Toomre returned to MIT to teach after completing his Ph.D. and remained there for two years.[5] After spending a year at the Institute for Advanced Study,[7] he returned again to MIT as part of the faculty, where he stayed.[5] Toomre was appointed an Associate Professor of Mathematics at MIT in 1965, and Professor in 1970.[7]
Scientific accomplishments
In 1964, Toomre devised a local gravitational stability criterion for differentially rotating disks.[8] It is known as the Toomre stability criterion, which is usually measured by a parameter denoted as Q.[9] The Q parameter measures the relative
importance of vorticity and internal velocity dispersion (large values of which stabilise) versus the disk surface density (large values of which destabilise). The parameter is constructed so that Q<1 implies instability.
Toomre conducted the first computer simulations of galaxy mergers in the 1970s with his brother Jüri, an astrophysicist and solar physicist.[12][13] Although the small number of particles in the simulations obscured many processes in galactic collisions, Toomre and Toomre were able to identify tidal tails in his simulations, similar to those seen in the Antennae Galaxies and the Mice.[14][15][16] The brothers attempted to reproduce specific galaxy mergers in their simulations, and it was their reproduction of the Antennae galaxies that gave them the greatest pleasure.[17] In 1977 Toomre suggested that elliptical galaxies are the remnants of the major mergers of spiral galaxies.[18][19] He further showed that based on the local galaxy merger rate, over a Hubble time the observed number of elliptical galaxies are produced if the universe begins with only spiral galaxies.[20] This idea remained controversial and widely debated for some time.[21][22]
From this work, the Toomre brothers identified the process of collision evolution as the Toomre sequence.[23][24] The sequence begins with two well separated spiral galaxies and follows them (as for the Antennae) through collisional disruption until they settle into a single elliptical galaxy.[25]
Awards and honors
In 1993, Toomre received the Dirk Brouwer Award which recognizes "outstanding contributions to the field of Dynamical Astronomy".[26][27]
Toomre was one of the 1984 recipients of the MacArthur Fellowship, popularly known as the "Genius Grant".[1][28]
^V. Courtillot (Fall 2004). "A Short Review of True Polar Wander". AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts. 31: U31B–08. Bibcode:2004AGUFM.U31B..08C. abstract #U31B-08
^"The DDA/AAS Brouwer Award". American Astronomical Society/Division on Dynamical Astronomy. Archived from the original on 13 May 2007. Retrieved 2007-05-18.