Strong spiral arms drive secular growth of pseudo bulges in disk galaxies
Si-Yue Yu (1), Dewang Xu (2,3), Luis C. Ho (2,3), Jing Wang (2,3) and, Wei-Bo Kao (3) ((1) MPIfR, (2) KIAA, (3) PKU)

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that stronger spiral arms in disk galaxies facilitate inward gas flow, leading to continuous central star formation and the growth of pseudo bulges, thus contributing to the galaxies' secular evolution.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence linking spiral arm strength to pseudo bulge growth and central star formation, highlighting a mechanism for secular galaxy evolution.
Findings
Stronger spiral arms correlate with higher central sSFR.
Pseudo bulge fraction increases with spiral arm strength.
Spiral arms promote continuous central star formation.
Abstract
Spiral-driven instabilities may drive gas inflow to enhance central star formation in disk galaxies. We investigate this hypothesis using the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) in a sample of 2779 nearby unbarred star-forming main-sequence spiral galaxies. The strength of spiral arms is quantified by their average Fourier amplitude relative to the axisymmetric disk. The star formation properties in the central 1--3\,kpc region were derived from the SDSS spectra. We show that galaxies with stronger spiral arms not only tend to have more intense central specific star formation rate (sSFR), larger Balmer absorption line index, and lower 4000-\AA\ break strength, but also have enhanced central sSFR relative to sSFR measured for the whole galaxy. This link is independent of redshift, stellar mass, surface density, and concentration. There is a lack of evidence for strong spiral arms being…
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