How galaxies lose their angular momentum

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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7 pages, 5 figures, submitted to MNRAS. Request for high resolution figures to the authors

Scientific paper

10.1111/j.1365-2966.2006.10996.x

The processes are investigated by which gas loses its angular momentum during the protogalactic collapse phase, leading to disk galaxies that are too compact with respect to the observations. High-resolution N-body/SPH simulations in a cosmological context are presented including cold gas and dark matter. A halo with quiet merging activity since z~3.8 and with a high spin parameter is analysed that should be an ideal candidate for the formation of an extended galactic disk. We show that the gas and the dark matter have similar specific angular momenta until a merger event occurs at z~2 with a mass ratio of 5:1. All the gas involved in the merger loses a substantial fraction of its specific angular momentum due to tidal torques and falls quickly into the center. Dynamical friction plays a minor role,in contrast to previous claims. In fact, after this event a new extended disk begins to form from gas that was not involved in the 5:1 merger event and that falls in subsequently. We argue that the angular momentum problem of disk galaxy formation is a merger problem: in cold dark matter cosmology substantial mergers with mass ratios of 1:1 to 6:1 are expected to occur in almost all galaxies. We suggest that energetic feedback processes could in principle solve this problem, however only if the heating occurs at the time or shortly before the last substantial merger event. Good candidates for such a coordinated feedback would be a merger-triggered star burst or central black hole heating. If a large fraction of the low angular momentum gas would be ejected as a result of these processes, late-type galaxies could form with a dominant extended disk component, resulting from late infall, a small bulge-to-disk ratio and a low baryon fraction, in agreement with observations.

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