7–11 Jul 2025
Teaching and Learning Centre (TLC)
Europe/London timezone

Bar formation and destruction in the FIRE-2 simulations

Not scheduled
1h 30m
Teaching and Learning Centre (TLC)

Teaching and Learning Centre (TLC)

Durham University South Road Durham DH1 3LS
Poster Barred Galaxies: Unraveling Their Evolution, Dynamics, and Cosmic Role Barred Galaxies: Unravelling Their Evolution, Dynamics and Cosmic Role

Description

The physical mechanisms responsible for bar formation and destruction in galaxies remain a subject of debate. While we have gained valuable insight into how bars form and evolve from isolated idealized simulations, in the cosmological domain, galactic bars evolve in complex environments with mergers, gas accretion events, in presence of turbulent Inter Stellar Medium (ISM) with multiple star formation episodes, in addition to coupling to their host galaxies' dark matter halos. We investigate bar formation in 13 Milky Way-mass galaxies from the FIRE-2 (Feedback in Realistic Environments) cosmological zoom-in simulations. 8 of the 13 simulated galaxies form bars at some point during their history: three from tidal interactions and five from internal evolution of the disk. The bars in FIRE-2 are generally shorter than the corotation radius (mean bar radius ∼1.53 kpc), have a wide range of pattern speeds (36--97 km s$^{−1}$ kpc$^{−1}$), and live for a wide range of dynamical times (2--160 bar rotations). We find that bar formation in FIRE-2 galaxies is influenced by satellite interactions and the stellar-to-dark matter mass ratio in the inner galaxy, but neither is a sufficient condition for bar formation. Bar formation is more likely to occur, and the bars formed are stronger and longer-lived, if the disks are kinematically cold; galaxies with high central gas fractions and/or vigorous star formation, on the other hand, tend to form weaker bars. In the case of the FIRE-2 galaxies these properties combine to produce ellipsoidal bars with strengths A2/A0~ 0.1--0.2.

Primary author

Dr Sioree Ansar (Durham University, United Kingdom)

Co-authors

Prof. Sarah Pearson (Niels Bohr International Academy & DARK, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, Blegdamsvej 17, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark) Prof. Robyn Sanderson (Department of Physics & Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania, 209 S 33rd St., Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA) Dr Arpit Arora (Department of Physics & Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania, 209 S 33rd St., Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA) Prof. Philip F Hopkins (TAPIR, Mailcode 350-17, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA) Dr Emily C. Cunningham (Department of Astronomy, Columbia University, 550 West 120th Street, New York, NY 10027, USA) Mx Jamie Quinn (Department of Physics, University of California, Merced, 5200 N. Lake Road, Merced, CA 95343)

Presentation materials

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