Spiral-induced velocity and metallicity patterns in a cosmological zoom simulation of a Milky Way-sized galaxy [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1604.01027


We use a high resolution cosmological zoom simulation of a Milky Way-sized halo to study the observable features in velocity and metallicity space associated with the dynamical influence of spiral arms. For the first time, we demonstrate that spiral arms, that form in a disc in a fully cosmological environment with realistic galaxy formation physics, drive large-scale systematic streaming motions. In particular, on the trailing edge of the spiral arms the peculiar galacto-centric radial and tangential velocity field is directed radially outward and tangentially backward, whereas it is radially inward and tangentially forward on the leading edge. Owing to the negative radial metallicity gradient, this systematic motion drives, at a given radius, an azimuthal variation in the residual metallicity that is characterised by a metal rich trailing edge and a metal poor leading edge. We show that these signatures are theoretically observable in external galaxies with Integral Field Unit instruments such as VLT/MUSE, and if detected, would provide evidence for large-scale systematic radial migration driven by spiral arms.

Read this paper on arXiv…

R. Grand, V. Springel, D. Kawata, et. al.
Wed, 6 Apr 16
18/63

Comments: 5 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to MNRAS letters