Pseudobulge Formation as a Dynamical Rather than a Secular Process
Javiera Guedes, Lucio Mayer, Marcella Carollo, and Piero Madau

TL;DR
This study shows that pseudobulges in spiral galaxies form rapidly through dynamical processes like disk instabilities and mergers at high redshift, rather than through slow secular evolution, and are closely linked to stellar bar evolution.
Contribution
It demonstrates that pseudobulge formation is primarily a dynamical process occurring early, challenging the traditional view of secular evolution as the main formation mechanism.
Findings
Pseudobulges form quickly at high redshift via dynamical instabilities and mergers.
The pseudobulge evolution is intertwined with the stellar bar's lifecycle.
Simulations suggest progenitors of late-type galaxies had strong bars and small pseudobulges at high redshift.
Abstract
We investigate the formation and evolution of the pseudobulge in "Eris", a high-resolution N-body + smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) cosmological simulation that successfully reproduces a Milky Way-like massive late-type spiral in a cold dark matter (LCDM) universe. At the present epoch, Eris has a virial mass Mvir=8x10^11 Msun, a photometric stellar mass M*=3.2x10^10 Msun, a bulge-to-total ratio B/T = 0.26, and a weak nuclear bar. We find that the bulk of the pseudobulge forms quickly at high redshift via a combination of non-axisymmetric disk instabilities and tidal interactions or mergers both occurring on dynamical timescales, not through slow secular processes at lower redshift. Its subsequent evolution is not strictly secular either, and is closely intertwined with the evolution of the stellar bar. In fact, the structure that we recognize as a pseudobulge today evolves from a…
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