709 research outputs found
The Bifurcated Age-Metallicity Relation of Milky Way Globular Clusters and its Implications For the Accretion History of the Galaxy
We use recently derived ages for 61 Milky Way (MW) globular clusters (GCs) to
show that their age-metallicity relation (AMR) can be divided into two
distinct, parallel sequences at [Fe/H] \ga -1.8. Approximately one-third of
the clusters form an offset sequence that spans the full range in age (--13 Gyr), but is more metal rich at a given age by dex in
[Fe/H]. All but one of the clusters in the offset sequence show orbital
properties that are consistent with membership in the MW disk. They are not
simply the most metal-rich GCs, which have long been known to have disk-like
kinematics, but they are the most metal-rich clusters at all ages. The slope of
the mass-metallicity relation (MMR) for galaxies implies that the offset in
metallicity of the two branches of the AMR corresponds to a mass decrement of 2
dex, suggesting host galaxy masses of M_{*} \sim 10^{7-8} \msol for GCs that
belong to the more metal-poor AMR. We suggest that the metal-rich branch of the
AMR consists of clusters that formed in-situ in the disk, while the metal-poor
GCs were formed in relatively low-mass (dwarf) galaxies and later accreted by
the MW. The observed AMR of MW disk stars, and of the LMC, SMC and WLM dwarf
galaxies are shown to be consistent with this interpretation, and the relative
distribution of implied progenitor masses for the halo GC clusters is in
excellent agreement with the MW subhalo mass function predicted by simulations.
A notable implication of the bifurcated AMR, is that the identical mean ages
and spread in ages, for the metal rich and metal poor GCs are difficult to
reconcile with an in-situ formation for the latter population.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Recommended from our members
What makes people recycle? An evaluation of attitudes and behaviour in London Western Riverside
Restructuring the social agenda: economic, social and fiscal preconditions
Summary
Introduction
The crisis which began in 2007 and deepened dramatically in 2008 has exposed deep rifts in the architecture
of the European monetary union. Harsh austerity policies which were first imposed on
countries in Eastern Europe, and subsequently on the countries in the euro area periphery, are now
beginning to be implemented in countries of the European core. The crisis is highlighting the deeply
undemocratic construction of the EU, as the Commission assumes ever greater powers to control
national budgets, without any serious oversight by the European Parliament. At the same time, the
position of the core countries of the North, and in particular Germany, has been strengthened in
relation to the countries of the periphery. But Germany’s economy, which has depended on stagnant
wages and a rising export surplus, cannot be a model for the whole EU. In the face of global climate
change, the EU’s approach to the Rio+20 conference in July 2012 contributed to its failure to reach
any serious agreement
Classifications of the Host Galaxies of Supernovae, Set III
A homogeneous sample comprising host galaxies of 604 recent supernovae,
including 212 objects discovered primarily in 2003 and 2004, has been
classified on the David Dunlap Observatory system. Most SN 1991bg-like SNe Ia
occur in E and E/Sa galaxies, whereas the majority of SN 1991T-like SNe Ia
occur in intermediate-type galaxies. This difference is significant at the
99.9% level. As expected, all types of SNe II are rare in early-type galaxies,
whereas normal SNe Ia occur in all Hubble types. This difference is significant
at the 99.99% level. A small number of SNe II in E galaxies might be due to
galaxy classification errors, or to a small young-population component in these
mainly old objects. No significant difference is found between the
distributions over Hubble type of SNe Ibc and SNe II. This confirms that both
of these types of objects have similar (massive) progenitors. The present data
show that, in order to understand the dependence of supernova type on
host-galaxy population, it is more important to obtain accurate morphological
classifications than it is to increase the size of the data sample.Comment: Accepted for publishing in PAS
The Resolved Structure and Dynamics of an Isolated Dwarf Galaxy: A VLT and Keck Spectroscopic Survey of WLM
We present spectroscopic data for 180 red giant branch stars in the isolated
dwarf irregular galaxy WLM. Observations of the Calcium II triplet lines in
spectra of RGB stars covering the entire galaxy were obtained with FORS2 at the
VLT and DEIMOS on Keck II allowing us to derive velocities, metallicities, and
ages for the stars. With accompanying photometric and radio data we have
measured the structural parameters of the stellar and gaseous populations over
the full galaxy. The stellar populations show an intrinsically thick
configuration with . The stellar rotation in WLM is
measured to be km s, however the ratio of rotation to
pressure support for the stars is , in contrast to the gas
whose ratio is seven times larger. This, along with the structural data and
alignment of the kinematic and photometric axes, suggests we are viewing WLM as
a highly inclined oblate spheroid. Stellar rotation curves, corrected for
asymmetric drift, are used to compute a dynamical mass of M at the half light radius (
pc). The stellar velocity dispersion increases with stellar age in a manner
consistent with giant molecular cloud and substructure interactions producing
the heating in WLM. Coupled with WLM's isolation, this suggests that the
extended vertical structure of its stellar and gaseous components and increase
in stellar velocity dispersion with age are due to internal feedback, rather
than tidally driven evolution. These represent some of the first observational
results from an isolated Local Group dwarf galaxy which can offer important
constraints on how strongly internal feedback and secular processes modulate SF
and dynamical evolution in low mass isolated objects.Comment: 14 Pages, 17 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in Ap
Revisiting the Stellar Velocity Ellipsoid - Hubble type relation: observations versus simulations
The stellar velocity ellipsoid (SVE) in galaxies can provide important information on the processes that participate in the dynamical heating of their disc components (e.g. giant molecular clouds, mergers, spiral density waves, bars). Earlier findings suggested a strong relation between the shape of the disc SVE and Hubble type, with later-type galaxies displaying more anisotropic ellipsoids and early-types being more isotropic. In this paper, we revisit the strength of this relation using an exhaustive compilation of observational results from the literature on this issue. We find no clear correlation between the shape of the disc SVE and morphological type, and show that galaxies with the same Hubble type display a wide range of vertical-to-radial velocity dispersion ratios. The points are distributed around a mean value and scatter of . With the aid of numerical simulations, we argue that different mechanisms might influence the shape of the SVE in the same manner and that the same process (e.g. mergers) does not have the same impact in all the galaxies. The complexity of the observational picture is confirmed by these simulations, which suggest that the vertical-to-radial axis ratio of the SVE is not a good indicator of the main source of disc heating. Our analysis of those simulations also indicates that the observed shape of the disc SVE may be affected by several processes simultaneously and that the signatures of some of them (e.g. mergers) fade over time
- …