The two-phase formation history of spiral galaxies traced by the cosmic evolution of the bar fraction
Katarina Kraljic, Fr\'ed\'eric Bournaud, Marie Martig

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to trace the evolution of galactic bars, revealing a two-phase formation history linked to galaxy morphology changes and providing predictions consistent with observations.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed simulation-based analysis of bar formation timing and its relation to galaxy evolution, highlighting a two-phase formation process.
Findings
Bars are rare in progenitors of present-day spirals at z>1.5.
The bar fraction increases rapidly after z~1, reaching 80% at z<0.5.
Bar formation is linked to the transition from violent to secular galaxy formation phases.
Abstract
We study the evolution of galactic bars and the link with disk and spheroid formation in a sample of zoom-in cosmological simulations. Our simulation sample focuses on galaxies with present-day stellar masses in the 10^10-10^11 Msun range, in field and loose group environments, with a broad variety of mass growth histories. In our models, bars are almost absent from the progenitors of present-day spirals at z>1.5, and they remain rare and generally too weak to be observable down to z~1. After this characteristic epoch, the fractions of observable and strong bars raise rapidly, bars being present in 80% of spiral galaxies and easily observable in two thirds of these at z<0.5. This is quantitatively consistent with the redshift evolution of the observed bar fraction. Our models predict that the decrease in the bar fraction with increasing redshift should continue with a fraction of…
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