Angular Momentum and Galaxy Formation Revisited: Scaling Relations for Disks and Bulges

Abstract

We show that the stellar specific angular momentum j*, mass M*, and bulge fraction beta* of normal galaxies of all morphological types are consistent with a simple model based on a linear superposition of independent disks and bulges. In this model, disks and bulges follow scaling relations of the form j*d ~ M*dalpha and j*b ~ M*balpha with alpha = 0.67 +/- 0.07 but offset from each other by a factor of 8 +/- 2 over the mass range 8.9 <= log M*/MSun <= 11.8. Separate fits for disks and bulges alone give alpha = 0.58 +/- 0.10 and alpha = 0.83 +/- 0.16, respectively. This model correctly predicts that galaxies follow a curved 2D surface in the 3D space of log j*, log M*, and beta*. We find no statistically significant indication that galaxies with classical and pseudo bulges follow different relations in this space, although some differences are permitted within the observed scatter and the inherent uncertainties in decomposing galaxies into disks and bulges. As a byproduct of this analysis, we show that the j*--M* scaling relations for disk-dominated galaxies from several previous studies are in excellent agreement with each other. In addition, we resolve some conflicting claims about the beta*-dependence of the j*--M* scaling relations. The results presented here reinforce and extend our earlier suggestion that the distribution of galaxies with different beta* in the j*--M* diagram constitutes an objective, physically motivated alternative to subjective classification schemes such as the Hubble sequence.

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