158 research outputs found
The X-Ray Zurich Environmental Study (X-ZENS). I. Chandra and XMM-Newton observations of active galactic nuclei in galaxies in nearby groups
We describe X-ray observations with Chandra and XMM-Newton of 18 galaxy
groups (M_group ~ 1-6x10^13 Msolar, z~0.05) from the Zurich Environmental Study
(ZENS). We aim to establish the frequency and properties, unaffected by host
galaxy dilution and obscuration, of AGNs in central and satellite galaxy
members, also as a function of halo-centric distance. X-ray point-source
detections are reported for 22 of 177 observed galaxies, down to a limit of
f_(0.5-8 keV) ~ 5x10^-15 erg cm^-2 s^-1, corresponding to a limiting luminosity
of L_(0.5-8 keV)~3x10^40 erg s^-1. With the majority of the X-ray sources
attributed to AGNs of low-to-moderate levels (L/L_Edd>~10^-4), we discuss the
detection rate in the context of the occupation of AGNs to halos of this mass
scale and redshift, and compare the structural/morphological properties between
AGN-active and non-active galaxies of different rank and location within the
group halos. We see a slight tendency for AGN hosts to have either relatively
brighter/denser disks (or relatively fainter/diffuse bulges) than non-active
galaxies of similar mass. At galaxy mass scales <10^11 Msolar, central galaxies
appear to be a factor ~4 more likely to host AGNs than satellite galaxies of
similar mass. This effect, coupled with the tendency for AGNs to reside in
massive galaxies, explains the (weak) trend for AGNs to be preferentially found
in the inner regions of groups, with no detectable trend with halo-centric
distance in the frequency of AGNs within the satellite population. Finally, our
data support other analyses in finding that the rate of decline with redshift
of AGN activity in groups matches that of the global AGN population, indicating
that either AGNs occur preferentially in groups, or that the evolution rate is
independent of halo mass. These trends are of potential importance, and require
X-ray coverage of a larger sample to be solidly confirmed.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures, submitted to The Astrophysical Journal, this is
a revised version that addresses the referee's comment
THE X-RAY ZURICH ENVIRONMENTAL STUDY (X-ZENS). II. X-RAY OBSERVATIONS OF THE DIFFUSE INTRAGROUP MEDIUM IN GALAXY GROUPS
We present the results of a pilot XMM-Newton and Chandra program aimed at studying the diffuse intragroup medium (IGM) of optically selected nearby groups from the Zurich ENvironmental Study (ZENS) catalog. The groups are in a narrow mass range about 10(13) M-circle dot, a mass scale at which the interplay between the IGM and the group member galaxies is still largely unprobed. X-ray emission from the IGM is detected in the energy band 0.5-2 keV with fluxPeer reviewe
The Zurich Environmental Study (ZENS) of galaxies in groups along the cosmic web. V. properties and frequency of merging satellites and centrals in different environments
We use the Zurich ENvironmental Study (ZENS) database to investigate the
environmental dependence of the merger fraction and merging galaxy
properties in a sample of ~1300 group galaxies with and
0.05<z<0.0585. In all galaxy mass bins investigated in our study, we find that
decreases by a factor of ~2-3 in groups with halo masses
relative to less massive systems, indicating a
suppression of merger activity in large potential wells. In the fiducial case
of relaxed groups only, we measure a variation dex, which is almost independent of galaxy mass
and merger stage. At galaxy masses , most mergers are dry
accretions of quenched satellites onto quenched centrals, leading to a strong
increase of with decreasing group-centric distance at these mass
scales.Both satellite and central galaxies in these high mass mergers do not
differ in color and structural properties from a control sample of nonmerging
galaxies of equal mass and rank. At galaxy masses , where
we mostly probe satellite-satellite pairs and mergers between star-forming
systems, close pairs (projected distance kpc) show instead
enhanced (specific) star formation rates and
larger sizes than similar mass, nonmerging satellites. The increase in both
size and SFR leads to similar surface star-formation densities in the merging
and control-sample satellite populations.Comment: Published in ApJ, 797, 12
A Survey of Atomic Carbon [C I] in High-redshift Main-Sequence Galaxies
We present the first results of an ALMA survey of the lower fine structure
line of atomic carbon [C I] in far infrared-selected
galaxies on the main sequence at in the COSMOS field. We compare our
sample with a comprehensive compilation of data available in the literature for
local and high-redshift starbursting systems and quasars. We show that the [C
I]() luminosity correlates on global scales with the
infrared luminosity similarly to low- CO transitions. We report
a systematic variation of / as a
function of the galaxy type, with the ratio being larger for main-sequence
galaxies than for starbursts and sub-millimeter galaxies at fixed .
The / and / mass ratios are similar for main-sequence galaxies and for
local and high-redshift starbursts within a 0.2 dex intrinsic scatter,
suggesting that [C I] is a good tracer of molecular gas mass as CO and dust. We
derive a fraction of %
of the total carbon mass in the atomic neutral phase. Moreover, we estimate the
neutral atomic carbon abundance, the fundamental ingredient to calibrate [C I]
as a gas tracer, by comparing and available
gas masses from CO lines and dust emission. We find lower [C I] abundances in
main-sequence galaxies than in starbursting systems and sub-millimeter
galaxies, as a consequence of the canonical and gas-to-dust
conversion factors. This argues against the application to different galaxy
populations of a universal standard [C I] abundance derived from highly biased
samples.Comment: 14 pages + Appendix. Accepted for publication in ApJ. All the data
tables in Appendix will be also released in electronic forma
CO excitation of normal star forming galaxies out to z=1.5 as regulated by the properties of their interstellar medium
We investigate the CO excitation of normal star forming galaxies at z=1.5 using IRAM PdBI observations of the CO[2-1], CO[3-2] and CO[5-4] transitions for 4 galaxies, and VLA observations of CO[1-0] for 3 of them, measuring reliable line fluxes with S/N>4-7 for individual transitions. While the average CO Spectral Line Energy Distribution (SLED) has a sub-thermal excitation similar to the Milky Way (MW) up to CO[3-2], we show that the average CO[5-4] emission is 4 times stronger than assuming MW excitation. This demonstrates the presence of an additional component of more excited, denser and possibly warmer molecular gas. The ratio of CO[5-4] to lower-J CO emission is however lower than in local (U)LIRGs and high-redshift starbursting SMGs, and appears to correlate closely with the average intensity of the radiation field and with the star formation surface density, but not with SF efficiency (SFE). This suggests that the overall CO excitation is at least indirectly affected by the metallicity of the ISM. The luminosity of the CO[5-4] transition is found to correlate linearly with the bolometric infrared luminosity over 4 orders of magnitudes, with BzK galaxies following the same linear trend as local spirals and (U)LIRGs and high redshift star bursting sub-millimeter galaxies. The CO[5-4] luminosity is thus related to the dense gas, and might be a more convenient way to probe it than standard high--density tracers. We see excitation variations among our sample galaxies, linked to their evolutionary state and clumpiness in optical rest frame images. In one galaxy we see spatially resolved excitation variations, the more highly excited part corresponds to the location of massive SF clumps. This provides support to models that suggest that giant clumps are the main source of the high excitation CO emission in high redshift disk-like galaxies
The Suppression of Star Formation and the Effect of Galaxy Environment in Low-Redshift Galaxy Groups
Understanding the interaction between galaxies and their surroundings is
central to building a coherent picture of galaxy evolution. Here we use GALEX
imaging of a statistically representative sample of 23 galaxy groups at z=0.06
to explore how local and global group environment affect the UV properties and
dust-corrected star formation rates of their member galaxies. The data provide
star formation rates out to beyond 2R_200 in all groups, down to a completeness
limit and limiting galaxy stellar mass of 0.06 M_sun/yr and 10^8 M_sun,
respectively. At fixed galaxy stellar mass, we find that the fraction of
star-forming group members is suppressed relative to the field out to an
average radius of R ~ 1.5 Mpc ~ 2R_200, mirroring results for massive clusters.
For the first time we also report a similar suppression of the specific star
formation rate within such galaxies, on average by 40% relative to the field,
thus directly revealing the impact of the group environment in quenching star
formation within infalling galaxies. At fixed galaxy density and stellar mass,
this suppression is stronger in more massive groups, implying that both local
and global group environment play a role in quenching. The results favor an
average quenching timescale of at least ~2 Gyr and strongly suggest that a
combination of tidal interactions and starvation is responsible. Despite their
past and ongoing quenching, galaxy groups with more than four members still
account for at least ~25% of the total UV output in the nearby universe.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures. ApJ accepte
Early- and late-stage mergers among main sequence and starburst galaxies at 0.2 ≤ z ≤ 2
We investigate the fraction of close pairs and morphologically identified mergers on and above the star-forming main sequence (MS) at 0.2 ≤ z ≤2.0. The novelty of our work lies in the use of a non-parametric morphological classification performed on resolved stellar mass maps, reducing the contamination by non-interacting, high-redshift clumpy galaxies. We find that the merger fraction rapidly rises to ≥70 per cent above the MS, implying that - already at z ≳ 1 - starburst (SB) events (∆MS ≥ 0.6) are almost always associated with a major merger (1:1 to 1:6 mass ratio). The majority of interacting galaxies in the SB region are morphologically disturbed, late-stage mergers. Pair fractions show little dependence on MS offset and pairs are more prevalent than late-stage mergers only in the lower half of the MS. In our sample, major mergers on the MS occur with a roughly equal frequency of ̃5-10 per cent at all masses ≳ 1010 M☉. The MS major merger fraction roughly doubles between z = 0.2 and 2, with morphological mergers driving the overall increase at z ≳ 1. The differential redshift evolution of interacting pairs and morphologically classified mergers on the MS can be reconciled by evolving observability time-scales for both pairs and morphological disturbances. The observed variation of the late-stage merger fraction with ∆MS follows the perturbative 2-Star Formation Mode model, where any MS galaxy can experience a continuum of different star formation rate enhancements. This points to an SB-merger connection not only for extreme events, but also more moderate bursts which merely scatter galaxies upward within the MS, rather than fully elevating them above it
Bailing Out the Milky Way: Variation in the Properties of Massive Dwarfs Among Galaxy-Sized Systems
Recent kinematical constraints on the internal densities of the Milky Way's
dwarf satellites have revealed a discrepancy with the subhalo populations of
simulated Galaxy-scale halos in the standard CDM model of hierarchical
structure formation. This has been dubbed the "too big to fail" problem, with
reference to the improbability of large and invisible companions existing in
the Galactic environment. In this paper, we argue that both the Milky Way
observations and simulated subhalos are consistent with the predictions of the
standard model for structure formation. Specifically, we show that there is
significant variation in the properties of subhalos among distinct host halos
of fixed mass and suggest that this can reasonably account for the deficit of
dense satellites in the Milky Way. We exploit well-tested analytic techniques
to predict the properties in a large sample of distinct host halos with a
variety of masses spanning the range expected of the Galactic halo. The
analytic model produces subhalo populations consistent with both Via Lactea II
and Aquarius, and our results suggest that natural variation in subhalo
properties suffices to explain the discrepancy between Milky Way satellite
kinematics and these numerical simulations. At least ~10% of Milky Way-sized
halos host subhalo populations for which there is no "too big to fail" problem,
even when the host halo mass is as large as M_host = 10^12.2 h^-1 M_sun.
Follow-up studies consisting of high-resolution simulations of a large number
of Milky Way-sized hosts are necessary to confirm our predictions. In the
absence of such efforts, the "too big to fail" problem does not appear to be a
significant challenge to the standard model of hierarchical formation.
[abridged]Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures; accepted by JCAP. Replaced with published
versio
Individual Risks and their Social Outcomes
This dissertation presents and defends an ethical outlook based on two guiding ideas: first, there is a plurality of rationally permissible attitudes towards risks that involve our welfare or well-being; and second, an ethical deliberator should defer to rational individuals’ attitudes towards risk when assessing policies with uncertain consequences that affect them. John Harsanyi famously argued that deferring to people’s preferences under risk leads to utilitarianism. Amartya Sen and John Weymark pointed out that Harsanyi’s argument relies on a contentious interpretation of decision theory under risk—according to which, effectively, only one attitude towards risks involving our well-being, that of risk neutrality, is rationally permissible. As the Sen-Weymark critique clarifies, Harsanyi’s stance is untenable if our quantitative notion of well-being is independent of preferences formed in conditions of risk. Chapter 1 argues that this is indeed the case: our quantitative notion of well-being depends on comparisons between outcomes with no uncertainty. It defends a method for deriving quantities of well-being based on conjoint measurement between objective goods. Chapter 2 explores the space of possibilities that our two guiding ideas leave us with; it shows that under weak assumptions they are incompatible with welfarism, the view that all we need to know in order to evaluate outcomes is how people’s well-being is distributed. It then presents a dilemma for non-welfarist views: they either entail that risk attitudes affect the moral significance of well-being in contexts of zero risk, or they struggle to vindicate the thought that improving everyone’s well-being is an important ethical concern. Chapter 3 sides with the first horn of this dilemma. It offers a defense of a position I call the Risk-Priority View: on this theory, the ethical import of an individual ending up with a certain amount of well-being is affected by that individual’s risk attitude. Roughly, more risk-averse individuals get priority in dire circumstances, while more risk-seeking individuals get priority in favorable ones
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