arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1611.04891 [astro-ph.GA]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Structures induced by companions in galactic discs

P. Kyziropoulos, C. Efthymiopoulos, G. Gravvanis, P. Patsis

Published 2016-11-15Version 1

Using N-body simulations we study the structures induced on a galactic disc by repeated flybys of a companion in decaying eccentric orbit around the disc. Our system is composed by a stellar disc, bulge and live dark matter halo, and we study the system's dynamical response to a sequence of a companion's flybys, when we vary i) the disc's temperature (parameterized by Toomre's Q-parameter) and ii) the companion's mass and initial orbit. We use a new 3D Cartesian grid code: MAIN (Mesh-adaptive Approximate Inverse N-body solver). The main features of MAIN are reviewed, with emphasis on the use of a new Symmetric Factored Approximate Sparse Inverse (SFASI) matrix in conjunction with the multigrid method that allows the efficient solution of Poisson's equation in three space variables. We find that: i) companions need to be assigned initial masses in a rather narrow window of values in order to produce significant and more long-standing non-axisymmetric structures (bars and spirals) in the main galaxy's disc by the repeated flyby mechanism. ii) a crucial phenomenon is the antagonism between companion-excited and self-excited modes on the disc. Values of $Q >1.5$ are needed in order to allow for the growth of the companion-excited modes to prevail over the the growth of the disc's self-excited modes. iii) We give evidence that the companion-induced spiral structure is best represented by a density wave with pattern speed nearly constant in a region extending from the ILR to a radius close to, but inside, corotation.

Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:2206.02616 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2022-06-06)
Did the Milky Way just light up? The recent star formation history of the Galactic disc
arXiv:2006.03057 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2020-06-04)
Distribution and kinematics of 26Al in the Galactic disc
arXiv:0907.1899 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2009-07-10)
Origin and structure of the Galactic disc(s)