937 research outputs found
Giant disk galaxies : Where environment trumps mass in galaxy evolution
We identify some of the most HI massive and fastest rotating disk galaxies in
the local universe with the aim of probing the processes that drive the
formation of these extreme disk galaxies. By combining data from the Cosmic
Flows project, which has consistently reanalyzed archival galaxy HI profiles,
and 3.6m photometry obtained with the Spitzer Space Telescope, with which
we can measure stellar mass, we use the baryonic Tully-Fisher (BTF)
relationship to explore whether these massive galaxies are distinct. We discuss
several results, but the most striking is the systematic offset of the
HI-massive sample above the BTF. These galaxies have both more gas and more
stars in their disks than the typical disk galaxy of similar rotational
velocity. The "condensed" baryon fraction, , the fraction of the baryons
in a dark matter halo that settle either as cold gas or stars into the disk, is
twice as high in the HI-massive sample than typical, and almost reaches the
universal baryon fraction in some cases, suggesting that the most extreme of
these galaxies have little in the way of a hot baryonic component or cold
baryons distributed well outside the disk. In contrast, the star formation
efficiency, measured as the ratio of the mass in stars to that in both stars
and gas, shows no difference between the HI-massive sample and the typical disk
galaxies. We conclude that the star formation efficiency is driven by an
internal, self-regulating process, while is affected by external factors.
We also found that the most massive HI detected galaxies are located
preferentially in filaments. We present the first evidence of an environmental
effect on galaxy evolution using a dynamical definition of a filament.Comment: 14 pages, in press MNRA
Deep imaging of Eridanus II and its lone star cluster
We present deep imaging of the most distant dwarf discovered by the Dark
Energy Survey, Eridanus II (Eri II). Our Magellan/Megacam stellar photometry
reaches mag deeper than previous work, and allows us to confirm the
presence of a stellar cluster whose position is consistent with Eri II's
center. This makes Eri II, at , the least luminous galaxy known to
host a (possibly central) cluster. The cluster is partially resolved, and at
it accounts for of Eri II's luminosity. We derive
updated structural parameters for Eri II, which has a half-light radius of
pc and is elongated (), at a measured
distance of kpc. The color-magnitude diagram displays a blue,
extended horizontal branch, as well as a less populated red horizontal branch.
A central concentration of stars brighter than the old main sequence turnoff
hints at a possible intermediate-age ( Gyr) population; alternatively,
these sources could be blue straggler stars. A deep Green Bank Telescope
observation of Eri II reveals no associated atomic gas.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures; ApJL accepte
Microlens Parallax Asymmetries Toward the LMC
If the microlensing events now being detected toward the Large Magellanic
Cloud (LMC) are due to lenses in the Milky Way halo, then the events should
typically have asymmetries of order 1% due to parallax from the reflex motion
of the Earth. By contrast, if the lenses are in the LMC, the parallax effects
should be negligible. A ground-based search for such parallax asymmetries would
therefore clarify the location of the lenses. A modest effort (2 hours per
night on a 1 m telescope) could measure 15 parallax asymmetries over 5 years
and so marginally discriminate between the halo and the LMC as the source of
the lenses. A dedicated 1 m telescope would approximately double the number of
measurements and would therefore clearly distinguish between the alternatives.
However, compared to satellite parallaxes, the information extracted from
ground-based parallaxes is substantially less useful for understanding the
nature of the halo lenses (if that is what they are). The backgrounds of
asymmetries due to binary-source and binary-lens events are estimated to be
approximately 7% and 12% respectively. These complicate the interpretation of
detected parallax asymmetries, but not critically.Comment: Submitted to ApJ, 17 pages, including 2 embedded figure
The Caustic Ring Model of the Milky Way Halo
We present a proposal for the full phase space distribution of the Milky Way
halo. The model is axially and reflection symmetric and its time evolution is
self-similar. It describes the halo as a set of discrete dark matter flows with
stated densities and velocity vectors everywhere. We first discuss the general
conditions under which the time evolution of a cold collisionless
self-gravitating fluid is self-similar, and show that symmetry is not necessary
for self-similarity. When spherical symmetry is imposed, the model is the same
as described by Fillmore and Goldreich, and by Bertschinger, twenty-three years
ago. The spherically symmetric model depends on one dimensionless parameter
and two dimensionful parameters. We set = 0.3, a value
consistent with the slope of the power spectrum of density perturbations on
galactic scales. The dimensionful parameters are determined by the Galactic
rotation velocity (220 km/s) at the position of the Sun and by the age of the
Galaxy (13.7 Gyr). The properties of the outer caustics are derived in the
spherically symmetric model. The structure of the inner halo depends on the
angular momentum distribution of the dark matter particles. We assume that
distribution to be axial and reflection symmetric, and dominated by net overall
rotation. The inner caustics are rings whose radii are determined in terms of a
single additional parameter . We summarize the observational
evidence in support of the model. The evidence is consistent with
= 0.18 in Concordance Cosmology, equivalent to = 0.26 in
Einstein - de Sitter cosmology. We give formulas to estimate the flow densities
and velocity vectors anywhere in the Milky Way halo. The properties of the
first forty flows at the location of the Earth are listed.Comment: 35 pages, 6 figure
The Environment of ``E+A'' Galaxies
The violent star formation history of ``E+A'' galaxies and their detection
almost exclusively in distant clusters is frequently used to link them to the
``Butcher-Oemler effect'' and to argue that cluster environment influences
galaxy evolution. From 11113 spectra in the Las Campanas Redshift Survey, we
have obtained a unique sample of 21 nearby ``E+A" galaxies. Surprisingly, a
large fraction (about 75%) of these ``E+A''s lie in the field. Therefore,
interactions with the cluster environment, in the form of the ICM or cluster
potential, are not essential for ``E+A'' formation. If one mechanism is
responsible for ``E+A''s, their existence in the field and the tidal features
in at least 5 of the 21 argue that galaxy-galaxy interactions and mergers are
that mechanism. The most likely environments for such interactions are poor
groups, which have lower velocity dispersions than clusters and higher galaxy
densities than the field. In hierarchical models, groups fall into clusters in
greater numbers at intermediate redshifts than they do today. Thus, the
Butcher-Oemler effect may reflect the typical evolution of galaxies in groups
and in the field rather than the influence of clusters on star formation in
galaxies. This abstract is abridged.Comment: 39 uuencoded, compressed pages (except Fig 1), complete preprint at
ftp://ociw.edu/pub/aiz/eplusa.ps, ApJ, submitte
Cluster detection from surface-brightness fluctuations in SDSS data
Galaxy clusters can be detected as surface brightness enhancements in
smoothed optical surveys. This method does not require individual galaxies to
be identifiable, and enables clusters to be detected out to surprisingly high
redshifts, as recently demonstrated by the Las Campanas Distant Cluster Survey
(LCDCS). Here, we investigate redshift limits for cluster detection in the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). Calibrating assumptions about the surface
brightness profile, the mass-to-light ratio, and the spectral energy
distribution of galaxy clusters using available observational data, we show
that it should be possible to detect galaxy groups out to redshifts of ~0.5,
and massive galaxy clusters out to redshifts of ~1.2 in summed r'+i'+z' SDSS
data. Redshift estimates can be derived from the SDSS magnitudes of brightest
cluster members out to redshifts near unity. Over the area of sky it covers,
SDSS should find >~98% of the clusters detectable by the Planck satellite
through the thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect. The few Planck clusters not
detected in SDSS will almost all be at z>~1.2.Comment: 7 pages, submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysic
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