Abstract
The disks of disk galaxies contain a substantial fraction of their
baryonic matter and angular momentum, and much of the evolutionary
activity in these galaxies, such as the formation of stars, spiral arms,
bars and rings, and the various forms of secular evolution, takes place
in their disks. The formation and evolution of galactic disks are
therefore particularly important for understanding how galaxies form and
evolve and the cause of the variety in which they appear to us. Ongoing
large surveys, made possible by new instrumentation at wavelengths from
the UV (Galaxy Evolution Explorer), via optical (Hubble Space Telescope
and large groundbased telescopes) and IR (Spitzer Space Telescope), to
the radio are providing much new information about disk galaxies over a
wide range of redshift. Although progress has been made, the dynamics
and structure of stellar disks, including their truncations, are still
not well understood. We do now have plausible estimates of disk
mass-to-light ratios, and estimates of Toomre's Q parameter show that
they are just locally stable. Disks are mostly very flat and sometimes
very thin, and they have a range in surface brightness from canonical
disks with a central surface brightness of about 21.5 B-mag
arcsec-2 down to very low surface brightnesses. It
appears that galaxy disks are not maximal, except possibly in the
largest systems. Their Hi layers display warps whenever Hi can be
detected beyond the stellar disk, with low-level star formation going on
out to large radii. Stellar disks display abundance gradients that
flatten at larger radii and sometimes even reverse. The existence of a
well-defined baryonic (stellar + Hi) Tully-Fisher relation hints at an
approximately uniform baryonic to dark matter ratio. Thick disks are
common in disk galaxies, and their existence appears unrelated to the
presence of a bulge component; they are old, but their formation is not
yet understood. Disk formation was already advanced at redshifts of
˜2, but at that epoch disks were not yet quiescent and in full
rotational equilibrium. Downsizing (the gradual reduction with time in
the mass of the most actively star-forming galaxies) is now
well-established. The formation and history of star formation in S0s are
still not fully understood.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 301-371 |
Number of pages | 71 |
Journal | Annual Review of Astronomy and Astrophysics |
Volume | 49 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Sep-2011 |
Keywords
- disks in galaxies: abundance gradients
- chemical evolution
- disk stability
- formation
- luminosity distributions
- mass distributions
- SO galaxies
- scaling
- laws
- thick disks
- surveys
- warps and truncations
- ON SPIRAL GALAXIES
- STAR-FORMATION HISTORY
- TULLY-FISHER RELATION
- COLD DARK-MATTER
- BAND SURFACE PHOTOMETRY
- WESTERBORK HI SURVEY
- DIGITAL SKY SURVEY
- INITIAL MASS FUNCTION
- SUPERMASSIVE BLACK-HOLES
- HIGH-VELOCITY CLOUDS