The Origin of Polar Ring Galaxies: Evidence for Galaxy Formation by Cold Accretion

  • Macciò A
  • Moore B
  • Stadel J
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Abstract

Polar ring galaxies are flattened stellar systems with an extended ring of gas and stars rotating in a plane almost perpendicular to the central galaxy. We show that their formation can occur naturally in a hierarchical universe where most low mass galaxies are assembled through the accretion of cold gas infalling along megaparsec scale filamentary structures. Within a large cosmological hydrodynamical simulation we find a system that closely resembles the classic polar ring galaxy NGC 4650A. How galaxies acquire their gas is a major uncertainty in models of galaxy formation and recent theoretical work has argued that cold accretion plays a major role. This idea is supported by our numerical simulations and the fact that polar ring galaxies are typically low mass systems.

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Macciò, A. V., Moore, B., & Stadel, J. (2006). The Origin of Polar Ring Galaxies: Evidence for Galaxy Formation by Cold Accretion. The Astrophysical Journal, 636(1), L25–L28. https://doi.org/10.1086/499778

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