A Universal Dance of Galactic Disks: Ubiquitous Precession and Its Implications
Yuan Wang, Xiong Luo, Huiyuan Wang, Enci Wang, Hao Li, Federico Marinacci, Xuejian Shen, Mark Vogelsberger

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to show that galactic disk precession is common, driven by external tidal torques, affecting galaxy evolution, gas warps, and satellite alignments, with implications for understanding galaxy dynamics.
Contribution
First comprehensive analysis of galactic disk precession across cosmic time using IllustrisTNG simulations, revealing its ubiquity and impact on galaxy evolution.
Findings
Disk precession is ubiquitous in galaxies.
Precession affects gas warps and satellite alignments.
Milky Way precesses at 3-10 degrees per billion years.
Abstract
Precession is a very common phenomenon for small-scale astronomical objects. However, the precession of galactic disks, occurring on a scale larger than kilo-parsec, has barely been studied in the literature. Quantifying this precession in observations remains challenging due to the lack of high-resolution dynamical data. Cosmological simulations, where gravitational interactions are self-consistently modeled, offer a unique avenue for investigating disk precession. Leveraging the IllustrisTNG simulations, we trace the evolution of spin orientation in Milky Way-like galaxies over cosmic time. We find that disk precession is ubiquitous in galaxies and significantly affects galaxy evolution. The precession is driven by the external tidal torque originating from the anisotropic matter distribution within , and is violent at and becomes gentler but…
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