Simulations of the formation and evolution of isolated dwarf galaxies - II. Angular momentum as a second parameter
Joeri Schroyen, Sven De Rijcke, Sander Valcke, Annelies, Cloet-Osselaer, Herwig Dejonghe

TL;DR
This study uses N-Body/SPH simulations to show that angular momentum, especially rotation, plays a crucial role in shaping dwarf galaxy metallicity profiles and star formation histories, offering a new explanation for observed galaxy types.
Contribution
It introduces the 'centrifugal barrier mechanism' as a novel explanation for flat metallicity profiles and highlights angular momentum as a second key parameter in dwarf galaxy evolution.
Findings
Rotation flattens metallicity profiles in dwarf galaxies.
Angular momentum leads to more uniform star formation across the galaxy.
Rotation influences galaxy morphology and star formation modes.
Abstract
We show results based on a large suite of N-Body/SPH simulations of isolated, flat dwarf galaxies, both rotating and non-rotating. The main goal is to investigate possible mechanisms to explain the observed dichotomy in radial stellar metallicity profiles of dwarf galaxies: dwarf irregulars (dIrr) and flat, rotating dwarf ellipticals (dE) generally possess flat metallicity profiles, while rounder and non-rotating dEs show strong negative metallicity gradients. These simulations show that flattening by rotation is key to reproducing the observed characteristics of flat dwarf galaxies, proving particularly efficient in erasing metallicity gradients. We propose a "centrifugal barrier mechanism" as an alternative to the previously suggested "fountain mechanism" for explaining the flat metallicity profiles of dIrrs and flat, rotating dEs. While only flattening the dark-matter halo has little…
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