From protogalaxy through thick and thin: Why did the Milky Way evolve in three kinematic phases?
Olti Myrtaj, James S. Bullock, Michael Boylan-Kolchin, Vedant Chandra, Claude-Andr\'e Faucher-Gigu\`ere, Robert Feldmann, Francisco J. Mercado, Jorge Moreno, Jonathan Stern, Andrew Wetzel, and Pratik J. Gandhi

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to explain the Milky Way's evolution through three kinematic phases, linking gas dynamics, star formation, and galaxy structure changes over cosmic time.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that the three kinematic phases of the Milky Way are reproduced in FIRE-2 simulations and identifies their physical origins.
Findings
Early disordered phase with low star formation rate and baryonic 'sloshing'
Transition to thick disk with coherent gas spin and bursty star formation
Final thin disk formation linked to circumgalactic medium virialization
Abstract
APOGEE and Gaia data have revealed that the Milky Way's structure appears to have evolved through three distinct kinematic phases. First, at early cosmic times, the Milky Way was a disordered protogalaxy, which subsequently "spun up" to a second kinematic phase marked by star formation occurring in a rotating, thick stellar disk. The thick disk phase later transitioned to a third (and final) phase with star formation occurring in a cold, thin stellar disk. In this paper, we use a suite of FIRE-2 simulations of Milky Way-mass galaxies to demonstrate that the same three phases arise in our cosmological zoom-in simulations, and study their physical origin. In all of our galaxies, the early disordered phase occurs when the rate of cool gas ( K) converting into stars is low, the star formation rate is bursty, and the baryonic mass "sloshes" within the host potential with respect…
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