Angular Momentum Regulates Atomic Gas Fractions of Galactic Disks
Abstract
We show that the mass fraction fatm = 1.35*MHI/M of neutral atomic gas (HI and He) in isolated local disk galaxies of baryonic mass M is well described by a straightforward stability model for flat exponential disks. In the outer disk parts, where gas at the characteristic dispersion of the warm neutral medium is stable in the sense of Toomre (1964), the disk consists of neutral atomic gas; conversely the inner part where this medium would be Toomre-unstable, is dominated by stars and molecules. Within this model, fatm only depends on a global stability parameter q=j*sigma/(GM), where j is the baryonic specific angular momentum of the disk and sigma the velocity dispersion of the atomic gas. The analytically derived first-order solution fatm = min1,2.5q1.12 provides a good fit to all plausible rotation curves. This model, with no free parameters, agrees remarkably well (+-0.2 dex) with measurements of fatm in isolated local disk galaxies, even with galaxies that are extremely HI-rich or HI-poor for their mass. The finding that fatm increases monotonically with q for pure stability reasons offers a powerful intuitive explanation for the mean variation of fatm with M: in a cold dark matter universe galaxies are expected to follow j~M(2/3), which implies the average scaling q~M(-1/3) and hence fatm~M(-0.37), in agreement with observations.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.