Stellar Disks in Aquarius Dark Matter Haloes
Jackson DeBuhr, Chung-Pei Ma, Simon D. M. White

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to explore how stellar disks interact with dark matter haloes, revealing effects on halo shape, bar formation, buckling instabilities, and disk warping over cosmic time.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent simulation method for galaxy disks within dark matter haloes, highlighting the impact of disk mass on bar formation and the link between halo reorientation and disk warps.
Findings
Inner haloes contract and become oblate as disks grow.
Most simulated disks form bars, with some experiencing buckling instabilities.
Disk mass significantly influences bar development and disk warping.
Abstract
We investigate the gravitational interactions between live stellar disks and their dark matter halos, using LCDM haloes similar in mass to that of the Milky Way taken from the Aquarius Project. We introduce the stellar disks by first allowing the haloes to respond to the influence of a growing rigid disk potential from z = 1.3 to z = 1.0. The rigid potential is then replaced with star particles which evolve self-consistently with the dark matter particles until z = 0.0. Regardless of the initial orientation of the disk, the inner parts of the haloes contract and change from prolate to oblate as the disk grows to its full size. When the disk normal is initially aligned with the major axis of the halo at z=1.3, the length of the major axis contracts and becomes the minor axis by z=1.0. Six out of the eight disks in our main set of simulations form bars, and five of the six bars experience…
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