106 research outputs found
Night sky brightness at sites from DMSP-OLS satellite measurements
We apply the sky brightness modelling technique introduced and developed by
Roy Garstang to high-resolution DMSP-OLS satellite measurements of upward
artificial light flux and to GTOPO30 digital elevation data in order to predict
the brightness distribution of the night sky at a given site in the primary
astronomical photometric bands for a range of atmospheric aerosol contents.
This method, based on global data and accounting for elevation, Earth curvature
and mountain screening, allows the evaluation of sky glow conditions over the
entire sky for any site in the World, to evaluate its evolution, to disentangle
the contribution of individual sources in the surrounding territory, and to
identify main contributing sources. Sky brightness, naked eye stellar
visibility and telescope limiting magnitude are produced as 3-dimensional
arrays whose axes are the position on the sky and the atmospheric clarity. We
compared our results to available measurements.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS, 17 june 200
Spatially Resolved Stellar Kinematics of Field Early-Type Galaxies at z=1: Evolution of the Rotation Rate
We use the spatial information of our previously published VLT/FORS2
absorption line spectroscopy to measure mean stellar velocity and velocity
dispersion profiles of 25 field early-type galaxies at a median redshift z=0.97
(full range 0.6<z<1.2). This provides the first detailed study of early-type
galaxy rotation at these redshifts. From surface brightness profiles from HST
imaging we calculate two-integral oblate axisymmetric Jeans equation models for
the observed kinematics. Fits to the data yield for each galaxy the degree of
rotational support and the mass-to-light ratio M/L_Jeans. S0 and Sa galaxies
are generally rotationally supported, whereas elliptical galaxies rotate less
rapidly or not at all. Down to M(B)=-19.5 (corrected for luminosity evolution),
we find no evidence for evolution in the fraction of rotating early-type (E+S0)
galaxies between z=1 (63+/-11%) and the present (61+/-5%). We interpret this as
evidence for little or no change in the field S0 fraction with redshift. We
compare M/L_Jeans with M/L_vir inferred from the virial theorem and globally
averaged quantities and assuming homologous evolution. There is good agreement
for non-rotating (mostly E) galaxies. However, for rotationally supported
galaxies (mostly S0) M/L_Jeans is on average ~40% higher than M/L_vir. We
discuss possible explanations and the implications for the evolution of M/L
between z=1 and the present and its dependence on mass.Comment: To appear in ApJ 683 (9 pages, 7 figures). Minor changes included to
match published versio
Molecular Gas in Elliptical Galaxies: Distribution and Kinematics
I present interferometric images (approx. 7" resolution) of CO emission in
five elliptical galaxies and nondetections in two others. These data double the
number of elliptical galaxies whose CO emission has been fully mapped. The
sample galaxies have 10^8 to 5x10^9 solar masses of molecular gas distributed
in mostly symmetric rotating disks with diameters of 2 to 12 kpc. Four out of
the five molecular disks show remarkable alignment with the optical major axes
of their host galaxies. The molecular masses are a few percent of the total
dynamical masses which are implied if the gas is on circular orbits. If the
molecular gas forms stars, it will make rotationally supported stellar disks
which will be very similar in character to the stellar disks now known to be
present in many ellipticals. Comparison of stellar kinematics to gas kinematics
in NGC 4476 implies that the molecular gas did not come from internal stellar
mass loss because the specific angular momentum of the gas is about three times
larger than that of the stars.Comment: 47 pages, 6 tables, 27 figures. Accepted by AJ, scheduled for August
200
Dynamical Models of Elliptical Galaxies in z=0.5 Clusters: I. Data-Model Comparison and Evolution of Galaxy Rotation
We present spatially resolved stellar rotation velocity and velocity
dispersion profiles form Keck/LRIS absorption-line spectra for 25 galaxies,
mostly visually classified ellipticals, in three clusters at z=0.5. We
interpret the kinematical data and HST photometry using oblate axisymmetric
two-integral f(E,Lz) dynamical models based on the Jeans equations. This yields
good fits, provided that the seeing and observational characteristics are
carefully modeled. The fits yield for each galaxy the dynamical M/L and a
measure of the galaxy rotation rate. Paper II addresses the implied M/L
evolution. Here we study the rotation-rate evolution by comparison to a sample
of local elliptical galaxies of similar present-day luminosity. The brightest
galaxies in the sample all rotate too slowly to account for their flattening,
as is also observed at z=0. But the average rotation rate is higher at z=0.5
than locally. This may be due to a higher fraction of misclassified S0 galaxies
(although this effect is insufficient to explain the observed strong evolution
of the cluster S0 fraction with redshift). Alternatively, dry mergers between
early-type galaxies may have decreased the average rotation rate over time. It
is unclear whether such mergers are numerous enough in clusters to explain the
observed trend quantitatively. Disk-disk mergers may affect the comparison
through the so-called progenitor bias, but this cannot explain the direction of
the observed rotation-rate evolution. Additional samples are needed to
constrain possible environmental dependencies and cosmic variance in galaxy
rotation rates. Either way, studies of the internal stellar dynamics of distant
galaxies provide a valuable new approach for exploring galaxy evolution.Comment: ApJ, submitted; 17 pages formatted with emulateap
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