Unstable Disk Galaxies. II. The Origin of Growing and Stationary Modes

I decompose the unstable growing modes of stellar disks to their Fourier components and present the physical mechanism of instabilities in the context of resonances. When the equilibrium distribution function is a nonuniform function of the orbital angular momentum, the capture of stars into the cor...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Astrophysical journal 2008-12, Vol.689 (1), p.134-147
1. Verfasser: Jalali, Mir Abbas
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:I decompose the unstable growing modes of stellar disks to their Fourier components and present the physical mechanism of instabilities in the context of resonances. When the equilibrium distribution function is a nonuniform function of the orbital angular momentum, the capture of stars into the corotation resonance imbalances the disk angular momentum and triggers growing bar and spiral modes. The stellar disk can then recover its angular momentum balance through the response of nonresonant stars. I carry out a complete analysis of orbital structure corresponding to each Fourier component in the radial angle and present a mathematical condition for the occurrence of van Kampen modes, which constitute a continuous family. I discuss the discreteness and allowable pattern speeds of unstable modes and argue that the mode growth is saturated due to the resonance overlapping mechanism. An individual growing mode can also be suppressed if the corotation and inner Lindblad resonances coexist and compete to capture a group of stars. Based on this mechanism, I show that self-consistent scale- free disks with a sufficient distribution of noncircular orbits should be stable under perturbations of angular wavenumber [image]. I also derive a criterion for the stability of stellar disks against nonaxisymmetric excitations.
ISSN:0004-637X
1538-4357
DOI:10.1086/592556