Two-Dimensional Magnetohydrodynamic Simulations of Barred Galaxies
Woong-Tae Kim (Seoul National University), James M. Stone, (Princeton)

TL;DR
This study uses two-dimensional MHD simulations to explore how magnetic fields influence the formation of dust lanes, nuclear rings, and magnetic arms in barred galaxies, revealing significant effects on gas dynamics and mass inflow.
Contribution
It introduces high-resolution 2D MHD simulations to analyze magnetic effects on galactic substructures and mass inflow, highlighting the role of magnetic fields in shaping galaxy features.
Findings
Magnetic fields reduce dust lane density and lead to smaller, more central nuclear rings.
Mass inflow rates increase significantly with magnetic field strength.
Magnetic dynamo action near corotation amplifies magnetic fields, forming magnetic arms with reconnection sites.
Abstract
Barred galaxies are known to possess magnetic fields that may affect the properties of bar substructures such as dust lanes and nuclear rings. We use two-dimensional high-resolution magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations to investigate the effects of magnetic fields on the formation and evolution of such substructures as well as on the mass inflow rates to the galaxy center. The gaseous medium is assumed to be infinitesimally-thin, isothermal, non-self-gravitating, and threaded by initially uniform, azimuthal magnetic fields. We find that there exists an outermost x1-orbit relative to which gaseous responses to an imposed stellar bar potential are completely different between inside and outside. Inside this orbit, gas is shocked into dust lanes and infalls to form a nuclear ring. Magnetic fields are compressed in dust lanes, reducing their peak density. Magnetic stress removes further…
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