Was the Milky Way Bulge Formed From The Buckling Disk Instability, Hierarchical Collapse, Accretion of Clumps, or All of the Above?
David M. Nataf

TL;DR
This paper reviews multiple formation scenarios for the Milky Way bulge, including buckling disk instability, hierarchical collapse, and clumpy galaxy accretion, suggesting a likely composite origin with different processes dominating for various stellar populations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive synthesis of observational and simulation evidence for multiple bulge formation mechanisms, emphasizing the plausibility of a composite origin for the Milky Way bulge.
Findings
N-body models successfully predict bulge kinematics and morphology.
Classical bulge scenario aligns with certain abundance trends.
Clumpy galaxy scenario explains high-redshift galaxy observations.
Abstract
The assembly of the Milky Way bulge is an old topic in astronomy, one now in a period of renewed and rapid development. The dominant scenario for bulge formation is that of the Milky Way as a nearly pure disk galaxy, with the inner disk having formed a bar and buckled. This can potentially explain virtually all bulge stars with [Fe/H] <~ -1.0, comprising 95% of the stellar population. The evidence is the incredible success in N-body models of this type in making meaningful predictions, such as the rotation curve and velocity dispersion measured from radial velocities, and the spatial morphologies of the peanut/X-shape and the long bar. The classical bulge scenario remains viable for stars with [Fe/H] <~ -1.0 and potentially a minority of the other stars. A classical bulge is expected from Lambda-CDM cosmological simulations, can accentuate the properties of an existing bar in a hybrid…
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