Inside out and upside-down: The roles of gas cooling and dynamical heating in shaping the stellar age–velocity relation

Author:

Bird Jonathan C1ORCID,Loebman Sarah R23,Weinberg David H45,Brooks Alyson M6,Quinn Thomas R7,Christensen Charlotte R8

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics and Astronomy, Vanderbilt University, 6301 Stevenson Center, Nashville, TN 37235, USA

2. Department of Physics, University of California, Merced, CA 95343, USA

3. Department of Physics, University of California, Davis, 1 Shields Ave, Davis, CA 95616, USA

4. Department of Astronomy, The Ohio State University, 140 West 18th Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210, USA

5. Center for Cosmology and Astro-Particle Physics, The Ohio State University, 191 West Woodruff Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210, USA

6. Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rutgers University, 136 Frelinghuysen Rd., Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA

7. Department of Astronomy, University of Washington, Box 351580, Seattle, WA 98115, USA

8. Physics Department, Grinnell College, 1115 8th Ave, Grinnell, IA, 50112, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Kinematic studies of disc galaxies, using individual stars in the Milky Way or statistical studies of global disc kinematics over time, provide insight into how discs form and evolve. We use a high-resolution, cosmological zoom-simulation of a Milky Way-mass disc galaxy (h277) to tie together local disc kinematics and the evolution of the disc over time. The present-day stellar age–velocity relationship (AVR) of h277 is nearly identical to that of the analogous solar-neighbourhood measurement in the Milky Way. A crucial element of this success is the simulation’s dynamically cold multiphase ISM, which allows young stars to form with a low velocity dispersion (σbirth$\sim \!6 - 8 \ \mathrm{km\, s}^{-1}$) at late times. Older stars are born kinematically hotter (i.e. the disc settles over time in an ‘upside-down’ formation scenario), and are subsequently heated after birth. The disc also grows ‘inside-out’, and many of the older stars in the present-day solar neighbourhood are present because of radial mixing. We demonstrate that the evolution of σbirth in h277 can be explained by the same model used to describe the general decrease in velocity dispersion observed in disc galaxies from z ∼ 2–3 to the present-day, in which the disc evolves in quasi-stable equilibrium and the ISM velocity dispersion decreases over time due to a decreasing gas fraction. Thus, our results tie together local observations of the Milky Way’s AVR with observed kinematics of high z disc galaxies.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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