We use numerical simulations to investigate the orientation of the angular momentum axis of disk galaxies relative to their surrounding large-scale structure. We find that this is closely related to the spatial configuration at turnaround of the material destined to form the galaxy, which is often part of a coherent two-dimensional slab crisscrossed by filaments. The rotation axis is found to align very well with the intermediate principal axis of the inertia momentum tensor at this time. This orientation is approximately preserved during the ensuing collapse, so that the rotation axis of the resulting disk ends up lying on the plane traced by the protogalactic material at turnaround. This suggests a tendency for disks to align themselves so that their rotation axis is perpendicular to the minor axis of the structure defined by surrounding matter. One example of this trend is provided by our own Galaxy, where the Galactic plane is almost at right angles with the supergalactic plane (SGP) drawn by nearby galaxies; indeed, the SGP latitude of the north Galactic pole is just 6Њ. We have searched for a similar signature in catalogs of nearby disk galaxies, and we find a significant excess of edge-on spiral galaxies (for which the orientation of the disk rotation axis may be determined unambiguously) highly inclined relative to the SGP. This result supports the view that disk galaxies acquire their angular momentum as a consequence of early tidal torques acting during the expansion phase of the protogalactic material.
CITATION STYLE
Navarro, J. F., Abadi, M. G., & Steinmetz, M. (2004). Tidal Torques and the Orientation of Nearby Disk Galaxies. The Astrophysical Journal, 613(1), L41–L44. https://doi.org/10.1086/424902
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