A Comprehensive Perturbative Formalism for Phase-Mixing in Perturbed Disks. I. Phase spirals in an Infinite, Isothermal Slab
Uddipan Banik, Martin D. Weinberg, Frank C. van den Bosch

TL;DR
This paper develops a perturbative formalism to analyze phase-mixing and phase spirals in galactic disks modeled as infinite isothermal slabs, revealing how different perturbation timescales excite bending and breathing modes, with implications for satellite interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive linear perturbation theory framework for phase-mixing in idealized disk models, emphasizing the roles of perturbation timescales and satellite encounters.
Findings
Faster perturbations excite stronger breathing modes.
Slower perturbations excite stronger bending modes.
Recent satellite encounters, especially Sagittarius, significantly influence disk dynamics.
Abstract
Galactic disks are highly responsive systems that often undergo external perturbations and subsequent collisionless equilibration, predominantly via phase-mixing. We use linear perturbation theory to study the response of infinite isothermal slab analogues of disks to perturbations with diverse spatio-temporal characteristics. Without self-gravity of the response, the dominant Fourier modes that get excited in a disk are the bending and breathing modes, which, due to vertical phase-mixing, trigger local phase-space spirals that are one- and two-armed, respectively. We demonstrate how the lateral streaming motion of slab stars causes phase spirals to damp out over time. The ratio of the perturbation timescale () to the local, vertical oscillation time () ultimately decides which of the two modes is excited. Faster, more impulsive ()…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMaterial Science and Thermodynamics · Tribology and Lubrication Engineering
