Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
2002-04-01
Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc. 332 (2002) 647
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 61 pages, 22 figures; figures 2-7 and 21-22 are separate gif files. Complete paper plus hig
Scientific paper
10.1046/j.1365-8711.2002.05314.x
The evolution of substructure embedded in non-dissipative dark halos is studied through N-body simulations of isolated systems, both in and out of initial equilibrium, complementing cosmological simulations of the growth of structure. We determine by both analytic calculations and direct analysis of the N-body simulations the relative importance of various dynamical processes acting on the clumps, such as the removal of material by global tides, clump-clump heating, clump-clump merging and dynamical friction. Our comparison between merging and disruption processes implies that spiral galaxies cannot be formed in a proto-system that contains a few large clumps, but can be formed through the accretion of many small clumps; elliptical galaxies form in a more clumpy environment than do spiral galaxies. Our results support the idea that the central cusp in the density profiles of dark halos is the consequence of self-limiting merging of small, dense halos. This implies that the collapse of a system of clumps/substructure is not sufficient to form a cD galaxy, with an extended envelope; plausibly subsequent accretion of large galaxies is required. Persistent streams of material from disrupted clumps can be found in the outer regions of the final system, and at an overdensity of around 0.75, can cover 10% to 30% of the sky.
Silk Joseph
Stiavelli Massimo
Zhang Bing
~Wyse Rosemary F. G.
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