The SKA as a Doorway to Angular Momentum
D. Obreschkow, M. Meyer, A. Popping, C. Power, P. Quinn, L., Staveley-Smith

TL;DR
The paper discusses how the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) can revolutionize the study of galactic angular momentum by enabling detailed HI kinematic measurements across large galaxy samples, advancing galaxy evolution understanding.
Contribution
It highlights the potential of SKA to provide unprecedented data on galaxy angular momentum, facilitating new insights into galaxy formation and evolution models.
Findings
SKA can measure HI kinematics in large galaxy samples
Enables robust (M,j)-plane distribution analysis
Allows environmental dependence studies of angular momentum
Abstract
Angular momentum is one of the most fundamental physical quantities governing galactic evolution. Differences in the colours, morphologies, star formation rates and gas fractions amongst galaxies of equal stellar/baryon mass M are potentially widely explained by variations in their specific stellar/baryon angular momentum j. The enormous potential of angular momentum science is only just being realised, thanks to the emergence of the first simulations of galaxies with converged spins, paralleled by a dramatic increase in kinematic observations. Such observations are still challenged by the fact that most of the stellar/baryon angular momentum resides at large radii. In fact, the radius that maximally contributes to the angular momentum of an exponential disk (3Re-4Re) is twice as large as the radius that maximally contributes to the disk mass; thus converged measurements of angular…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
