Bar quenching in gas-rich galaxies
S. Khoperskov, M. Haywood, P. Di Matteo, M. D. Lehnert, F. Combes

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the formation of stellar bars in gas-rich disk galaxies can rapidly quench star formation by increasing gas velocity dispersion and reducing star-formation efficiency, with simulations showing a tenfold decrease within less than a billion years.
Contribution
It provides a quantitative analysis of how stellar bars induce rapid star formation quenching in gas-rich galaxies through simulations including star formation and feedback processes.
Findings
Bars increase gas velocity dispersion to 20-35 km/s.
Star formation rate decreases by a factor of 10 within 1 Gyr.
Barred galaxies exhibit significantly lower star-formation efficiency.
Abstract
Galaxy surveys have suggested that rapid and sustained decrease in the star-formation rate, "quenching", in massive disk galaxies is frequently related to the presence of a bar. Optical and near-IR observations reveal that nearly 60% of disk galaxies in the local universe are barred, thus it is important to understand the relationship between bars and star formation in disk galaxies. Recent observational results imply that the Milky Way quenched about 9-10 Gyr ago, at the transition between the cessation of the growth of the kinematically hot, old, metal-poor thick disk and the kinematically colder, younger, and more metal-rich thin disk. Although perhaps coincidental, the quenching episode could also be related to the formation of the bar. To explore the relation between bar formation and star formation in gas rich galaxies quantitatively, we simulated gas-rich disk isolated galaxies.…
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