Bibcode
Di Cintio, A.; Brook, C. B.; Macciò, Andrea V.; Dutton, Aaron A.; Cardona-Barrero, Salvador
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 486, Issue 2, p.2535-2548
Advertised on:
6
2019
Citations
34
Refereed citations
31
Description
The existence of galaxies with a surface brightness μ lower than the
night sky has been known since three decades. Yet, their formation
mechanism and emergence within a Lambda cold dark matter universe has
remained largely undetermined. For the first time, we investigated the
origin of low surface brightness (LSB) galaxies with M⋆
˜ 109.5-10 M⊙, which we are able to
reproduce within hydrodynamical cosmological simulations from the NIHAO
suite. The simulated and observed LSB galaxies share similar properties,
having large H I reservoir, extended star formation histories and
effective radii, low Sérsic index, and slowly rising rotation
curves. The formation mechanism of these objects is explored: simulated
LSB galaxies form as a result of coplanar co-rotating mergers and
aligned accretion of gas at early times, while perpendicular mergers and
misaligned gas accretion result in higher μ galaxies by z = 0. The
larger the merger, the stronger the correlation between merger orbital
configuration and final μ. While the halo spin parameter is
consistently high in simulated LSB galaxies, the impact of halo
concentration, feedback-driven gas outflows, and merger time only plays
a minor-to-no role in determining μ. Interestingly, the formation
scenario of such `classical' LSB galaxies differs from the one of less
massive, M⋆ ˜ 107-9 M⊙,
ultra-diffuse galaxies, the latter resulting from the effects of
SNae-driven gas outflows: an M⋆ of ˜109
M⊙ thus represents the transition regime between a
feedback-dominated to an angular-momentum-dominated formation scenario
in the LSB realm. Observational predictions are offered regarding
spatially resolved star formation rates through LSB discs: these,
together with upcoming surveys, can be used to verify the proposed
emergence scenario of LSB galaxies.
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