Bibcode
Stringer, M. J.; Benson, A. J.
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 382, Issue 2, pp. 641-651.
Fecha de publicación:
12
2007
Número de citas
35
Número de citas referidas
34
Descripción
The formation of galactic discs and the efficiency of star formation
within them are issues central to our understanding of galaxy formation.
We have developed a detailed and versatile model of disc formation which
combines the strengths of previous studies of isolated discs with those
of hierarchical galaxy formation models. Disc structure is inferred from
the distribution of angular momentum in hot halo gas and the
hierarchical build-up of dark matter, leading to theoretically generated
systems where the evolution of surface density, rotation, velocity
dispersion, stability and metallicity is predicted for annular regions
of width 20-100pc. The model will be used to establish whether the
accepted theory of large-scale structure formation in the universe is
consistent with observed trends in the properties of disc galaxies.
This first paper explicitly examines the importance of embedding such
calculations within a merging hierarchy of dark matter haloes, finding
that this leads to dramatically different formation histories compared
to models in which discs grow in isolation. Different models of star
formation are explored, and are found to have only a secondary influence
on the properties of the resulting galaxy discs, the main governing
factor being the infalling gas supply from the hot halo.