Building stellar bulges and halo cores from massive clumps observed in the DYNAMO-HST sample

Author:

Hashim Mahmoud1,El-Zant Amr A1,Del Popolo Antonino234

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Theoretical Physics, The British University in Egypt , Sherouk City, 11837 Cairo , Egypt

2. Dipartimento di Fisica e Astronomia, University Of Catania , Viale Andrea Doria 6, I-95125, Catania , Italy

3. Institute of Astronomy and National Astronomical Observatory, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences , 72, Tsarigradsko Shosse Blvd., 1784 Sofia , Bulgaria

4. Institute of Astronomy, Russian Academy of Sciences , 119017, Pyatnitskaya str, 48, Moscow , Russia

Abstract

ABSTRACT We present N-body simulations of the process of bulge formation in disc galaxies due to inward migration of massive stellar clumps. The process is accompanied by dark halo heating, with a quasi-isothermal core replacing the initial central density cusp, transforming an initially dark matter dominated central region into a baryon dominated one. The characteristics of the clumps are chosen to be compatible with low redshift observations of stellar clumps in DYNAMO-HST galaxies, which may be relatively long lived in terms of being robust against internal starburst-instigated disruption. We thus test for disruption due to tidal stripping using different clump internal radial profiles; Plummer, Hernquist, and Jaffe, in ascending order of see per central density profile. Our calculations predict that in order for clump migration to be effective in building galactic bulges and dark halo cores, steeply increasing central clump profiles, or a less massive or less concentrated haloes, are preferred. The dependence on such factors may contribute to the diversity in observed total mass distributions and resulting rotation curves in galaxies. When the process is most efficient, a ‘bulge-halo conspiracy’, with a singular isothermal total density akin to that observed bright galaxies, results.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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