Dynamics of Non-Steady Spiral Arms in Disk Galaxies
Junichi Baba, Takayuki R. Saitoh, Keiichi Wada

TL;DR
This study uses 3D N-body simulations to explore how non-steady spiral arms in disk galaxies form, evolve, and influence stellar migration, revealing a recurrent, low-heating process driven by nonlinear star-arm interactions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that non-steady spiral arms result from swing amplification and nonlinear star-arm interactions, explaining their recurrent nature and minimal disk heating.
Findings
Spiral arms form via swing amplification.
Stars migrate radially without significant heating.
Spiral arms are recurrent and follow differential rotation.
Abstract
In order to understand the physical mechanisms underlying non-steady stellar spiral arms in disk galaxies, we analyzed the growing and damping phases of their spiral arms using three-dimensional -body simulations. We confirmed that the spiral arms are formed due to a swing amplification mechanism that reinforces density enhancement as a seeded wake. In the damping phase, the Coriolis force exerted on a portion of the arm surpasses the gravitational force that acts to shrink the portion. Consequently, the stars in the portion escape from the arm, and subsequently they form a new arm at a different location. The time-dependent nature of the spiral arms are originated in the continual repetition of this non-linear phenomenon. Since a spiral arm does not rigidly rotate, but follows the galactic differential rotation, the stars in the arm rotate at almost the same rate as the arm. In…
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