Central Regions of Barred Galaxies: Two-Dimensional Non-self-gravitating Hydrodynamic Simulations
Woong-Tae Kim (1,2), Woo-Young Seo (1), James M. Stone (3), Doosoo, Yoon (1,4), Peter J. Teuben (5) ((1) SNU, (2) IAS, (3) Princeton, (4) UWI,, (5) UMD)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution hydrodynamic simulations to explore how gas dynamics and central black hole mass influence substructures like shocks, rings, and spirals in barred galaxy centers, impacting star formation and black hole activity.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the formation and properties of nuclear rings and spirals, showing their dependence on gas sound speed and black hole mass, which was not fully understood before.
Findings
Nuclear rings shrink with increasing sound speed, independent of black hole mass.
Nuclear spirals only persist at low sound speeds or high black hole masses.
Mass inflow rates increase significantly with higher sound speeds, potentially fueling nuclear activity.
Abstract
The inner regions of barred galaxies contain substructures such as off-axis shocks, nuclear rings, and nuclear spirals. These substructure may affect star formation, and control the activity of a central black hole (BH) by determining the mass inflow rate. We investigate the formation and properties of such substructures using high-resolution, grid-based hydrodynamic simulations. The gaseous medium is assumed to be infinitesimally-thin, isothermal, and non-self-gravitating. The stars and dark matter are represented by a static gravitational potential with four components: a stellar disk, the bulge, a central BH, and the bar. To investigate various galactic environments, we vary the gas sound speed c_s as well as the mass of the central BH M_BH. Once the flow has reached a quasi-steady state, off-axis shocks tend to move closer to the bar major axis as c_s increases. Nuclear rings shrink…
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