A jolt to the system: ram pressure on low-mass galaxies in simulations of the Local Group

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY(2023)

引用 1|浏览9
暂无评分
摘要
Low-mass galaxies are highly susceptible to environmental effects that can efficiently quench star formation. We explore the role of ram pressure in quenching low-mass galaxies (M-* similar to 10(5)-10(9) M-circle dot) within 2Mpc of Milky Way (MW) hosts using the FIRE-2 simulations. Ram pressure is highly variable across different environments, within individual MW haloes, and for individual low-mass galaxies over time. The impulsiveness of ram pressure - the maximum ram pressure scaled to the integrated ram pressure prior to quenching - correlates with whether a galaxy is quiescent or star forming. The time-scale between maximum ram pressure and quenching is anticorrelated with impulsiveness, such that high impulsiveness corresponds to quenching time-scales <1Gyr. Galaxies in low-mass groups (M-*,M-host 10(7)-10(9) M-circle dot) outside of MW haloes experience typical ram pressure only slightly lower than ram pressure on MW satellites, helping to explain effective quenching via group preprocessing. Ram pressure on MW satellites rises sharply with decreasing distance to the host, and, at a fixed physical distance, more recent pericentre passages are typically associated with higher ram pressure because of greater gas density in the inner host halo at late times. Furthermore, the ram pressure and gas density in the inner regions of Local Group-like paired host haloes are higher at small angles off the host galaxy disc compared to isolated hosts. The quiescent fraction of satellites within these low-latitude regions is also elevated in the simulations and observations, signaling possible anisotropic quenching via ram pressure around MW-mass hosts.
更多
查看译文
关键词
methods: numerical,galaxies: evolution,galaxies: Local Group
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要