Insights into the structure and kinematics of a Milky Way-like galaxy
Eva Dur\'an-Camacho, Ana Duarte-Cabral

TL;DR
This study uses a numerical simulation of a Milky Way-like galaxy to analyze its structure and kinematics, successfully reproducing many observed features and providing insights into spiral arm formation and galaxy dynamics.
Contribution
It presents a close-to-observed isothermal simulation of a MW-like galaxy focusing on large-scale flows and spiral patterns, advancing understanding of galaxy dynamics without including star formation or feedback.
Findings
Model reproduces many MW structural and kinematic signatures.
Spiral arms are highly segmented and less coherent, resembling observations.
Radial motions are strongly linked to non-circular motions from the bar.
Abstract
Understanding how the large-scale kinematics of the MW shape the formation and evolution of the interstellar medium remains challenging from an observational perspective, and numerical models that can reproduce the observed structure and kinematics of the MW are much needed in order to infer how the MW might work as a star formation engine. This work aims to use a numerical framework that is a close match to the observed large-scale distribution of stars and gas in the MW to isolate and understand the impact of galaxy-driven flows on the formation, agglomeration, and longevity of spiral patterns, prior to the inclusion of chemistry, star formation, and feedback. We use an isothermal simulation of a MW-like galaxy, found to closely match the longitude-velocity observational features of the MW in previous work, that includes the coupled evolution of gas, stars, and dark matter under…
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