Angular momentum and galaxy formation revisited
Aaron J. Romanowsky, S. Michael Fall

TL;DR
This paper revisits galaxy angular momentum, analyzing its relation with mass across galaxy types, challenging previous ideas about ellipticals, and proposing models for galaxy formation that match observed angular momentum distributions.
Contribution
It introduces new methods for estimating galaxy angular momentum, analyzes a large galaxy sample, and develops cosmological models to explain angular momentum evolution in galaxies.
Findings
Ellipticals contain 3-4 times less angular momentum than spirals of the same mass.
Spirals and ellipticals follow parallel j_*-M_* relations, with ellipticals showing a mass-size-rotation conspiracy.
Galaxy morphology correlates with disk/bulge components following separate angular momentum scaling relations.
Abstract
Motivated by new kinematic data in the outer parts of early-type galaxies (ETGs), we re-examine angular momentum (AM) in all galaxy types. We present methods for estimating the specific AM j, focusing on ETGs, to derive relations between stellar j_* and mass M_* (after Fall 1983). We perform analyses of 8 galaxies out to ~10 R_e, finding that data at 2 R_e are sufficient to estimate total j_*. Our results contravene suggestions that ellipticals (Es) harbor large reservoirs of hidden j_* from AM transport in major mergers. We carry out a j_*-M_* analysis of literature data for ~100 nearby bright galaxies of all types. The Es and spirals form parallel j_*-M_* tracks, which for spirals is like the Tully-Fisher relation, but for Es derives from a mass-size-rotation conspiracy. The Es contain ~3-4 times less AM than equal-mass spirals. We decompose the spirals into disks+bulges and find…
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