Formation of young boxy/peanut bulges in ringed barred galaxies
Herve Wozniak (CRAL), Leo Michel-Dansac (IATE)

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations to explore how gas content influences the formation of boxy/peanut-shaped bulges in barred galaxies, revealing different mechanisms and stellar populations involved.
Contribution
It demonstrates that gas and star formation significantly alter the orbital structure and formation process of B/PS bulges compared to collisionless models.
Findings
Young stars form a B/PS bulge via vertical resonances.
Different orbit families dominate in gaseous vs. collisionless cases.
A flat nuclear ring forms and persists within the bulge.
Abstract
We investigate whether the formation mechanism of boxy and peanut-shaped (B/PS) bulges could depend on the gas content of the galaxy. We have performed N-body simulations with and without a gaseous component. In the second case star formation/feedback recipes have also been implemented to create new stellar populations. As in many previous studies, in our N-body collisionless simulation, the B/PS is due to the classical break in the z mirror symmetry lasting roughly 200 Myr. When a gaseous component and star formation recipes are added to the simulation, the bulge-growing mechanism is quite different. The young stellar population that is born in the thin gaseous disc rapidly populates vertical resonant orbits triggered by the combined effects of the linear horizontal and vertical ILRs. This leads to a B/PS bulge mainly made of stellar material younger than the surrounding population.…
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