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Galaxy Formation: the Role of Gravitational Collisions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 May 2016

C. Balland
Affiliation:
Center for Particle Astrophysics & Astronomy Department University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, U.S.A.
J. Silk
Affiliation:
Center for Particle Astrophysics & Astronomy Department University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, U.S.A.
R. Schaeffer
Affiliation:
C.E.N., Saclay, France

Extract

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Some aspect of a semi-empirical model of galaxy formation is presented. In this model, galaxy formation proceeds through a series of rapid non-merging collisions with surrounding objects. For a given galaxy, a collision at an epoch z is characterized in terms of the fractional rate of change of binding energy induced by the tidal field [1]. The total rate of change of binding energy during the lifetime of the galaxy is computed in an Einstein-de Sitter universe, assuming that collisions continuously occur from birth up to the present day against a set of background galaxies with various masses. Rules for the formation of morphological types are then derived along the following (phenomenological) line: substantial or efficient collisions – characterized by a high rate of energy exchange – drive the formation of elliptical galaxies, whereas little or inefficient collisions lead to the formation of disks. These rules are coupled to the Press & Schechter mass function for a Cold Dark Matter spectrum normalized to the present distribution of X-ray clusters, allowing one to predict the evolution, for each morphological type, of number densities as a function of redshift. The model reproduces the observed present-day morphology-density relation [2] and predicts the formation redshift of field ellipticals to be z ≥ 2, while spirals form at z ≤ 1.5. Predictions are made for the redshift evolution of morphological populations in the field as well as in clusters (see [3] for more details).

Type
III. Galaxy Formation and Evolution
Copyright
Copyright © Kluwer 1999 

References

[1] Aguilar, L. A., White, S. D. M., ApJ 295, 374 (1985)Google Scholar
[2] Postman, M., Geller, M. J., ApJ 281, 95 (1984)Google Scholar
[3] Balland, C., Silk, J., Schaeffer, R., ApJ, submitted, (1997)Google Scholar