The "real" reason why some galaxies are flat

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the reasons why some galaxies, as well as phenomena like Saturn's rings, exhibit a flat shape. Participants explore various explanations related to angular momentum, rotation, and the physical processes involved in galaxy formation. The scope includes theoretical considerations and conceptual clarifications regarding the dynamics of galactic structures.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that the initial angular momentum of a forming galaxy causes particles to collide and settle into a common direction, leading to a flattened structure.
  • Others argue that the centrifugal force acting on rotating spheres causes them to flatten along their axis of rotation, with faster rotating galaxies becoming thinner and flatter.
  • A participant suggests that the relationship between angular momentum and energy dissipation plays a crucial role in determining the flatness of a galaxy, emphasizing that energy loss mechanisms differ between gas clouds and star systems.
  • One participant questions the validity of the second explanation, asking whether it contributes significantly to the overall effect of flattening.
  • Another participant notes that faster rotation speeds may lead to greater angular momentum, potentially supporting both models in explaining galaxy flatness.
  • There is a mention of the popular viewpoint that galactic disks form through conservation of angular momentum and other factors, including the mass of the galaxy relative to its dark matter halo.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the relative importance of the two proposed explanations for galaxy flatness. There is no consensus on which explanation is more accurate or how they might be interrelated, indicating that the discussion remains unresolved.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight the complexity of the processes involved in galaxy formation, including the roles of angular momentum, energy dissipation, and the nature of the materials involved (gas vs. stars). Limitations in understanding the contributions of these factors are acknowledged.

Afterthought
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I'm doing research on why some galaxies and other phenomenon like Saturn's rings are flat. There seems to be two answers. Here they are in shortened form:

1) When the galaxy is forming, there is some net angular momentum in some direction.Over time, all particles with an angular momentum pointing at some tilted direction will collide with other such particles, and will either be destroyed, ejected, or their tilts will be less extreme (Although I must admit I don't get who this will flatten it out, it seems to me this will only create a system where most particles are moving in the same direction). This appears to be the more popular explanation.

2) When spheres rotate, they are flattened along their axis of rotation due to the centrifugal force being stronger perpendicular to the axis of rotation. This is why the Earth is flattened a little bit. ICRAR in 2014 found that the faster a galaxy rotates, the thinner/flatter they are, which goes well with this explanation.

I'm confused which explanation is correct, or if both are - and if both, how they are related.
Thanks for any help.
 
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I think it's a bit of both.
As the progenitor gas cloud contracts the more the angular momentum settles into some overall direction.
If the eventual rotation velocity of forming stars is not particularly fast you get an eliptical galaxy, an oblate spheroid.
At faster rates of spin though, your second point becomes more noticible, to the point where it has a dominant effect on the shape of the galaxy.
That is, faster spinning galaxies are more likely to assume a disc shape, and the fastest of all should be the flatest ones.
 
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1) is much closer to reality, as the initial galactic cloud is nothing more than gas and dust, e.g., particles - certainly not a solid object like the Earth. The flattening occurs because though gravity is trying to collapse the cloud uniformly, the requirement that angular momentum be conserved prevents the collapse from fully occurring perpendicular to the axis of rotation.
 
It's not a matter of being "closer to reality" or not. It's a matter of fact. Is 2 true, or is not true? Or is it perhaps true, but it doesn't contribute much to the overall effect?
 
I think of it this way. An assembly of particles has two conserved quantities, the total energy and the total angular momentum. Friction between the particles allows kinetic energy to be converted to thermal energy, which can then be radiated away. So the assembly can lose total energy, but it has no effective way to lose total angular momentum. So it moves towards the state which has a minimum energy for a given amount of angular momentum, which is a rotating disk. So how 'flat' the system is is not simply a function of how fast it is rotating, meaning that your statement (2) doesn't really tell the whole story. It is determined by how far along the system is is this process of shedding energy. This is determined by a number of factors, including how much gas the system has and how old it is. The gas content is important because rotating gas clouds have friction which leads to energy dissipation, whereas systems containing only stars are nearly frictionless and so lose energy very slowly.
 
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Afterthought said:
ICRAR in 2014 found that the faster a galaxy rotates, the thinner/flatter they are, which goes well with this explanation.
Don't faster rotation speeds also contribute to greater angular momentum? I would think over time, there would be more interactions and therefore conservation of angular momentum would produce a flatter disk more efficiently. Wouldn't this then also contribute to the first model?
 
sunrah said:
Don't faster rotation speeds also contribute to greater angular momentum? I would think over time, there would be more interactions and therefore conservation of angular momentum would produce a flatter disk more efficiently. Wouldn't this then also contribute to the first model?
Hmm, that escaped me but that does seem to be correct.

I would still consider my question to be open for further explanations.
 
Afterthought said:
Hmm, that escaped me but that does seem to be correct.

I would still consider my question to be open for further explanations.

Honestly I can't remember anything about centrifugal forces in my galactic courses. Although I don't know why 2 seems wrong (apart from the fact that galaxies are not rigid bodies), the popular view point is that galactic disks (at least 1D models) are formed through conservation of angular momentum, a rotationally distributed exponential profile and having a galaxy mass considerably less than the dark matter halo mass.
 

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