Exploring the fate of primordial discs in Milky Way-sized galaxies with the GigaEris simulation
Floor van Donkelaar, Lucio Mayer, Pedro R. Capelo, Piero Madau

TL;DR
This study uses the GigaEris simulation to investigate the formation and evolution of primordial galactic discs at high redshifts, revealing a two-phase formation process involving early pseudo-bulge creation and later thin disc development.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the early inward migration of stars in primordial discs and proposes a two-phase formation scenario contrasting with traditional inside-out models.
Findings
76% of early disc stars become part of a pseudo-bulge by z=4.4
Inward migration dominates for stars formed at z>6
Early discs transform into pseudo-bulges within less than a billion years
Abstract
Recent observations with JWST and ALMA have unveiled galaxies with regular discs at significantly higher redshifts than previously expected. This appears to be in contrast with constraints on the stellar populations of the Milky Way, suggesting that the bulk of the Galactic thin disc formed after , and raises questions about the history, evolution, and survivability of primordial discs. Here, we use GigaEris, a state-of-the-art -body, hydrodynamical, cosmological ``zoom-in'' simulation with a billion particles within the virial radius, to delve into the formation of the early kinematically cold discs (KCDs), defined by their ratio between the mean rotational velocity and the radial velocity dispersion, of a Milky Way-sized galaxy at redshifts . Our analysis reveals a primarily inward migration pattern for disc stars formed at , turning into a mix of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Scientific Research and Discoveries
