TNG50 模拟中类似银河系星系的气体形态:扭曲和拉伸信号

Thomas K. Waters, Colton Peterson, Razieh Emami, Xuejian Shen, L. Hernquist, Randall Smith, M. Vogelsberger, Charles Alcock, Grant Tremblay, Matthew Liska, John C. Forbes, Jorge Moreno
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摘要

我们对来自 IllustrisTNG TNG50 模拟的 25 个类银河系样本的气体形态进行了深入分析。我们使用局部壳迭代法对冷气体、暖气体、热气体和气体粒子的形态进行了整体约束,并通过计算硬-软 X 射线比来探索其观测意义,硬-软 X 射线比在星系分布的内侧 ∼ 50 kpc 范围内介于 10-3 和 10-2 之间,而在热气体分布的外侧则介于 10-5-10-4 之间。我们将星系分为三大类:简单星系、拉伸星系和扭曲星系。这些分类的依据是还原惯性张量主轴的径向重新定向。我们发现,样本中绝大多数(77%)星系的径向剖面都呈现出扭曲模式。此外,我们还详细比较了(i)属于不同温度机制的气体分布,(ii)冷气体分布和恒星分布,以及(iii)气体分布和暗物质(DM)晕之间的关系。我们发现冷气体分布和恒星分布的形态特性之间有很强的相关性。此外,我们还发现气态分布与DM晕之间的相关性随着气体温度的升高而增强,这意味着我们可以利用暖-热气态形态作为探测DM形态的示踪剂。最后,我们发现气态分布的形态明显比恒星分布和DM光环的形态更突出,我们假设这是恒星和活动星系核反馈造成的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Gas Morphology of Milky Way–like Galaxies in the TNG50 Simulation: Signals of Twisting and Stretching
We present an in-depth analysis of gas morphologies for a sample of 25 Milky Way–like galaxies from the IllustrisTNG TNG50 simulation. We constrain the morphology of cold, warm, hot gas, and gas particles as a whole using a local shell iterative method and explore its observational implications by computing the hard-to-soft X-ray ratio, which ranges between 10−3 and 10−2 in the inner ∼50 kpc of the distribution and 10−5–10−4 at the outer portion of the hot gas distribution. We group galaxies into three main categories: simple, stretched, and twisted. These categories are based on the radial reorientation of the principal axes of the reduced inertia tensor. We find that a vast majority (77%) of the galaxies in our sample exhibit twisting patterns in their radial profiles. Additionally, we present detailed comparisons between (i) the gaseous distributions belonging to individual temperature regimes, (ii) the cold gas distributions and stellar distributions, and (iii) the gaseous distributions and dark matter (DM) halos. We find a strong correlation between the morphological properties of the cold gas and stellar distributions. Furthermore, we find a correlation between gaseous distributions with a DM halo that increases with gas temperature, implying that we may use the warm–hot gaseous morphology as a tracer to probe the DM morphology. Finally, we show gaseous distributions exhibit significantly more prolate morphologies than the stellar distributions and DM halos, which we hypothesize is due to stellar and active galactic nucleus feedback.
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