High-Redshift Star-Forming Galaxies: Angular Momentum and Baryon Fraction, Turbulent Pressure Effects and the Origin of Turbulence
A. Burkert, R. Genzel, N. Bouche, G. Cresci, S. Khochfar, J., Sommer-Larsen, A. Sternberg, T. Naab, N. Foerster-Schreiber, L. Tacconi, K., Shapiro, E. Hicks, D. Lutz, R. Davies, P. Buschkamp, S. Genel

TL;DR
This study analyzes high-redshift star-forming galaxies, revealing how turbulence, pressure effects, and angular momentum influence their structure and dynamics, with implications for galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of high-redshift galaxy dynamics, incorporating pressure effects and turbulence, and compares observations with cosmological models.
Findings
Dispersion-dominated galaxies have pressure gradients reducing rotational velocities.
Rotation-dominated galaxies fit better with lower dark halo contributions.
Turbulence driven by gravitational instability aligns with observed gas motions.
Abstract
The structure of a sample of high-redshift (z=2), rotating galaxies with high star formation rates and turbulent gas velocities of sigma=40-80 km/s is investigated. Fitting the observed disk rotational velocities and radii with a Mo, Mao, White (1998) (MMW) model requires unusually large disk spin parameters lambda_d>0.1 and disk-to-dark halo mass fraction m_d=0.2, close to the cosmic baryon fraction. The galaxies segregate into dispersion-dominated systems with 1<vmax/sigma<3, maximum rotational velocities vmax<200 km/s and disk half-light radii rd=1-3 kpc and rotation-dominated systems with vmax>200 km/s, vmax/sigma>3 and rd=4-8 kpc. For the dispersion-dominated sample, radial pressure gradients partly compensate the gravitational force, reducing the rotational velocities. Including this pressure effect in the MMW model, dispersion-dominated galaxies can be fitted well with spin…
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