English

Global lopsided instability in a purely stellar galactic disc

Astrophysics 2009-11-13 v1

Abstract

It is shown that pure exponential discs in spiral galaxies are capable of supporting slowly varying discrete global lopsided modes, which can explain the observed features of lopsidedness in the stellar discs. Using linearized fluid dynamical equations with the softened self-gravity and pressure of the perturbation as the collective effect, we derive self-consistently a quadratic eigenvalue equation for the lopsided perturbation in the galactic disc. On solving this, we find that the ground-state mode shows the observed characteristics of the lopsidedness in a galactic disc, namely the fractional Fourier amplitude A1_1 increases smoothly with the radius. These lopsided patterns precess in the disc with a very slow pattern speed with no preferred sense of precession. We show that the lopsided modes in the stellar disc are long-lived because of a substantial reduction (\sim a factor of 10 compared to the local free precession rate) in the differential precession. The numerical solution of the equations shows that the ground-state lopsided modes are either very slowly precessing stationary normal mode oscillations of the disc or growing modes with a slow growth rate depending on the relative importance of the collective effect of the self-gravity. N-body simulations are performed to test the spontaneous growth of lopsidedness in a pure stellar disc. Both approaches are then compared and interpreted in terms of long-lived global m=1m=1 instabilities, with almost zero pattern speed.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0708.2873,
  title  = {Global lopsided instability in a purely stellar galactic disc},
  author = {K. Saha and F. Combes and C. Jog},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0708.2873},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

15 pages, 23 figures, accepted in MNRAS

R2 v1 2026-06-21T09:09:23.420Z