On the significance of the thick disks of disk galaxies

Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series IOP Science 271:1 (2024) 1

Authors:

Sukyoung K Yi, Jk Jang, Julien Devriendt, Yohan Dubois, San Han, Taysun Kimm, Katarina Kraljic, Minjung Park, Sebastien Peirani, Christophe Pichon, Jinsu Rhee

Abstract:

Thick disks are a prevalent feature observed in numerous disk galaxies, including our own Milky Way. Their significance has been reported to vary widely, ranging from a few percent to 100% of the disk mass, depending on the galaxy and the measurement method. We use the NewHorizon simulation, which has high spatial and stellar mass resolutions, to investigate the issue of the thick-disk mass fraction. We also use the NewHorizon2 simulation, which was run on the same initial conditions, but additionally traced nine chemical elements. Based on a sample of 27 massive disk galaxies with M* > 1010M in NewHorizon, the contribution of the thick disk was found to be 20% ± 11% in r-band luminosity or 35% ± 15% in mass to the overall galactic disk, which seems in agreement with observational data. The vertical profiles of 0, 22, and 5 galaxies are best fitted by 1, 2, or 3 sech2 components, respectively. The NewHorizon2 data show that the selection of thick-disk stars based on a single [α/Fe] cut is contaminated by stars of different kinematic properties, while missing the bulk of kinematically thick disk stars. Vertical luminosity profile fits recover the key properties of thick disks reasonably well. The majority of stars are born near the galactic midplane with high circularity and get heated with time via fluctuations in the force field. Depending on the star formation and merger histories, galaxies may naturally develop thick disks with significantly different properties.

Boosting galactic outflows with enhanced resolution

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 528:3 (2024) 5412-5431

Authors:

Martin Rey, Harley Katz, Alex Cameron, Julien Devriendt, Adrianne Slyz

Abstract:

We study how better resolving the cooling length of galactic outflows affect their energetics. We perform radiativehydrodynamical galaxy formation simulations of an isolated dwarf galaxy (M = 108 M) with the RAMSES-RTZ code, accounting for non-equilibrium cooling and chemistry coupled to radiative transfer. Our simulations reach a spatial resolution of 18 pc in the interstellar medium (ISM) using a traditional quasi-Lagrangian scheme. We further implement a new adaptive mesh refinement strategy to resolve the local gas cooling length, allowing us to gradually increase the resolution in the stellar-feedback-powered outflows, from ≥ 200 pc to 18 pc. The propagation of outflows into the inner circumgalactic medium is significantly modified by this additional resolution, but the ISM, star formation, and feedback remain by and large the same. With increasing resolution in the diffuse gas, the hot outflowing phase (T > 8 × 104 K) systematically reaches overall higher temperatures and stays hotter for longer as it propagates outwards. This leads to two-fold increases in the time-averaged mass and metal outflow loading factors away from the galaxy (r = 5 kpc), a five-fold increase in the average energy loading factor, and a ≈50 per cent increase in the number of sightlines with NO VI ≥ 1013 cm−2. Such a significant boost to the energetics of outflows without new feedback mechanisms or channels strongly motivates future studies quantifying the efficiency with which better-resolved multiphase outflows regulate galactic star formation in a cosmological context.

LtU-ILI: An All-in-One Framework for Implicit Inference in Astrophysics and Cosmology

ArXiv 2402.05137 (2024)

Authors:

Matthew Ho, Deaglan J Bartlett, Nicolas Chartier, Carolina Cuesta-Lazaro, Simon Ding, Axel Lapel, Pablo Lemos, Christopher C Lovell, T Lucas Makinen, Chirag Modi, Viraj Pandya, Shivam Pandey, Lucia A Perez, Benjamin Wandelt, Greg L Bryan

Inside the bubble: exploring the environments of reionisation-era Lyman-α emitting galaxies with JADES and FRESCO⋆

Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences 682 (2024) a40

Authors:

Joris Witstok, Renske Smit, Aayush Saxena, Gareth C Jones, Jakob M Helton, Fengwu Sun, Roberto Maiolino, Nimisha Kumari, Daniel P Stark, Andrew J Bunker, Santiago Arribas, William M Baker, Rachana Bhatawdekar, Kristan Boyett, Alex J Cameron, Stefano Carniani, Stephane Charlot, Jacopo Chevallard, Mirko Curti, Emma Curtis-Lake, Daniel J Eisenstein, Ryan Endsley, Kevin Hainline, Zhiyuan Ji, Benjamin D Johnson, Tobias J Looser, Erica Nelson, Michele Perna, Hans-Walter Rix, Brant E Robertson, Lester Sandles, Jan Scholtz, Charlotte Simmonds, Sandro Tacchella, Hannah Übler, Christina C Williams, Christopher NA Willmer, Chris Willott

Emergence and cosmic evolution of the Kennicutt–Schmidt relation driven by interstellar turbulence

Astronomy and Astrophysics EDP Sciences 682 (2024) A50

Authors:

Katarina Kraljic, Florent Renaud, Yohan Dubois, Christophe Pichon, Oscar Agertz, Eric Andersson, Julien Devriendt, Jonathan Freundlich, Sugata Kaviraj, Taysun Kimm, Garreth Martin, Sébastien Peirani, Álvaro Segovia Otero, Marta Volonteri, Sukyoung K Yi

Abstract:

The scaling relations between the gas content and star formation rate of galaxies provide useful insights into the processes governing their formation and evolution. We investigated the emergence and the physical drivers of the global Kennicutt-Schmidt (KS) relation at 0:25 ≤ z ≤ 4 in the cosmological hydrodynamic simulation NewHorizon, capturing the evolution of a few hundred galaxies with a resolution down to 34 pc. The details of this relation vary strongly with the stellar mass of galaxies and the redshift. A power-law relation ΣSFR / Σa gas with a ≈ 1:4, like that found empirically, emerges at z ≈ 2..3 for the more massive half of the galaxy population. However, no such convergence is found in the lower-mass galaxies, for which the relation gets shallower with decreasing redshift. At galactic scales, the star formation activity correlates with the level of turbulence of the interstellar medium, quantified by the Mach number, rather than with the gas fraction (neutral or molecular), confirming the conclusions found in previous works. With decreasing redshift, the number of outliers with short depletion times diminishes, reducing the scatter of the KS relation, while the overall population of galaxies shifts toward low densities. Our results, from parsec-scale star formation models calibrated with local Universe physics, demonstrate that the cosmological evolution of the environmental (e.g., mergers) and internal conditions (e.g., gas fractions) conspire to shape the KS relation. This is an illustration of how the interplay of global and local processes leaves a detectable imprint on galactic-scale observables and scaling relations.