Oscillating dynamical friction on galactic bars by trapped dark matter
Rimpei Chiba, Ralph Sch\"onrich

TL;DR
This paper investigates the slow regime of dynamical friction on galactic bars caused by trapped dark matter, revealing oscillatory behavior and potential observable signatures in stellar phase-space spirals.
Contribution
It formulates the time-dependent dynamical friction in the slow limit and explores its effects using simulations and secular perturbation theory, highlighting new oscillatory phenomena.
Findings
Dynamical friction oscillates with Gyr periods due to phase-space spirals.
Trapped orbits dominate angular momentum exchange in the slow regime.
Observable phase-space spirals may encode the age of galactic bars.
Abstract
The dynamic evolution of galactic bars in standard CDM models is dominated by angular momentum loss to the dark matter haloes via dynamical friction. Traditional approximations to dynamical friction are formulated using the linearized collisionless Boltzmann equation and have been shown to be valid in the fast limit, i.e. for rapidly slowing bars. However, the linear assumption breaks down within a few dynamical periods for typical slowly evolving bars, which trap a significant amount of disc stars and dark matter in resonances. Recent observations of the Galactic bar imply this slow regime at the main bar resonances. We formulate the time-dependent dynamical friction in the slow limit and explore its mechanism in the general slow regime with test-particle simulations. Here, angular momentum exchange is dominated by resonantly trapped orbits which slowly librate around the…
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