| Literature DB >> 30598560 |
Shea Garrison-Kimmel1, Philip F Hopkins1, Andrew Wetzel1,2,3, Kareem El-Badry4, Robyn E Sanderson1,5, James S Bullock6, Xiangcheng Ma1, Freeke van de Voort7,8, Zachary Hafen9, Claude-André Faucher-Giguère9, Christopher C Hayward10, Eliot Quataert4, Dušan Kereš11, Michael Boylan-Kolchin12.
Abstract
We use hydrodynamic cosmological zoom-in simulations from the Feedback in Realistic Environments project to explore the morphologies and kinematics of 15 Milky Way (MW)-mass galaxies. Our sample ranges from compact, bulge-dominated systems with 90 per cent of their stellar mass within 2.5 kpc to well-ordered discs that reach ≳15 kpc. The gas in our galaxies always forms a thin, rotation-supported disc at z = 0, with sizes primarily determined by the gas mass. For stars, we quantify kinematics and morphology both via the fraction of stars on disc-like orbits and with the radial extent of the stellar disc. In this mass range, stellar morphology and kinematics are poorly correlated with the properties of the halo available from dark matter-only simulations (halo merger history, spin, or formation time). They more strongly correlate with the gaseous histories of the galaxies: those that maintain a high gas mass in the disc after z ~ 1 develop well-ordered stellar discs. The best predictor of morphology we identify is the spin of the gas in the halo at the time the galaxy formed 1/2 of its stars (i.e. the gas that builds the galaxy). High-z mergers, before a hot halo emerges, produce some of the most massive bulges in the sample (from compact discs in gas-rich mergers), while later-forming bulges typically originate from internal processes, as satellites are stripped of gas before the galaxies merge. Moreover, most stars in z = 0 MW-mass galaxies (even z = 0 bulge stars) form in a disc: ≳60-90 per cent of stars begin their lives rotationally supported.Entities:
Keywords: bulges – galaxies; evolution – galaxies; formation – galaxies; galaxies; spiral – galaxies; structure – cosmology; theory
Year: 2018 PMID: 30598560 PMCID: PMC6310044 DOI: 10.1093/mnras/sty2513
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mon Not R Astron Soc ISSN: 0035-8711 Impact factor: 5.287