论文标题
飞溅桥的星形形成
Star Formation in Splash Bridges
论文作者
论文摘要
飞溅桥是由两个富含气体的磁盘星系的直接碰撞而产生的。这些直接的碰撞可以在每个星系的恒星磁盘上剥离的\ si {e10}的顺序上弹出气体质量。 Taffy Galaxy System(UGC 1294/5)是飞溅桥系统的典型示例。 Taffy的CO观察表明,其飞溅桥的质量与银河系的H_2质量相当。但是,桥梁内发生的鲜明的恒星形成突出了对直接气体磁盘碰撞模型的需求。 ARP 194系统显示了由于两个磁盘星系之间的碰撞而导致的另一个飞溅桥。两个恒星磁盘之间的区域包含活性恒星形成的明亮团块。我们的目标是通过采用牛仔裤标准来确定在气体富含气体的磁盘碰撞的震惊和冷却气体中的重力不稳定性,以更好地了解飞溅桥中恒星形成的条件。飞溅桥的结果是从我们以前的工作中使用粘性粒子代码获得的,并进行了后处理。我们发现气盘与气体碰撞的碰撞速度之间的倾斜度强烈影响气体的分数,而气体的比例将在重力上不稳定。气盘之间的低倾斜会产生星爆,而高倾斜会导致稳定的恒星形成。撞击处的气盘的偏移将确定直接碰撞的气体元件数量,但不会强烈影响所得的恒星形成。
Splash bridges are created from the direct collision of two gas-rich disk galaxies. These direct collisions can eject gas masses on the order of \SI{e10} Msun stripped from the stellar disks of each galaxy. The Taffy Galaxy system (UGC 1294/5) is a prototypical example of a splash bridge system. CO observations of the Taffy revealed that its splash bridge contains a mass of H_2 equal to that of the Milky Way's H_2 mass. However, the little visible star formation occurring within the bridge highlights the need for models of direct gas-rich disk collisions. The Arp 194 system displays what may be another splash bridge resulting from the collision between two disk galaxies. The region between the two stellar disks contains bright clumps of active star formation. We aim to better understand the conditions for star formation in splash bridges by employing a Jeans criterion to determine where gravitational instabilities occur in the shocked and cooling gas of gas-rich disk collisions. The splash bridge results are obtained from our previous work using a sticky particle code and post-processed. We find that the inclination between the gas disks and the collision velocity with which the gas collides strongly affects the fraction of gas that will become gravitationally unstable. Low inclinations between gas disks produce starbursts whereas high inclinations result in steady-rate star formation. The offset of the gas disks at impact will determine how many gas elements directly collide but does not strongly affect the resulting star formation.