We use a series of N-body/smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations and
analytic arguments to show that the presence of an effective temperature floor
in the interstellar medium at T_F ~ 10^4 K naturally explains the tendency for
low-mass galaxies to be more spheroidal, more gas rich, and less efficient in
converting baryons into stars than larger galaxies. The trend arises because
gas pressure support becomes important compared to angular momentum support in
small dark matter haloes. We suggest that dwarf galaxies with rotational
velocities ~ 40 km/s do not originate as thin discs, but rather are born as
thick, puffy systems. If accreted on to larger haloes, tenuous dwarfs of this
kind will be more susceptible to gas loss or tidal transformation than
scaled-down versions of larger spirals. For a constant temperature floor,
pressure support becomes less important in large haloes, and this produces a
tendency for massive isolated galaxies to have thinner discs and more efficient
star formation than their less massive counterparts, as observed.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, MNRAS in press. Minor changes in response to
referee comment