311 research outputs found
Gamma-Rays from Dark Matter Mini-Spikes in M31
The existence of a population of wandering Intermediate Mass Black Holes
(IMBHs) is a generic prediction of scenarios that seek to explain the formation
of Supermassive Black Holes in terms of growth from massive seeds. The growth
of IMBHs may lead to the formation of DM overdensities called "mini-spikes",
recently proposed as ideal targets for indirect DM searches. Current
ground-based gamma-ray experiments, however, cannot search for these objects
due to their limited field of view, and it might be challenging to discriminate
mini-spikes in the Milky Way from the many astrophysical sources that GLAST is
expected to observe. We show here that gamma-ray experiments can effectively
search for IMBHs in the nearby Andromeda galaxy (also known as M31), where
mini-spikes would appear as a distribution of point-sources, isotropically
distributed in a \thickapprox 3^{\circ} circle around the galactic center. For
a neutralino-like DM candidate with a mass m_{\chi}=150 GeV, up to 20 sources
would be detected with GLAST (at 5\sigma, in 2 months). With Air Cherenkov
Telescopes such as MAGIC and VERITAS, up to 10 sources might be detected,
provided that the mass of neutralino is in the TeV range or above.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Investigating the Andromeda Stream: II. Orbital Fits and Properties of the Progenitor
We construct test-particle orbits and simple N-body models that match the
properties of the giant stellar stream observed to the south of M31, using the
model of M31's potential derived in the companion paper by Geehan et al.
(2006). We introduce a simple approximation to account for the difference in
position between the stream and the orbit of the progenitor; this significantly
affects the best-fitting orbits. The progenitor orbits we derive have orbital
apocenter \sim 60 \kpc and pericenter \sim 3 \kpc, though these quantities
vary somewhat with the current orbital phase of the progenitor which is as yet
unknown. Our best combined fit to the stream and galaxy properties implies a
mass within 125 kpc of M31 of (7.4 \pm 1.2) \times 10^{11} \Msun. Based on
its length, width, luminosity, and velocity dispersion, we conclude that the
stream originates from a progenitor satellite with mass M_s \sim 10^9 \Msun,
and at most modest amounts of dark matter; the estimate of is again
correlated with the phase of the progenitor. M31 displays a large number of
faint features in its inner halo which may be progenitors or continuations of
the stream. While the orbital fits are not constrained enough for us to
conclusively identify the progenitor, we can identify several plausible
candidates, of which a feature in the planetary nebula distribution found by
Merrett et al. is the most plausible, and rule out several others. We make
predictions for the kinematic properties of the successful candidates. These
may aid in observational identification of the progenitor object, which would
greatly constrain the allowed models of the stream.Comment: 17 pages, 10 color figures, 4 tables. Accepted by Monthly Notices;
some minor revisions and corrected typo
Darwin Tames an Andromeda Dwarf: Unraveling the Orbit of NGC 205 Using a Genetic Algorithm
NGC 205, a close satellite of the M31 galaxy, is our nearest example of a
dwarf elliptical galaxy. Photometric and kinematic observations suggest that
NGC 205 is undergoing tidal distortion from its interaction with M31. Despite
earlier attempts, the orbit and progenitor properties of NGC 205 are not well
known. We perform an optimized search for these unknowns by combining a genetic
algorithm with restricted N-body simulations of the interaction. This approach,
coupled with photometric and kinematic observations as constraints, allows for
an effective exploration of the parameter space. We represent NGC 205 as a
static Hernquist potential with embedded massless test particles that serve as
tracers of surface brightness. We explore 3 distinct, initially stable
configurations of test particles: cold rotating disk, warm rotating disk, and
hot, pressure-supported spheroid. Each model reproduces some, but not all, of
the observed features of NGC 205, leading us to speculate that a rotating
progenitor with substantial pressure support could match all of the
observables. Furthermore, plausible combinations of mass and scale length for
the pressure-supported spheroid progenitor model reproduce the observed
velocity dispersion profile. For all 3 models, orbits that best match the
observables place the satellite 11+/-9 kpc behind M31 moving at very large
velocities: 300-500 km/s on primarily radial orbits. Given that the observed
radial component is only 54 km/s, this implies a large tangential motion for
NGC 205, moving from the NW to the SE. These results suggest NGC 205 is not
associated with the stellar arc observed to the NE of NGC 205. Furthermore, NGC
205's velocity appears to be near or greater than its escape velocity,
signifying that the satellite is likely on its first M31 passage.Comment: 34 pages, 20 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal, A pdf version with high-resolution figures may be obtained from
http://www.ucolick.org/~kirsten/ms.pd
Tracing Galaxy Formation with Stellar Halos II: Relating Substructure in Phase- and Abundance-Space to Accretion Histories
This paper explores the mapping between the observable properties of a
stellar halo in phase- and abundance-space and the parent galaxy's accretion
history in terms of the characteristic epoch of accretion and mass and orbits
of progenitor objects. The study utilizes a suite of eleven stellar halo models
constructed within the context of a standard LCDM cosmology. The results
demonstrate that coordinate-space studies are sensitive to the recent (0-8
Gyears ago) merger histories of galaxies (this timescale corresponds to the
last few to tens of percent of mass accretion for a Milky-Way-type galaxy).
Specifically, the {\it frequency, sky coverage} and {\it fraction of stars} in
substructures in the stellar halo as a function of surface brightness are
indicators of the importance of recent merging and of the luminosity function
of infalling dwarfs. The {\it morphology} of features serves as a guide to the
orbital distribution of those dwarfs. Constraints on the earlier merger history
(> 8 Gyears ago) can be gleaned from the abundance patterns in halo stars:
within our models, dramatic differences in the dominant epoch of accretion or
luminosity function of progenitor objects leave clear signatures in the
[alpha/Fe] and [Fe/H] distributions of the stellar halo - halos dominated by
very early accretion have higher average [alpha/Fe], while those dominated by
high luminosity satellites have higher [Fe/H]. This intuition can be applied to
reconstruct much about the merger histories of nearby galaxies from current and
future data sets.Comment: 21 pages, 20 figures. To appear in the Astrophysical Journa
Origin of rotational kinematics in the globular cluster system of M31: A new clue to the bulge formation
We propose that the rotational kinematics of the globular cluster system
(GCS) in M31 can result from a past major merger event that could have formed
its bulge component. We numerically investigate kinematical properties of
globular clusters (GCs) in remnants of galaxy mergers between two disks with
GCs in both their disk and halo components. We find that the GCS formed during
major merging can show strongly rotational kinematics with the maximum
rotational velocities of 140 - 170 km/s for a certain range of orbital
parameters of merging. We also find that a rotating stellar bar, which can be
morphologically identified as a boxy bulge if seen edge-on, can be formed in
models for which the GCSs show strongly rotational kinematics. We thus suggest
that the observed rotational kinematics of GCs with different metallicities in
M31 can be closely associated with the ancient major merger event. We discuss
whether the formation of the rotating bulge/bar in M31 can be due to the
ancient merger.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, accepted in MNRAS Letter
A kinematically selected, metal-poor stellar halo in the outskirts of M31
We present evidence for a metal-poor, [Fe/H] =0.2 dex,
stellar halo component detectable at radii from 10 kpc to 70 kpc, in our
nearest giant spiral neighbor, the Andromeda galaxy. This metal-poor sample
underlies the recently-discovered extended rotating component, and has no
detected metallicity gradient. This discovery uses a large sample of 9861
radial velocities of Red Giant Branch (RGB) stars obtained with the Keck-II
telescope and DEIMOS spectrograph, with 827 stars with robust radial velocity
measurements isolated kinematically to lie in the halo component primarily by
windowing out the extended rotating component which dominates the photometric
profile of Andromeda out to 50 kpc (de-projected). The stars lie in 54
spectroscopic fields spread over an 8 square degree region, and are expected to
fairly sample the halo to a radius of 70 kpc. The halo sample shows no
significant evidence for rotation. Fitting a simple model in which the velocity
dispersion of the component decreases with radius, we find a central velocity
dispersion of 152\kms decreasing by -0.90\kms/\kpc. By fitting a
cosmologically-motivated NFW halo model to the halo stars we constrain the
virial mass of M31 to be greater than 9.0 \times 10^{11} \msun with 99%
confidence. The properties of this halo component are very similar to that
found in our Milky Way, revealing that these roughly equal mass galaxies may
have led similar accretion and evolutionary paths in the early Universe.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures, accepted in ApJ. substantially revised versio
The Detailed Star Formation History in the Spheroid, Outer Disk, and Tidal Stream of the Andromeda Galaxy
Using the Advanced Camera for Surveys on the Hubble Space Telescope, we have
obtained deep optical images reaching stars well below the oldest main sequence
turnoff in the spheroid, tidal stream, and outer disk of the Andromeda Galaxy.
We have reconstructed the star formation history in these fields by comparing
their color-magnitude diagrams to a grid of isochrones calibrated to Galactic
globular clusters observed in the same bands. Each field exhibits an extended
star formation history, with many stars younger than 10 Gyr but few younger
than 4 Gyr. Considered together, the star counts, kinematics, and population
characteristics of the spheroid argue against some explanations for its
intermediate-age, metal-rich population, such as a significant contribution
from stars residing in the disk or a chance intersection with the stream's
orbit. Instead, it is likely that this population is intrinsic to the inner
spheroid, whose highly-disturbed structure is clearly distinct from the
pressure-supported metal-poor halo that dominates farther from the galaxy's
center. The stream and spheroid populations are similar, but not identical,
with the stream's mean age being ~1 Gyr younger; this similarity suggests that
the inner spheroid is largely polluted by material stripped from either the
stream's progenitor or similar objects. The disk population is considerably
younger and more metal-rich than the stream and spheroid populations, but not
as young as the thin disk population of the solar neighborhood; instead, the
outer disk of Andromeda is dominated by stars of age 4 - 8 Gyr, resembling the
Milky Way's thick disk. The disk data are inconsistent with a population
dominated by ages older than 10 Gyr, and in fact do not require any stars older
than 10 Gyr.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. 29 pages, 23
figures (including 9 in color), latex. Updated for minor edits and additional
references. Images and CMDs are significantly smoothed and degraded in this
version; a version with high-quality figures is available at
http://www.stsci.edu/~tbrown/m31sfh/preprint.pd
Strangers in the night: Discovery of a dwarf spheroidal galaxy on its first Local Group infall
We present spectroscopic observations of the AndXII dwarf spheroidal galaxy
using DEIMOS/Keck-II, showing it to be moving rapidly through the Local Group
(-556 km/s heliocentric velocity, -281 km/s relative to Andromeda from the MW),
falling into the Local Group from ~115 kpc beyond Andromeda's nucleus. AndXII
therefore represents a dwarf galaxy plausibly falling into the Local Group for
the first time, and never having experienced a dense galactic environment. From
Green Bank Telescope observations, a limit on the H{I} gas mass of <3000 Msun
suggests that AndXII's gas could have been removed prior to experiencing the
tides of the Local Group galaxies. Orbit models suggest the dwarf is close to
the escape velocity of M31 for published mass models. AndXII is our best direct
evidence for the late infall of satellite galaxies, a prediction of
cosmological simulations.Comment: 4 pages 5 figures 1 table, accepted in ApJ, july issu
Wide-Field Survey of Globular Clusters in M31. II. Kinematics of the Globular Cluster System
We present a kinematic analysis of the globular cluster(GC) system in M31.
Using the photometric and spectroscopic database of 504 GCs, we have
investigated the kinematics of the M31 GC system. We find that the all GC
system shows strong rotation, with rotation amplitude of v_rot~190km/s, and
that a weak rotation persists even for the outermost samples at |Y|>5kpc. The
rotation-corrected velocity dispersion for the GC system is estimated to be
sigma_{p,r}~130km/s, and it increases from sigma_{p,r}~120km/s at |Y|<1kpc to
sigma_{p,r}~150km/s at |Y|>5kpc. These results are very similar to those for
the metal-poor GCs. This shows that there is a dynamically hot halo in M31 that
is rotating but primarily pressure-supported. We have identified 50
"friendless" GCs, and they appear to rotate around the major axis of M31. For
the subsamples of metal-poor and metal-rich GCs, we have found that the
metal-rich GCs are more centrally concentrated than the metal-poor GCs, and
both subsamples show strong rotation. For the subsamples of bright and faint
GCs, it is found that the rotation for the faint GCs is stronger than that for
the bright GCs. We have identified 56 GCs and GC candidates with X-ray
detection. It is found that the majority of X-ray emitting GCs follow the disk
rotation, and that the redder, more metal-rich, and brighter GCs are more
likely to be detected as X-ray emitting GCs. We have derived a rotation curve
of M31 using the GCs at |Y|<0.6kpc. We have estimated the dynamical mass of M31
using `Projected Mass Estimator(PME)' and `Tracer Mass Estimator(TME)'. We
finally discuss the implication of these results and compare the kinematics of
GCs with that of planetary nebulae in M31.Comment: 62 pages, 26 figues, Accepted by Ap
Morphological And Cytochemical Characterization Of Rat Adrenocortical Cells in vitro
Primary monolayer cultures of adrenocortical cells were established from adult female rats of the Wistar strain by single treatment with collagenase type II. This lot of collagenase had been evaluated for collagenase, clostripain, caseinase, and tryptic enzyme activities. The adrenocortical cells were maintained in Dulbecco's Modified Eagle's Medium, Fetal Calf Serum, and gentamycin. Morphological observation of cultures revealed the presence of epithelial cortical cells and absence of medullary cells (epithelial or fibroblastic). The cells contained cytoplasmic lipid granules. In an attempt to localize sites of 3 Beta - hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity, cytochemical experiments were performed
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