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      The Delayed Formation of Dwarf Galaxies

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          Abstract

          One of the largest uncertainties in understanding the effect of a background UV field on galaxy formation is the intensity and evolution of the radiation field with redshift. This work attempts to shed light on this issue by computing the quasi-hydrostatic equilibrium states of gas in spherically symmetric dark matter halos (roughly corresponding to dwarf galaxies) as a function of the amplitude of the background UV field. We integrate the full equations of radiative transfer, heating, cooling and non-equilibrium chemistry for nine species: H, H^+, H^-,H_2, H_2^+, He, He^+, He^{++}, and e^-. As the amplitude of the UV background is decreased the gas in the core of the dwarf goes through three stages characterized by the predominance of ionized (H^+), neutral (H) and molecular (H_2) hydrogen. Characterizing the gas state of a dwarf galaxy with the radiation field allows us to estimate its behavior for a variety of models of the background UV flux. Our results indicate that a typical radiation field can easily delay the collapse of gas in halos corresponding to 1-\(\sigma\) CDM perturbations with circular velocities less than 30 km/s.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          09 April 1997
          Article
          10.1086/304602
          astro-ph/9704076
          796f85c7-61e1-4fff-97d9-3379b4af0827
          History
          Custom metadata
          ApJ 487 (1997) 61
          23 pages (including 8 figures). Figures 3 and 8 best viewed in color
          astro-ph

          General astrophysics
          General astrophysics

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