The rapid onset of stellar bars in the baryon-dominated centers of disk galaxies

Abstract

Recent observations of high-redshift galactic disks (z≈ 1-3) show a strong negative trend in the dark matter fraction fDM with increasing baryonic surface density. For this to be true, the inner baryons must dominate over dark matter in early massive galaxies, as observed in the Milky Way today. If disks are dominant at early times, we show that stellar bars form promptly within these disks, leading to a high bar fraction at early times. New JWST observations provide the best evidence to date for mature stellar bars in this redshift range. The disk mass fraction fdisk within Rs=2.2 Rdisk is the dominant factor in determining how rapidly a bar forms. Using 3D hydro simulations of halo-disk-bulge galaxies, we confirm the "Fujii relation" for the exponential dependence of the bar formation time τbar as a function of fdisk. For fdisk > 0.3, the bar formation time declines exponentially fast with increasing fdisk. This relation is a challenge to simulators - barred models with inadequate resolution fall off this curve. Instead of Fujii's arbitrary threshold for when a bar forms, for the first time, we exploit the exponential growth timescale associated with a positive feedback cycle as the bar emerges from the underlying disk. A modified, mass-dependent trend is observed for halos relevant to systems at cosmic noon (10.5 < Mhalo < 12), where the bar onset is slower for higher mass halos at a fixed fdisk. If baryons dominate over dark matter within R ≈ Rs, we predict that a high fraction of bars will be found in high-redshift disks long before z = 1. Due to its widespread use in simulations, we investigate the Efstathiou-Lake-Negroponte criterion for bar instability: this sub-optimal parameter is inversely related to fdisk, with a secondary dependence on Mhalo.

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