Simulations of the formation and evolution of isolated dwarf galaxies
Sander Valcke, S. De Rijcke, H. Dejonghe

TL;DR
This paper presents self-consistent simulations of isolated dwarf galaxy formation and evolution, incorporating star formation, chemical enrichment, feedback, and gas cooling, showing burst-like star formation histories consistent with observations.
Contribution
The study introduces detailed models of dwarf galaxy evolution using the HYDRA code with new star formation and feedback prescriptions, supported by cosmological merger trees.
Findings
Model galaxies exhibit burst-like star formation histories.
Gas blow-out ranges from 3x10^7 to 6x10^7 solar masses.
Model properties align well with observed dwarf galaxy relations.
Abstract
We present new fully self-consistent models of the formation and evolution of isolated dwarf galaxies. We have used the publicly available N-body/SPH code HYDRA, to which we have added a set of star formation criteria, and prescriptions for chemical enrichment (taking into account contributions from both SNIa and SNII), supernova feedback, and gas cooling. The models follow the evolution of an initially homogeneous gas cloud collapsing in a pre-existing dark-matter halo. These simplified initial conditions are supported by the merger trees of isolated dwarf galaxies extracted from the milli-Millennium Simulation. The star-formation histories of the model galaxies exhibit burst-like behaviour. These bursts are a consequence of the blow-out and subsequent in-fall of gas. The amount of gas that leaves the galaxy for good is found to be small, in absolute numbers, ranging between 3x10^7…
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