Sign on

SAO/NASA ADS Astronomy Abstract Service


· Find Similar Abstracts (with default settings below)
· Full Refereed Journal Article (PDF/Postscript)
· Full Refereed Scanned Article (GIF)
· arXiv e-print (arXiv:astro-ph/9512099)
· References in the article
· Citations to the Article (969) (Citation History)
· Refereed Citations to the Article
· SIMBAD Objects (9)
· Also-Read Articles (Reads History)
· HEP/Spires Information
·
· Translate This Page
Title:
Gasdynamics and Starbursts in Major Mergers
Authors:
Mihos, J. Christopher; Hernquist, Lars
Publication:
Astrophysical Journal v.464, p.641 (ApJ Homepage)
Publication Date:
06/1996
Origin:
APJ; NED
Astronomy Keywords:
GALAXIES: ACTIVE, GALAXIES: INTERACTIONS, GALAXIES: STARBURST, GALAXIES: STRUCTURE, METHODS: NUMERICAL
DOI:
10.1086/177353
Bibliographic Code:
1996ApJ...464..641M

Abstract

Using numerical simulation, we study the development of gaseous inflows and triggering of starburst activity in mergers of disk galaxies of comparable mass. Our models cover a range of orbits and internal structures for the merging galaxies. In all encounters studied, the galaxies experience strong gaseous inflows and, using a density-dependent Schmidt law to model star formation, moderate to intense starburst activity. We find that galaxy structure plays a dominant role in regulating activity. The gaseous inflows are strongest when galaxies with dense central bulges are in the final stages of merging, while inflows in bulgeless galaxies are weaker and occur earlier in the interaction. Orbital geometry plays only a relatively modest role in the onset of collisionally induced activity. Through an analysis of the torques acting on the gas, we show that these inflows are generally driven by gravitational torques from the host galaxy (rather than the companion) and that dense bulges act to stabilize galaxies against bar modes and inflow until the galaxies merge, at which point rapidly varying gravitational torques drive strong dissipation and inflow of gas in the merging pair. The strongest inflows (and associated starburst activity) develop in coplanar encounters, while the activity in inclined mergers is somewhat less intense and occurs slightly later during the merger. To the extent that a Schmidt law is a reasonable description of star formation in these systems, the starbursts that develop in mergers of galaxies with central bulges represent an increase in the star formation rate of two orders of magnitude over that in isolated galaxies. We find that the gaseous and stellar morphology and star-forming properties of these systems provide a good match to those of observed ultraluminous infrared galaxies. Our results imply that the internal structure of the merging galaxies, rather than orbital geometry, may be the key factor in producing ultraluminous infrared galaxies.

Printing Options

Print whole paper
Print Page(s) through

Return 600 dpi PDF to Acrobat/Browser. Different resolutions (200 or 600 dpi), formats (Postscript, PDF, etc), page sizes (US Letter, European A4, etc), and compression (gzip,compress,none) can be set through the Printing Preferences



More Article Retrieval Options

HELP for Article Retrieval


Bibtex entry for this abstract   Preferred format for this abstract (see Preferences)

  New!

Find Similar Abstracts:

Use: Authors
Title
Keywords (in text query field)
Abstract Text
Return: Query Results Return    items starting with number
Query Form
Database: Astronomy
Physics
arXiv e-prints