Ring Galaxies in the EAGLE Hydrodynamical Simulations
Ahmed Elagali, Claudia D. P. Lagos, O. Ivy Wong, Lister, Staveley-Smith, James W. Trayford, Matthieu Schaller, Tiantian Yuan, Mario G., Abadi

TL;DR
This study uses the EAGLE simulations to analyze the formation, evolution, and properties of ring galaxies, finding that most form through interactions and exhibit unique gas and star formation characteristics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of ring galaxy formation and evolution in cosmological simulations, confirming observational trends and elucidating the role of interactions and ISM properties.
Findings
83% of ring galaxies form via interactions.
Ring galaxies are HI rich but have inefficient star formation.
Most have long-lived ring morphologies (>2 Gyr).
Abstract
We study the formation and evolution of ring galaxies in the Evolution and Assembly of GaLaxies and their Environments (EAGLE) simulations. We use the largest reference model Ref-L100N1504, a cubic cosmological volume of 100 comoving megaparsecs on a side, to identify and characterise these systems through cosmic time. The number density of ring galaxies in EAGLE is in broad agreement with the observations. The vast majority of ring galaxies identified in EAGLE (83 per cent) have an interaction origin, i.e., form when one or more companion galaxies drop-through a disk galaxy. The remainder (17 per cent) have very long-lived ring morphologies (> 2 Gyr) and host strong bars. Ring galaxies are HI rich galaxies, yet display inefficient star formation activity and tend to reside in the green valley particularly at z > 0.5. This inefficiency is mainly due to the low pressure and metallicity…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
