Why the Milky Way's bulge is not only a bar formed from a cold thin disk

By analyzing a N-body simulation of a bulge formed simply via a bar instability mechanism operating on a kinematically cold stellar disk, and by comparing the results of this analysis with the structural and kinematic properties of the main stellar populations of the Milky Way bulge, we conclude tha...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2014-11
Hauptverfasser: P Di Matteo, Gomez, A, Haywood, M, Combes, F, Lehnert, M D, Ness, M, Snaith, O N, Katz, D, Semelin, B
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:By analyzing a N-body simulation of a bulge formed simply via a bar instability mechanism operating on a kinematically cold stellar disk, and by comparing the results of this analysis with the structural and kinematic properties of the main stellar populations of the Milky Way bulge, we conclude that the bulge of our Galaxy is not a pure stellar bar formed from a pre-existing thin stellar disk, as some studies have recently suggested. On the basis of several arguments emphasized in this paper, we propose that the bulge population which, in the Milky Way, is observed not to be part of the peanut structure corresponds to the old galactic thick disk, thus implying that the Milky Way is a pure thin+thick disk galaxy, with only a possible limited contribution of a classical bulge.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1411.1416