290 research outputs found
The Environmental Dependence of the Evolving S0 Fraction
We reinvestigate the dramatic rise in the S0 fraction, f_S0, within clusters
since z ~ 0.5. In particular, we focus on the role of the global galaxy
environment on f_S0 by compiling, either from our own observations or the
literature, robust line-of-sight velocity dispersions, sigma's, for a sample of
galaxy groups and clusters at 0.1 < z < 0.8 that have uniformly determined,
published morphological fractions. We find that the trend of f_S0 with redshift
is twice as strong for sigma < 750 km/s groups/poor clusters than for
higher-sigma, rich clusters. From this result, we infer that over this redshift
range galaxy-galaxy interactions, which are more effective in lower-sigma
environments, are more responsible for transforming spiral galaxies into S0's
than galaxy-environment processes, which are more effective in higher-sigma
environments. The rapid, recent growth of the S0 population in groups and poor
clusters implies that large numbers of progenitors exist in low-sigma systems
at modest redshifts (~ 0.5), where morphologies and internal kinematics are
within the measurement range of current technology.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. 13 pages, 6
figure
Entropy scaling in galaxy clusters: insights from an XMM-Newton observation of the poor cluster A1983
An XMM-Newton observation of the cool (kT=2.1 keV) cluster A1983, at z=0.044,
is presented. Gas density and temperature profiles are calculated for the inner
500 h_{50}^{-1} kpc (~0.35 r_200). The outer regions of the surface brightness
profile are well described with a beta model with beta=0.74, but the central
regions require the introduction of a second component. The temperature profile
is flat at the exterior with a slight dip towards the centre. The total mass
profile, calculated assuming hydrostatic equilibrium, is consistent with an NFW
profile, but with a low concentration parameter c=3.75 +/- 0.74. The M/L_B
ratio profile shows that, at large scale, light traces mass to a reasonable
extent, and the M/L_B ratio at 0.35 r_200 is consistent with the trends with
mass observed in the optical. The M_Fe/L_B ratio is about two times less than
that observed for a cluster at 5 keV. The gas mass fraction rises rapidly to
level off at ~200 kpc; the value at 0.35 r_200 is ~8%. The scaling properties
of the emission measure profile are consistent with the empirical relation
\mgas \propto \Tx^{1.94}, and not with the self-similar relation \mgas \propto
\Tx^{1.5}. Comparison of the entropy profile of A1983 with that of the hot
cluster A1413 shows that the profiles are well scaled using the empirically
determined relation S \propto \Tx^{0.65}, suggesting that the slope of the S-T
relation is shallower than in the self-similar model. The form of the entropy
profiles is remarkably similar, and there is no sign of a larger isentropic
core in the cooler cluster. These data provide powerful agruments against
preheating models. In turn, there is now increasing observational support for a
trend of f_gas with system mass, which may go some way towards explaining the
observed scaling behaviour. (Abridged.)Comment: Final refereed version to appear in A&A; Figs 2, 7, 11 and 12 are low
re
The Evolution of [OII] Emission from Cluster Galaxies
We investigate the evolution of the star formation rate in cluster galaxies.
We complement data from the CNOC1 cluster survey (0.15<z<0.6) with measurements
from galaxy clusters in the 2dF galaxy redshift survey (0.05<z<0.1) and
measurements from recently published work on higher redshift clusters, up to
almost z=1. We focus our attention on galaxies in the cluster core, ie.
galaxies with r<0.7h^{-1}_{70}Mpc. Averaging over clusters in redshift bins, we
find that the fraction of galaxies with strong [OII] emission is < 20% in
cluster cores, and the fraction evolves little with redshift. In contrast,
field galaxies from the survey show a very strong increase over the same
redshift range. It thus appears that the environment in the cores of rich
clusters is hostile to star formation at all the redshifts studied. We compare
this result with the evolution of the colours of galaxies in cluster cores,
first reported by Butcher & Oemler (1984). Using the same galaxies for our
analysis of the [OII] emission, we confirm that the fraction of blue galaxies,
which are defined as galaxies 0.2 mag bluer in the rest frame B-V than the red
sequence of each cluster, increases strongly with redshift. Since the colours
of galaxies retain a memory of their recent star formation history, while
emission from the [OII] line does not, we suggest that these two results can
best be reconciled if the rate at which the clusters are being assembled is
higher in the past, and the galaxies from which it is being assembled are
typically bluer.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Discovery of Two Distant Type Ia Supernovae in the Hubble Deep Field North with the Advanced Camera for Surveys
We present observations of the first two supernovae discovered with the
recently installed Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) on the Hubble Space
Telescope. The supernovae were found in Wide Field Camera images of the Hubble
Deep Field North taken with the F775W, F850LP, and G800L optical elements as
part of the ACS guaranteed time observation program. Spectra extracted from the
ACS G800L grism exposures confirm that the objects are Type Ia supernovae (SNe
Ia) at redshifts z=0.47 and z=0.95. Follow-up HST observations have been
conducted with ACS in F775W and F850LP and with NICMOS in the near-infrared
F110W bandpass, yielding a total of 9 flux measurements in the 3 bandpasses
over a period of 50 days in the observed frame. We discuss many of the
important issues in doing accurate photometry with the ACS. We analyze the
multi-band light curves using two different fitting methods to calibrate the
supernovae luminosities and place them on the SNe Ia Hubble diagram. The
resulting distances are consistent with the redshift-distance relation of the
accelerating universe model, although evolving intergalactic grey dust remains
as a less likely possibility. The relative ease with which these SNe Ia were
found, confirmed, and monitored demonstrates the potential ACS holds for
revolutionizing the field of high-redshift SNe Ia, and therefore of testing the
accelerating universe cosmology and constraining the "epoch of deceleration".Comment: 11 pages, 8 embedded figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
What determines the fraction of elliptical galaxies in clusters?
We study the correlation between the morphological mix of cluster galaxies
and the assembly history of the parent cluster by taking advantage of two
independently developed semi-analytic models for galaxy formation and
evolution. In our models, both the number of cluster members and that of
elliptical members increase as a function of cluster mass, in such a way that
the resulting elliptical fractions are approximately independent of cluster
mass. The population of cluster ellipticals exhibit a marked bimodal
distribution as a function of galaxy stellar mass, with a dip at masses . In the framework of our models, this bimodality
originates from the combination of a strongly decreasing number of galaxies
with increasing stellar mass, and a correspondingly increasing probability of
experiencing major mergers. We show that the correlation between the measured
elliptical fraction and the assembly history of the parent cluster is weak, and
that it becomes stronger in models that adopt longer galaxy merger times. We
argue that this results from the combined effect of a decreasing bulge
production due to a reduced number of mergers, and an increasing survival
probability of pre-existing ellipticals, with the latter process being more
important than the former.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Exploring the NRO Opportunity for a Hubble-sized Wide-field Near-IR Space Telescope -- NEW WFIRST
We discuss scientific, technical and programmatic issues related to the use
of an NRO 2.4m telescope for the WFIRST initiative of the 2010 Decadal Survey.
We show that this implementation of WFIRST, which we call "NEW WFIRST," would
achieve the goals of the NWNH Decadal Survey for the WFIRST core programs of
Dark Energy and Microlensing Planet Finding, with the crucial benefit of deeper
and/or wider near-IR surveys for GO science and a potentially Hubble-like Guest
Observer program. NEW WFIRST could also include a coronagraphic imager for
direct detection of dust disks and planets around neighboring stars, a
high-priority science and technology precursor for future ambitious programs to
image Earth-like planets around neighboring stars.Comment: 76 pages, 26 figures -- associated with the Princeton "New Telescope
Meeting
Compact groups in theory and practice -- IV. The connection to large-scale structure
We investigate the properties of photometrically-selected compact groups
(CGs) in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. In this paper, the fourth in a series,
we focus on understanding the characteristics of our observed CG sample with
particular attention paid to quantifying and removing contamination from
projected foreground or background galaxies. Based on a simple comparison of
pairwise redshift likelihoods, we find that approximately half of compact
groups in the parent sample contain one or more projected (interloping)
members; our final clean sample contains 4566 galaxies in 1086 compact groups.
We show that half of the remaining CGs are associated with rich groups (or
clusters), i.e. they are embedded sub-structure. The other half have spatial
distributions and number-density profiles consistent with the interpretation
that they are either independently distributed structures within the field
(i.e. they are isolated) or associated with relatively poor structures.
Comparisons of late-type and red-sequence fractions in radial annuli show that
galaxies around apparently isolated compact groups resemble the field
population by 300 to 500 kpc from the group centre. In contrast, the galaxy
population surrounding embedded compact groups appears to remain distinct from
the field out beyond 1 to 2 Mpc, consistent with results for rich groups. We
take this as additional evidence that the observed distinction between compact
groups, i.e. isolated vs. embedded, is a separation between different host
environments.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Evolution in the Disks and Bulges of Group Galaxies since z=0.4
We present quantitative morphology measurements of a sample of optically
selected group galaxies at 0.3 < z < 0.55 using the Hubble Space Telescope
(HST) Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) and the GIM2D surface
brightness--fitting software package. The group sample is derived from the
Canadian Network for Observational Cosmology Field Redshift survey (CNOC2) and
follow-up Magellan spectroscopy. We compare these measurements to a similarly
selected group sample from the Millennium Galaxy Catalogue (MGC) at 0.05 < z <
0.12. We find that, at both epochs, the group and field fractional bulge
luminosity (B/T) distributions differ significantly, with the dominant
difference being a deficit of disk--dominated (B/T < 0.2) galaxies in the group
samples. At fixed luminosity, z=0.4 groups have ~ 5.5 +/- 2 % fewer
disk--dominated galaxies than the field, while by z=0.1 this difference has
increased to ~ 19 +/- 6 %. Despite the morphological evolution we see no
evidence that the group environment is actively perturbing or otherwise
affecting the entire existing disk population. At both redshifts, the disks of
group galaxies have similar scaling relations and show similar median
asymmetries as the disks of field galaxies. We do find evidence that the
fraction of highly asymmetric, bulge--dominated galaxies is 6 +/- 3 % higher in
groups than in the field, suggesting there may be enhanced merging in group
environments. We replicate our group samples at z=0.4 and z=0 using the
semi-analytic galaxy catalogues of Bower et al (2006). This model accurately
reproduces the B/T distributions of the group and field at z=0.1. However, the
model does not reproduce our finding that the deficit of disks in groups has
increased significantly since z=0.4.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 20 pages, 17 figure
Star formation activity of intermediate redshift cluster galaxies out to the infall regions
We present a spectroscopic analysis of two galaxy clusters out to ~4Mpc at
z~0.2. The two clusters VMF73 and VMF74 identified by Vikhlinin et al. (1998)
were observed with MOSCA at the Calar Alto 3.5m telescope. Both clusters lie in
the ROSAT PSPC field R285 and were selected from the X-ray Dark Cluster Survey
(Gilbank et al. 2004) that provides optical V- and I-band data. VMF73 and VMF74
are located at respective redshifts of z=0.25 and z=0.18 with velocity
dispersions of 671 km/s and 442 km/s, respectively. The spectroscopic
observations reach out to ~2.5 virial radii. Line strength measurements of the
emission lines H_alpha and [OII]3727 are used to assess the star formation
activity of cluster galaxies which show radial and density dependences. The
mean and median of both line strength distributions as well as the fraction of
star forming galaxies increase with increasing clustercentric distance and
decreasing local galaxy density. Except for two galaxies with strong H_alpha
and [OII] emission, all of the cluster galaxies are normal star forming or
passive galaxies. Our results are consistent with other studies that show the
truncation in star formation occurs far from the cluster centre.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures. A&A in pres
The Relation Between Galaxy Morphology and Environment in the Local Universe: An RC3-SDSS Picture
We present an analysis of the z ~ 0 morphology-environment relation for 911
bright (M_B < -19) galaxies, matching classical RC3 morphologies to the
SDSS-based group catalog of Yang et al. We study how the relative fractions of
spirals, lenticulars, and ellipticals depend on halo mass over a range of
10^11.7-10^14.8 h^-1 Msol. We pay particular attention to how morphology
relates to central (most massive) vs satellite galaxy status. The fraction of
galaxies which are elliptical is a strong function of stellar mass; it is also
a strong function of halo mass, but only for central galaxies. We interpret
this in a scenario where elliptical galaxies are formed, probably via mergers,
as central galaxies within their halos; satellite ellipticals are previously
central galaxies accreted onto larger halos. The overall fraction of S0
galaxies increases strongly with halo mass, from ~10% to ~70%. We find striking
differences between the central and satellites: 20+/-2% of central M_* >
10^10.5 Msol galaxies are S0 regardless of halo mass, but satellite S0 galaxies
are only found in massive (> 10^13 h^-1 Msol) halos, where they are 69+/-4% of
the M_* > 10^10.5 Msol satellite population. This suggests two channels for S0
formation: one for central galaxies, and another which transforms lower mass
(M_* <~ 10^11 Msol) accreted spirals into satellite S0 galaxies in massive
halos. Analysis of finer morphological structure (bars and rings in disk
galaxies) shows some trends with stellar mass, but none with halo mass; this is
consistent with other recent studies which indicate that bars are not strongly
influenced by galaxy environment. Radio sources in high-mass central galaxies
are common, similarly so for elliptical and S0 galaxies, with a frequency that
increases with halo mass. Emission-line AGN (mostly LINERs) are more common in
S0s, but show no strong environmental trends (abridged).Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal (ApJ
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