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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Excitation of activity in galaxies by minor mergers

Lars Hernquist, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1995 - 
- Vol. 448, pp 41
TLDR
In this article, a model for the origin of nuclear activity in a quiescent disk galaxy is presented. But the model does not include star formation and, therefore, cannot determine the ultimate fate of the gas.
Abstract
Mergers between gas--rich disks and less--massive dwarf galaxies are studied using numerical simulation. As the orbit of a satellite decays through dynamical friction, the primary disk develops large-amplitude spirals in response to its tidal forcing. While these features arise in both the stars and the gas in the disk, the non--axisymmetric structures in the gas differ slightly from those in the stars. In particular, as a consequence of the formation of strong shocks in the gas and the effects of radiative cooling, the gas response tends to lead the stellar response, enabling the stars to strongly torque the gas. These torques deprive the gas of its angular momentum, forcing a significant fraction of it into the inner regions of the disk. The radial inflows induced by these mergers accumulate large quantities of interstellar gas in the nuclear regions of the host disks. In some cases, nearly half of all the gas initially distributed throughout the disk winds up in a dense ``cloud'' several hundred parsecs in extent. The models reported here do not include star formation and, so, we cannot determine the ultimate fate of the gas. Nevertheless, given the high densities in the nuclear gas, it is plausible to identify these concentrations of dense gas in the remnants with those accompanying intense starbursts in some active galaxies. Therefore, the calculations here provide a framework for interpreting the origin of nuclear activity in otherwise quiescent disk galaxies. To the extent that galaxy formation is a chaotic process in which large structures are built up by the accretion of smaller fragments, our models may also be relevant to starbursts and the onset of nuclear activity in proto--galaxies at high redshifts.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Modelling feedback from stars and black holes in galaxy mergers

TL;DR: In this paper, a coarse-grained representation of the properties of the interstellar medium (ISM) and BH accretion starting from basic physical assumptions is proposed to incorporate feedback from star formation and black hole accretion into simulations of isolated and merging galaxies.
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A Unified, Merger-driven Model of the Origin of Starbursts, Quasars, the Cosmic X-Ray Background, Supermassive Black Holes, and Galaxy Spheroids

TL;DR: In this article, an evolutionary model for starbursts, quasars, and spheroidal galaxies is presented, in which mergers between gas-rich galaxies drive nuclear inflows of gas, producing starburst and feeding the buried growth of supermassive black holes (BHs) until feedback expels gas and renders a briefly visible optical quasar.
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A Cosmological Framework for the Co-Evolution of Quasars, Supermassive Black Holes, and Elliptical Galaxies. I. Galaxy Mergers and Quasar Activity

TL;DR: In this paper, a model for the cosmological role of mergers in the evolution of starbursts, quasars, and spheroidal galaxies is proposed.
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A unified model for the evolution of galaxies and quasars

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors incorporate a simple scheme for the growth of supermassive black holes into semi-analytic models that follow the formation and evolution of galaxies in a cold dark matter-dominated universe.
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The Compact Steep-Spectrum and Gigahertz Peaked-Spectrum Radio Sources

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