ArXiv TLDR

A Universal Dance of Galactic Disks: Ubiquitous Precession and Its Implications

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2605.00349

Yuan Wang, Xiong Luo, Huiyuan Wang, Enci Wang, Hao Li + 3 more

astro-ph.GA

TLDR

Galactic disk precession is ubiquitous, driven by tidal torques, and significantly impacts galaxy evolution, including warps and satellite alignment.

Key contributions

  • Demonstrates ubiquitous galactic disk precession using IllustrisTNG simulations, driven by external tidal torques.
  • Shows precession is violent at high redshift (z>1) and gentler but significant at z~0, even for settled disks.
  • Predicts Milky Way precession (3-10 deg/Gyr) and links precession to cold gas warps and prolate elliptical galaxy formation.
  • Explains radial alignment of satellite galaxies and the role of accreted gas stream precession in disk evolution.

Why it matters

This paper reveals that galactic disk precession is a fundamental and widespread phenomenon, previously overlooked at large scales. Its findings explain observed features like galactic warps and satellite alignment, and offer new insights into the formation of elliptical galaxies and the overall evolution of disk galaxies.

Original 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 $30\ \mathrm{kpc}$, and is violent at $\mathrm{z} > 1$ and becomes gentler but significant at $\mathrm{z} \sim 0$, when the disks are considered dynamically settled. Disk precession can induce significant cold gas warp, which is often observed in the Milky Way and nearby galaxies. We predict that the Milky Way is precessing at a rate of $\simeq3-10$ degrees per billion years at current epoch based on its observed warp. Violent precession can heat the orbits of stars, which may eventually produce prolate elliptical galaxies. The tidal torque from central galaxies can cause the precession of nearby satellite galaxies and causes their disks to point towards the centrals, which explains the observational radial alignment. We also find that the precession of accreted cold gas stream, regulated by the galaxies' torque, is crucial for the evolution of disk galaxies.

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