1,503 research outputs found
Why stellar feedback promotes disc formation in simulated galaxies
We study how feedback influences baryon infall onto galaxies using
cosmological, zoom-in simulations of haloes with present mass
to . Starting
at z=4 from identical initial conditions, implementations of weak and strong
stellar feedback produce bulge- and disc-dominated galaxies, respectively.
Strong feedback favours disc formation: (1) because conversion of gas into
stars is suppressed at early times, as required by abundance matching
arguments, resulting in flat star formation histories and higher gas fractions;
(2) because 50% of the stars form in situ from recycled disc gas with angular
momentum only weakly related to that of the z=0 dark halo; (3) because
late-time gas accretion is typically an order of magnitude stronger and has
higher specific angular momentum, with recycled gas dominating over primordial
infall; (4) because 25-30% of the total accreted gas is ejected entirely before
z~1, removing primarily low angular momentum material which enriches the nearby
inter-galactic medium. Most recycled gas roughly conserves its angular
momentum, but material ejected for long times and to large radii can gain
significant angular momentum before re-accretion. These processes lower galaxy
formation efficiency in addition to promoting disc formation.Comment: 23 pages, 29 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The STACEE-32 Ground Based Gamma-ray Detector
We describe the design and performance of the Solar Tower Atmospheric
Cherenkov Effect Experiment detector in its initial configuration (STACEE-32).
STACEE is a new ground-based gamma ray detector using the atmospheric Cherenkov
technique. In STACEE, the heliostats of a solar energy research array are used
to collect and focus the Cherenkov photons produced in gamma-ray induced air
showers. The large Cherenkov photon collection area of STACEE results in a
gamma-ray energy threshold below that of previous detectors.Comment: 45 pages, 25 figures, Accepted for publication in Nuclear Instruments
and Methods
Short-lived star-forming giant clumps in cosmological simulations of z~2 disks
Many observed massive star-forming z\approx2 galaxies are large disks that
exhibit irregular morphologies, with \sim1kpc, \sim10^(8-10)Msun clumps. We
present the largest sample to date of high-resolution cosmological SPH
simulations that zoom-in on the formation of individual M*\sim10^(10.5)Msun
galaxies in \sim10^(12)Msun halos at z\approx2. Our code includes strong
stellar feedback parameterized as momentum-driven galactic winds. This model
reproduces many characteristic features of this observed class of galaxies,
such as their clumpy morphologies, smooth and monotonic velocity gradients,
high gas fractions (f_g\sim50%) and high specific star-formation rates
(\gtrsim1Gyr^(-1)). In accord with recent models, giant clumps
(Mclump\sim(5x10^8-10^9)Msun) form in-situ via gravitational instabilities.
However, the galactic winds are critical for their subsequent evolution. The
giant clumps we obtain are short-lived and are disrupted by wind-driven mass
loss. They do not virialise or migrate to the galaxy centers as suggested in
recent work neglecting strong winds. By phenomenologically implementing the
winds that are observed from high-redshift galaxies and in particular from
individual clumps, our simulations reproduce well new observational constraints
on clump kinematics and clump ages. In particular, the observation that older
clumps appear closer to their galaxy centers is reproduced in our simulations,
as a result of inside-out formation of the disks rather than inward clump
migration.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
Constraints on Gamma-ray Emission from the Galactic Plane at 300 TeV
We describe a new search for diffuse ultrahigh energy gamma-ray emission
associated with molecular clouds in the galactic disk. The Chicago Air Shower
Array (CASA), operating in coincidence with the Michigan muon array (MIA), has
recorded over 2.2 x 10^{9} air showers from April 4, 1990 to October 7, 1995.
We search for gamma rays based upon the muon content of air showers arriving
from the direction of the galactic plane. We find no significant evidence for
diffuse gamma-ray emission, and we set an upper limit on the ratio of gamma
rays to normal hadronic cosmic rays at less than 2.4 x 10^{-5} at 310 TeV (90%
confidence limit) from the galactic plane region: (50 degrees < l < 200
degrees); -5 degrees < b < 5 degrees). This limit places a strong constraint on
models for emission from molecular clouds in the galaxy. We rule out
significant spectral hardening in the outer galaxy, and conclude that emission
from the plane at these energies is likely to be dominated by the decay of
neutral pions resulting from cosmic rays interactions with passive target gas
molecules.Comment: Astrophysical Journal, submitted, 11 pages, AASTeX Latex, 3
Postscript figure
The ATLAS3D project - XXVI : H I discs in real and simulated fast and slow rotators
One quarter of all nearby early-type galaxies (ETGs) outside Virgo host a disc/ring of H I with size from a few to tens of kpc and mass up to ∼109 M⊙. Here we investigate whether this H I is related to the presence of a stellar disc within the host making use of the classification of ETGs in fast and slow rotators (FR/SR). We find a large diversity of H I masses and morphologies within both families. Surprisingly, SRs are detected as often, host as much H I and have a similar rate of H I discs/rings as FRs. Accretion of H I is therefore not always linked to the growth of an inner stellar disc. The weak relation between H I and stellar disc is confirmed by their frequent kinematical misalignment in FRs, including cases of polar and counterrotating gas. In SRs the H I is usually polar. This complex picture highlights a diversity of ETG formation histories which may be lost in the relative simplicity of their inner structure and emerges when studying their outer regions. We find that Λ CDM hydrodynamical simulations have difficulties reproducing the H I properties of ETGs. The gas discs formed in simulations are either too massive or too small depending on the star formation feedback implementation. Kinematical misalignments match the observations only qualitatively. The main point of conflict is that nearly all simulated FRs and a large fraction of all simulated SRs host corotating H I. This establishes the H I properties of ETGs as a novel challenge to simulationsPeer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
The ATLAS3D project - XXV: Two-dimensional kinematic analysis of simulated galaxies and the cosmological origin of fast and slow rotators
We present a detailed two-dimensional stellar dynamical analysis of as ample of 44 cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of individual central galaxies with stellar masses of 2 x 1010Msun ∼≤ Mstar ∼≤ 6x 1011Msun. Kinematic maps of the stellar line-of-sight velocity, velocity dispersion, and higher-order Gauss-Hermite moments h3 and h4 are constructed for each central galaxy and for the most massive satellites. The amount of rotation is quantified using the λR-parameter. The velocity, velocity dispersion, h3, and h4 fields of the simulated galaxies show a diversity similar to observed kinematic maps of early-type galaxies in the ATLAS3D survey. This includes fast (regular), slow, and misaligned rotation, hot spheroids with embedded cold disk components as well as galaxies with counter-rotating cores or central depressions in the velocity dispersion. We link the present-day kinematic properties to the individual cosmological formation histories of the galaxies. In general, major galaxy mergers have a significant influence on the rotation properties resulting in both a spin-down as well as a spin-up of the merger remnant. Lower mass galaxies with significant in-situ formation of stars, or with additional gas-rich major mergers - resulting in a spin-up - in their formation history, form elongated fast rotators with a clear anti-correlation of h3 and v/σ. An additional formation path for fast rotators includes gas-poor major mergers leading to a spin-up of the remnants. This formation path does not result in anti-correlated h3 and v/σ. The galaxies most consistent with the rare class of non-rotating round early-type galaxies grow by gas-poor minor mergers alone. In general, more massive galaxies have less in-situ star formation since z ∼ 2, rotate slower and have older stellar populations. (shortened)PostprintPeer reviewe
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