Bibcode
Sales, Laura V.; Navarro, Julio F.; Theuns, Tom; Schaye, Joop; White, Simon D. M.; Frenk, Carlos S.; Crain, Robert A.; Dalla Vecchia, C.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 423, Issue 2, pp. 1544-1555.
Advertised on:
6
2012
Citations
247
Refereed citations
233
Description
The major morphological features of a galaxy are thought to be
determined by the assembly history and net spin of its surrounding dark
halo. In the simplest scenario, disc galaxies form predominantly in
haloes with high angular momentum and quiet recent assembly history,
whereas spheroids are the slowly rotating remnants of repeated merging
events. We explore these assumptions using 100 systems with halo masses
similar to that of the Milky Way, identified in a series of cosmological
gasdynamical simulations: the Galaxies-Intergalactic Medium Interaction
Calculation (GIMIC). At z= 0, the simulated galaxies exhibit a wide
variety of morphologies, from dispersion-dominated spheroids to pure
disc galaxies. Surprisingly, these morphological features are very
poorly correlated with their halo properties: discs form in haloes with
high and low net spin, and mergers play a negligible role in the
formation of spheroids, whose stars form primarily in situ. With
hindsight, this weak correlation between halo and galaxy properties is
unsurprising given that a minority of the available baryons (˜40
per cent) end up in galaxies. More important to morphology is the
coherent alignment of the angular momentum of baryons that accrete over
time to form a galaxy. Spheroids tend to form when the spin of newly
accreted gas is misaligned with that of the extant galaxy, leading to
the episodic formation of stars with different kinematics that cancel
out the net rotation of the system. Discs, on the other hand, form out
of gas that flows in with similar angular momentum to that of earlier
accreted material. Gas accretion from a hot corona thus favours disc
formation, whereas gas that flows ‘cold’, often along
separate, misaligned filaments, favours the formation of spheroids. In
this scenario, many spheroids consist of the superposition of stellar
components with distinct kinematics, age and metallicity, an arrangement
that might survive to the present day given the paucity of major
mergers. Since angular momentum is acquired largely at turnaround,
morphology depends on the early interplay between the tidal field and
the shape of the material destined to form a galaxy.