The Mass Dependence of Star Formation Histories in Barred Spiral Galaxies
Christian Carles, Hugo Martel, Sara L. Ellison, and Daisuke Kawata

TL;DR
This study uses gasdynamical simulations to explore how bars influence star formation histories in disc galaxies, revealing that bars cause irregular star formation patterns and central gas concentration differences based on galaxy mass.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the mass-dependent effects of bars on star formation and gas dynamics in disc galaxies through detailed simulations.
Findings
Barred galaxies exhibit irregular star formation, especially at high masses.
Massive barred galaxies undergo starbursts that exhaust central gas.
Unbarred galaxies have more stable, gradually evolving star formation rates.
Abstract
We performed a series of 29 gasdynamical simulations of disc galaxies, barred and unbarred, with various stellar masses, to study the impact of the bar on star formation history. Unbarred galaxies evolve very smoothly, with a star formation rate (SFR) that varies by at most a factor of three over a period of 2 Gyr. The evolution of barred galaxies is much more irregular, especially at high stellar masses. In these galaxies, the bar drives a substantial amount of gas toward the centre, resulting in a high SFR, and producing a starburst in the most massive galaxies. Most of the gas is converted into stars, and gas exhaustion leads to a rapid drop of star formation after the starburst. In massive barred galaxies (stellar mass M* > 2x10^10 Msun) the large amount of gas funnelled toward the centre is completely consumed by the starburst, while in lower-mass barred galaxies it is only…
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