Effects of the Central Mass Concentration on Bar Formation in Disk Galaxies
Abstract
While bars are common in disk galaxies, their formation conditions are not well understood. We use N-body simulations to study bar formation and evolution in isolated galaxies consisting of a stellar disk, a classical bulge, and a dark halo. We consider 24 galaxy models that are similar to the Milky Way but differ in the mass and compactness of the classical bulge and halo concentration. We find that the bar formation requires (QT,min/1.2)2 + (CMC/0.05)2 1, where QT,min and CMC refers to the minimum value of the Toomre stability parameter and the central mass concentration, respectively. Bars tend to be stronger, longer, and rotate slower in galaxies with a less massive and less compact bulge and halo. All bars formed in our models correspond to slow bars. A model with the bulge mass of 10--20\% of the disk under a concentrated halo produces a bar similar to the Milky-Way bar. We discuss our findings in relation to other bar formation criteria suggested by previous studies.
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