Lopsided galactic disks in IllustrisTNG
Ewa L. Lokas

TL;DR
This study investigates the properties and origins of lopsided stellar disks in simulated galaxies from IllustrisTNG, finding that asymmetric star formation driven by gas accretion is a primary cause, with some discrepancies compared to real observations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of lopsided galactic disks in the IllustrisTNG simulation, highlighting their properties, formation mechanisms, and differences from observed galaxies.
Findings
8% of simulated disks are lopsided, lower than 30% observed.
Lopsidedness correlates with higher gas content and star formation.
Most lopsided disks have recent asymmetry, often from gas accretion.
Abstract
A significant fraction of nearby late-type galaxies are lopsided. We study the asymmetry of the stellar component in a sample of well-resolved disky galaxies selected from the last snapshot of the Illustris TNG100 simulation based on their flatness and rotational support. Among 1912 disks, we identify 161 objects with significant asymmetry in terms of the m=1 Fourier mode of the stellar component within (1-2) stellar half-mass radii and describe their properties using three representative examples. The profiles of the m=1 mode typically increase with radius, and the corresponding phase is constant in the asymmetric region, signifying a global distortion. Following the evolution of the lopsided disks over time, we find that their history is rather uneventful and the occurrence of the asymmetry is fairly recent. Only about 1/3 of the lopsided disks experienced any strong interaction…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
