Bibcode
López-Corredoira, M.; Betancort-Rijo, J. E.; Beckman, J. E.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.386, p.169-186 (2002)
Advertised on:
4
2002
Journal
Citations
84
Refereed citations
72
Description
A new method is developed to calculate the amplitude of the galactic
warps generated by a torque due to external forces. This takes into
account that the warp is produced as a reorientation of the different
rings which constitute the disc in order to compensate the differential
precession generated by the external force, yielding a uniform
asymptotic precession for all rings. Application of this method to
gravitational tidal forces in the Milky Way due to the Magellanic Clouds
leads to a very low amplitude of the warp, as has been inferred in
previous studies; so, tidal forces are unlikely to generate warps, at
least in the Milky Way. If the force were due to an extragalactic
magnetic field, its intensity would have to be very high, greater than 1
mu G, to generate the observed warps. An alternative hypothesis is
explored: the accretion of the intergalactic medium over the disk. A
cup-shaped distortion is expected, due to the transmission of the linear
momentum; but, this effect is small and the predominant effect turns out
to be the transmission of angular momentum, i.e. a torque giving an
integral-sign shape warp. The torque produced by a flow of velocity ~
100 km s-1 and baryon density ~ 10-25
kg/m3 is enough to generate the observed warps and this
mechanism offers quite a plausible explanation. First, because this
order of accretion rate is inferred from other processes observed in the
Galaxy, notably its chemical evolution. The inferred rate of infall of
matter, ~ 1 M_sun/yr, to the Galactic disc that this theory predicts
agrees with the quantitative predictions of this chemical evolution
resolving key issues, notably the G-dwarf problem. Second, the required
density of the intergalactic medium is within the range of values
compatible with observation. By this mechanism, we can explain the warp
phenomenon in terms of intergalactic accretion flows onto the disk of
the galaxy.