Binary
We study the possibility that minor mergers resolve the loss cone depletion
problem, which is the difficulty occured in the coalescence process of the
supermassive black hole (SMBH) binary, by performing numerical simulations with
a highly accurate -body code. We show that the minor merger of a dwarf
galaxy disturbs stellar orbits in the galactic central region of the host
galaxy where the loss cone depletion is already caused by the SMBH binary. The
disturbed stars are supplied into the loss cone. Stars of the dwarf galaxy are
also supplied into the loss cone. The gravitational interactions between the
SMBH binary and these stars become very effective. The gravitational
interaction decreases the binding energy of the SMBH binary effectively. As a
result, the shrink of the separation of the SMBH binary is accelerated. Our
numerical results strongly suggest that the minor mergers are one of the
important processes to reduce the coalescence time of the SMBH binary much less
than the Hubble time.Comment: 6 pages, 16 figures. accepted for publication in PAS
Bar-driven Fueling to a Galactic Central Reagin in a Massive Gas Disk
We have found an effective fueling process to a central region of galaxies
with weak bar-like distortion by two dimensional hydrodynamical simulations.
Gravitational instability of an elongated gas ring at the inner Lindblad
resonance (ILR), which has been reported as an effective fueling mechanism, are
not needed for this fueling process. A massive gaseous disk in a central region
of galaxies sensitively responds to the weakly distorted potential, and a large
amount of gas can be fed into within of a core radius of the potential
in several yr. The ILRs, the dissipative nature of the gas, and
self-gravity of the gas are essential for triggering this effective fueling.
The accumulation process has not been ever known: the gas accumulates to form a
dense `linear' structure inclined at about 45 degree with respect to the bar
potential in a {\it leading sense}. We also found that a counter rotating
gaseous core can be formed as a result of the fueling. The sense of the
rotation of the core depends on a fraction of the gas mass to the background
mass. Physical mechanism of the fueling process can be understood using a
linear theory of gaseous orbits in a weak barred potential.Comment: 8 pages, uuencoded gziped Postscript file without figures. Figures
will be sent upon request ([email protected]). Accepted by MNRA
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