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The role of external gas accretion on galaxy transformations, and evidence of such accretion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 March 2015

Françoise Combes*
Affiliation:
LERMA, CNRS, Observatoire de Paris, 61 Av de l'Observatoire, F-75014 Paris, France email: francoise.combes@obspm.fr
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Abstract

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Continuously accreting matter from cosmic filaments is one of the main way to assemble mass for galaxies (Keres et al.2005, Dekel et al.2009). This external accretion accelerates secular processes, and maintain star formation, but also bar and spiral formation (Bournaud & Combes 2002), and consequent radial migration. Secular evolution may alleviate the problem of too massive bulge formation in the standard LCDM hierarchical scenario. Inside out formation of galaxies may account for the evolution of the size-mass relation and evolution with redshift. I will show how gas accretion from the inter galactic medium can mimick perturbations due to galaxy interactions (cf Figure 1), and I will describe evidence of such accretion, through warps, polar rings or damped Lyman-α systems.

Type
Contributed Papers
Copyright
Copyright © International Astronomical Union 2015 

References

Bournaud, F. & Combes, F. 2002, A&A 392, 83Google Scholar
Dekel, A., et al. 2009, Nature 457, 451CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keres, D., et al. 2005, MNRAS 363, 2CrossRefGoogle Scholar