Secular Evolution and the Formation of Pseudobulges in Disk Galaxies
The University of Texas at Austin · University of Arizona
Abstract
▪ Abstract The Universe is in transition. At early times, galactic evolution was dominated by hierarchical clustering and merging, processes that are violent and rapid. In the far future, evolution will mostly be secular—the slow rearrangement of energy and mass that results from interactions involving collective phenomena such as bars, oval disks, spiral structure, and triaxial dark halos. Both processes are important now. This review discusses internal secular evolution, concentrating on one important consequence, the buildup of dense central components in disk galaxies that look like classical, merger-built bulges but that were made slowly out of disk gas. We call these pseudobulges. We begin with an…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 36.86
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 370
Authors
2- JKJohn KormendyCorresponding
The University of Texas at Austin
- RCRobert C. Kennicutt
University of Arizona
Topics & keywords
- Galaxy
- Star formation
- Spiral galaxy
- Galaxy formation and evolution
- Elliptical galaxy
- Bulge
- Star cluster
- Lenticular galaxy