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http://dx.doi.org/10.5303/JKAS.2013.46.1.1

THE INITIAL CONDITIONS AND EVOLUTION OF ISOLATED GALAXY MODELS: EFFECTS OF THE HOT GAS HALO  

Hwang, Jeong-Sun (School of Physics, Korea Institute for Advanced Study)
Park, Changbom (School of Physics, Korea Institute for Advanced Study)
Choi, Jun-Hwan (Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Kentucky)
Publication Information
Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society / v.46, no.1, 2013 , pp. 1-32 More about this Journal
Abstract
We construct several Milky Way-like galaxy models containing a gas halo (as well as gaseous and stellar disks, a dark matter halo, and a stellar bulge) following either an isothermal or an NFW density profile with varying mass and initial spin. In addition, galactic winds associated with star formation are tested in some of the simulations. We evolve these isolated galaxy models using the GADGET-3 N-body/hydrodynamic simulation code, paying particular attention to the effects of the gaseous halo on the evolution. We find that the evolution of the models is strongly affected by the adopted gas halo component, particularly in the gas dissipation and the star formation activity in the disk. The model without a gas halo shows an increasing star formation rate (SFR) at the beginning of the simulation for some hundreds of millions of years and then a continuously decreasing rate to the end of the run at 3 Gyr. Whereas the SFRs in the models with a gas halo, depending on the density profile and the total mass of the gas halo, emerge to be either relatively flat throughout the simulations or increasing until the middle of the run (over a gigayear) and then decreasing to the end. The models with the more centrally concentrated NFW gas halo show overall higher SFRs than those with the isothermal gas halo of the equal mass. The gas accretion from the halo onto the disk also occurs more in the models with the NFW gas halo, however, this is shown to take place mostly in the inner part of the disk and not to contribute significantly to the star formation unless the gas halo has very high density at the central part. The rotation of a gas halo is found to make SFR lower in the model. The SFRs in the runs including galactic winds are found to be lower than those in the same runs but without winds. We conclude that the effects of a hot gaseous halo on the evolution of galaxies are generally too significant to be simply ignored. We also expect that more hydrodynamical processes in galaxies could be understood through numerical simulations employing both gas disk and gas halo components.
Keywords
methods: numerical; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: spiral; galaxies: halos; galaxies: structure; galaxies: star formation;
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