Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing, Swinburne University, PO Box 218, Hawthorn, Victoria 3122, Australia.
Nature. 2010 Oct 7;467(7316):684-6. doi: 10.1038/nature09452.
Observations of star formation and kinematics in early galaxies at high spatial and spectral resolution have shown that two-thirds are massive rotating disk galaxies, with the remainder being less massive non-rotating objects. The line-of-sight-averaged velocity dispersions are typically five times higher than in today's disk galaxies. This suggests that gravitationally unstable, gas-rich disks in the early Universe are fuelled by cold, dense accreting gas flowing along cosmic filaments and penetrating hot galactic gas halos. These accreting flows, however, have not been observed, and cosmic accretion cannot power the observed level of turbulence. Here we report observations of a sample of rare, high-velocity-dispersion disk galaxies in the nearby Universe where cold accretion is unlikely to drive their high star formation rates. We find that their velocity dispersions are correlated with their star formation rates, but not their masses or gas fractions, which suggests that star formation is the energetic driver of galaxy disk turbulence at all cosmic epochs.
高空间和光谱分辨率下对早期星系中恒星形成和运动学的观测表明,三分之二的星系是大质量旋转盘星系,其余的则是较小质量的非旋转物体。视线平均速度离散度通常比当今盘状星系高五倍。这表明,早期宇宙中不稳定的、富含气体的盘状物质是由沿着宇宙纤维流动并穿透热星系气体晕的冷、密集的吸积气体所驱动的。然而,这些吸积流尚未被观测到,宇宙吸积也无法为观测到的湍流水平提供动力。在这里,我们报告了对附近宇宙中一组罕见的高速弥散盘星系样本的观测结果,在这些星系中,冷吸积不太可能驱动它们的高恒星形成率。我们发现,它们的速度离散度与恒星形成率相关,但与质量或气体分数无关,这表明在所有宇宙时代,恒星形成都是星系盘湍流的能量驱动因素。