772 research outputs found
An N-body/SPH Study of Isolated Galaxy Mass Density Profiles
We investigate the evolution of mass density profiles in secular disk galaxy
models, paying special attention to the development of a two-component profile
from a single initial exponential disk free of cosmological evolution (i.e., no
accretion or interactions). As the source of density profile variations, we
examine the parameter space of the spin parameter, halo concentration, virial
mass, disk mass and bulge mass, for a total of 162 simulations in the context
of a plausible model of star formation and feedback (GADGET-2). The evolution
of the galaxy mass density profile, including the development of a
two-component profile with an inner and outer segment, is controlled by the
ratio of the disk mass fraction, , to the halo spin parameter,
. The location of the break between the two components and speed at
which it develops is directly proportional to ; the amplitude of
the transition between the inner and outer regions is however controlled by the
ratio of halo concentration to virial velocity. The location of the divide
between the inner and outer profile does not change with time. (Abridged)Comment: 27 pages, 31 figures. Accepted for publication at MNRAS. A
high-resolution version of the paper with figures can be found here
http://www.mpia-hd.mpg.de/~foyle/papers/MN-07-1491-MJ.R1.pd
The dark matter halo shape of edge-on disk galaxies - II. Modelling the HI observations: methods
This is the second paper of a series in which we attempt to put constraints
on the flattening of dark halos in disk galaxies. For this purpose, we observe
the HI in edge-on galaxies, where it is in principle possible to measure the
force field in the halo vertically and radially from gas layer flaring and
rotation curve decomposition respectively. To calculate the force fields, we
need to analyse the observed XV diagrams to accurately measure all three
functions that describe the planar kinematics and distribution of a galaxy: the
radial HI surface density, the rotation curve and the HI velocity dispersion.
In this paper, we discuss the improvements and limitations of the methods
previously used to measure these HI properties. We extend the constant velocity
dispersion method to include determination of the HI velocity dispersion as a
function of galactocentric radius and perform extensive tests on the quality of
the fits. We will apply this 'radial decomposition XV modelling method' to our
HI observations of 8 HI-rich, late-type, edge-on galaxies in the third paper of
this series.Comment: Accepted for publication by Astronomy & Astrophysics. For a higher
resolution version see
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~vdkruit/jea3/homepage/12566.pd
Star formation thresholds and galaxy edges: why and where
We study global star formation thresholds in the outer parts of galaxies by
investigating the stability of disk galaxies embedded in dark halos. The disks
are self-gravitating, contain metals and dust, and are exposed to UV radiation.
We find that the critical surface density for the existence of a cold
interstellar phase depends only weakly on the parameters of the model and
coincides with the empirically derived surface density threshold for star
formation. Furthermore, it is shown that the drop in the thermal velocity
dispersion associated with the transition from the warm to the cold gas phase
triggers gravitational instability on a wide range of scales. The presence of
strong turbulence does not undermine this conclusion if the disk is
self-gravitating. Models based on the hypothesis that the onset of thermal
instability determines the star formation threshold in the outer parts of
galaxies can reproduce many observations, including the threshold radii, column
densities, and the sizes of stellar disks as a function of disk scale length
and mass. Finally, prescriptions are given for implementing star formation
thresholds in (semi-)analytic models and three-dimensional hydrodynamical
simulations of galaxy formation.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal. Version 2: text significantly revised (major improvements), physics
unchanged. Version 3: minor correction
Revisiting the Scale Length-mu0 Plane and the Freeman Law in the Local Universe
We have used Virtual Observatory technology to analyse the disk scale length
and central surface brightness for a sample of 29955 bright disk galaxies from
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We use the results in the r-band and revisit the
relation between these parameters and the galaxy morphology, and find the
average disk surface brightness of 20.2(0.7) mag/arcsec^2. We confirm that late
type spirals populate the lower left corner of the scale length-mu0 plane and
that the early and intermediate spirals are mixed in this diagram, with disky
ellipticals at the top left corner. We further investigate the Freeman Law and
affirm that it indeed defines an upper limit for the disk central surface
brightness in bright galaxies, and that disks in late type spirals have fainter
central surface brightness. Our results are based on a volume corrected sample
of galaxies in the local universe (z < 0.3) that is two orders of magnitudes
larger than any sample previously studied, and deliver statistically
significant implications that provide a comprehensive test bed for future
theoretical studies and numerical simulations of galaxy formation and
evolution.Comment: ApJL, in pres
Radial Profiles of Star Formation in the Far Outer Regions of Galaxy Disks
Star formation in galaxies is triggered by a combination of processes,
including gravitational instabilities, spiral wave shocks, stellar compression,
and turbulence compression. Some of these persist in the far outer regions
where the column density is far below the threshold for instabilities, making
the outer disk cutoff somewhat gradual. We show that in a galaxy with a single
exponential gas profile the star formation rate can have a double exponential
with a shallow one in the inner part and a steep one in the outer part. Such
double exponentials have been observed recently in the broad-band intensity
profiles of spiral and dwarf Irregular galaxies. The break radius in our model
occurs slightly outside the threshold for instabilities provided the Mach
number for compressive motions remains of order unity to large radii. The ratio
of the break radius to the inner exponential scale length increases for higher
surface brightness disks because the unstable part extends further out. This is
also in agreement with observations. Galaxies with extended outer gas disks
that fall more slowly than a single exponential, such as 1/R, can have their
star formation rate scale approximately as a single exponential with radius,
even out to 10 disk scale lengths. Halpha profiles should drop much faster than
the star formation rate as a result of the rapidly decreasing ambient density.Comment: To appear in ApJ. Available from
ftp.lowell.edu/pub/dah/papers/sfouterdisks
Diffuse HI Disks in Isolated Galaxies
In order to investigate the contribution of diffuse components to their total
HI emission, we have obtained high precision HI line flux densities with the
100m Green Bank Telescope for a sample of 100 isolated spiral and irregular
galaxies which we have previously observed with the 43m telescope. A comparison
of the observed HI line fluxes obtained with the two different telescopes,
characterized by half-power beam widths of 9 arcmin and 21 arcmin respectively,
exploits a ``beam matching'' technique to yield a statistical determination of
the occurrence of diffuse HI components in their disks. A simple model of the
HI distribution within a galaxy well describes ~75 % of the sample and accounts
for all of the HI line flux density. The remaining galaxies are approximately
evenly divided into two categories: ones which appear to possess a
significantly more extensive HI distribution than the model predicts, and ones
for which the HI distribution is more centrally concentrated than predicted.
Examples of both extremes can be found in the literature but little attention
has been paid to the centrally concentrated HI systems. Our sample has
demonstrated that galaxies do not commonly possess extended regions of low
surface brightness HI gas which is not accounted for by our current
understanding of the structure of HI disks. Eight HI-rich companions to the
target objects are identified, and a set of extragalactic HI line flux density
calibrators is presented.Comment: 26 page
Stellar populations across the NGC4244 truncated galactic disk
We use HST/ACS to study the resolved stellar populations of the nearby,
nearly edge-on galaxy NGC4244 across its outer disk surface density break. The
stellar photometry allows us to study the distribution of different stellar
populations and reach very low equivalent surface brightnesses. We find that
the break occurs at the same radius for young, intermediate age, and old stars.
The stellar density beyond the break drops sharply by a factor of at least 600
in 5 kpc. The break occurs at the same radius independent of height above the
disk, but is sharpest in the midplane and nearly disappears at large heights.
These results make it unlikely that truncations are caused by a star formation
threshold alone: the threshold would have to keep the same radial position from
less than 100 Myr to 10 Gyr ago, in spite of potential disturbances such as
infall and redistribution of gas by internal processes. A dynamical
interpretation of truncation formation is more likely such as due to angular
momentum redistribution by bars or density waves, or heating and stripping of
stars caused by the bombardment of dark matter sub-halos. The latter
explanation is also in quantitative agreement with the small diffuse component
we see around the galaxy.Comment: ApJ Letters, in press. Five pages, 2 figure
Truncations of stellar disk and warps of HI-layers in edge-on spiral galaxies
Edge-on spiral galaxies often have stellar disks with relatively sharp
truncations and warped HI-layers in the outer parts. Warps appear to start
preferentially near the optical boundaries of the disks. Here we make a
comparative study of warps and truncations in edge-on galaxies. The
Garc\'{\i}a-Ruiz et al. (2002) sample with extensive HI-mapping is complemented
with luminosity distributions from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The method to
identify truncations has been tested using the sample of edge-on galaxies of
van der Kruit & Searle. Results are: (i.) The majority (17 out of 23) of the
galaxies show evidence for truncations. (ii.) When an HI-warp is present it
starts at 1.1 truncation radii. (iii.) This supplements the rules for warps
formulated by Briggs (1990), if the Holmberg radius is replaced for edge-on
systems with the truncation radius. (iv.) The truncation radius and the onset
of the warps coincide radially with features in the rotation curve and the HI
surface density. The latter is also true for less inclined systems. (v.) Inner
disks are very flat and the onset of the warp just beyond the truncation radius
is abrupt and discontinuous. These findings suggest that the inner flat disk
and the outer warped disk are distinct components with quite different
formation histories, probably involving quite different epochs. The inner disk
forms initially and the warped outer disk forms as a result of much later
infall of gas with a higher angular momentum in a different orientation. In an
appendix the Holmberg radius is discussed. Contrary to what is often assumed
Holmberg radii are not corrected for inclination.Comment: Accepted for pubication by Astronomy & Astrophysic
Structure, mass and stability of galactic disks
In this review I concentrate on three areas related to structure of disks in
spiral galaxies. First I will review the work on structure, kinematics and
dynamics of stellar disks. Next I will review the progress in the area of
flaring of HI layers. These subjects are relevant for the presence of dark
matter and lead to the conclusion that disk are in general not `maximal', have
lower M/L ratios than previously suspected and are locally stable w.r.t.
Toomre's Q criterion for local stability. I will end with a few words on
`truncations' in stellar disks.Comment: Invited review at "Galaxies and their Masks" for Ken Freeman's 70-th
birthday, Sossusvlei, Namibia, April 2010. A version with high-res. figures
is available at
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~vdkruit/jea3/homepage/Namibiachapter.pd
The Globular Cluster System of the Virgo Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy VCC 1087
We have analysed the globular cluster (GC) system of the nucleated dwarf
elliptical galaxy VCC 1087 in the Virgo cluster, based on Keck/LRIS
spectroscopy and archival HST/ACS imaging. We estimate VCC 1087 hosts a total
population of 77+/-19 GCs, which corresponds to a relatively high V-band
specific frequency of 5.8+/-1.4. The g-z color distribution of the GCs shows a
blue (metal-poor) peak with a tail of redder (metal-rich) clusters similar in
color to those seen in luminous ellipticals. Spectroscopy of a subsample of 12
GCs suggests that the GC system is old and coeval (~10 Gyr), with a fairly
broad metallicity distribution (-1.8<[m/H]<-0.8). In contrast, an integrated
spectrum of the underlying galaxy starlight reveals that its optical luminosity
is dominated by metal-rich, intermediate-aged stars. Radial velocities of the
GCs suggest rotation close to the major axis of the galaxy, and this rotation
is dynamically significant with (v/sigma)^* >1. A compilation of the kinematics
of the GC systems of 9 early-type galaxies shows surprising diversity in the
v/sigma parameter for GC systems. In this context, the GC system of VCC 1087
exhibits the most significant rotation to velocity dispersion signature.
Modeling the velocity dispersion profile of the GCs and galaxy stars suggest
fairly constant mass-to-light ratios of ~3 out to 6.5 kpc. The present
observations can entertain both baryonic and non-baryonic solutions, and GC
velocities at larger radii would be most valuable with regard to this issue. We
discuss the evolution of VCC 1087 in terms of the galaxy ``harassment''
scenario, and conclude that this galaxy may well be the remains of a faded,
tidally perturbed Sc spiral [abridged].Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures, to appear in the A
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