arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:2110.13964 [astro-ph.GA]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Internally-driven warps in disc galaxies

J. A. Sellwood, Victor P. Debattista

Published 2021-10-26Version 1

Any perturbation to a disc galaxy that creates a misalignment between the planes of the inner and outer disc, will excite a slowly evolving bending wave in the outer disc. The torque from the stiff inner disc drives a retrograde, leading-spiral bending wave that grows in amplitude as it propagates outward over a period of several Gyr. This behaviour creates warps that obey the rules established from observations, and operates no matter what the original cause of the misalignment between the inner and outer disc. The part of the disc left behind by the outwardly propagating wave is brought into alignment with the inner disc. Here we confirm that mild warps in simulations of disc galaxies can be excited by shot noise in the halo, as was recently reported. We show that the quadrupole component of the noise creates disc distortions most effectively. Bending waves caused by shot noise in carefully constructed equilibrium simulations of isolated galaxies are far too mild to be observable, but perturbations from halo substructure and galaxy assembly must excite larger amplitude bending waves in real galaxies.

Comments: 8 pages, 10 figs, revised version submitted to MNRAS
Categories: astro-ph.GA
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1007.1485 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2010-07-08, updated 2010-07-28)
Was the Progenitor of the Sagittarius Stream a Disc Galaxy?
arXiv:1705.10325 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2017-05-29)
On the effect of galactic outflows in cosmological simulations of disc galaxies
arXiv:1901.00510 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2019-01-02)
Accretion of Small Satellites and Gas Inflows in a Disc Galaxy