Evolution of gaseous disk viscosity driven by supernova explosion. II. Structure and emissions from star-forming galaxies at high redshift
Chang-Shuo Yan, Jian-Min Wang

TL;DR
This paper models how supernova-driven turbulence influences the evolution, structure, and emissions of high-redshift star-forming galaxies, revealing mechanisms for gas transport, bulge growth, and starburst activity.
Contribution
It introduces a numerical model incorporating supernova feedback into galaxy disk dynamics, explaining observed features and galaxy evolution at high redshift.
Findings
High SN-driven viscosity transports gas inward, forming stellar disks or rings.
Starbursts trigger SMBH activity with a ~10^8 yr lag.
Models reproduce observed emission line ratios and velocity dispersions.
Abstract
(Abridged) High redshift galaxies are undergoing intensive evolution of dynamical structure and morphologies. We incorporate the feedback into the dynamical equations through mass dropout and angular momentum transportation driven by the SNexp-excited turbulent viscosity. We numerically solve the equations and show that there can be intensive evolution of structure of the gaseous disk. Secular evolution of the disk shows interesting characteristics that are 1) high viscosity excited by SNexp can efficiently transport the gas from 10kpc to kpc forming a stellar disk whereas a stellar ring forms for the case with low viscosity; 2) starbursts trigger SMBH activity with a lag yr depending on star formation rates, prompting the joint evolution of SMBHs and bulges; 3) the velocity dispersion is as high as in the gaseous disk. In order to compare the present…
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