119 research outputs found
Where are the ``Missing'' Galactic Baryons?
Based on 19 high-resolution N-body/gas-dynamical galaxy formation simulations
in the LCDM cosmology it is shown, that for a galaxy like the Milky Way, in
addition to the baryonic mass of the galaxy itself, about 70% extra baryonic
mass should reside around the galaxy (inside of the virial radius), chiefly in
the form of hot gas. Averaging over the entire field galaxy population, this
``external'' component amounts to 64-85% of the baryonic mass of the population
itself. These results are supported by the recent detection of very extended,
soft X-ray emission from the halo of the quiescent, massive disk galaxy NGC
5746.
Some of the hot gas may, by thermal instability, have condensed into mainly
pressure supported, warm clouds, similar to the Galactic High Velocity Clouds
(HVCs). Based on an ultra-high resolution cosmological test simulation of a
Milky Way like galaxy (with a gas particle mass and gravity softening length of
only 7600 h^-1 Msun and 83 h^-1 pc,respectively), it is argued, that the hot
gas phase dominates over the warm gas phase, in the halo. Finally, an origin of
HVCs as ``leftovers'' from filamentary, ``cold'' accretion events, mainly
occurring early in the history of galaxies, is proposed.Comment: 4 Pages, 4 Figures, Submitted to ApJL, Printing in colour recommende
The chemical evolution of gas-rich dwarf galaxies
A numerical double burst model of the chemical evolution of gas-rich dwarf
galaxies has been developed. The model is fitted to a sample of N/O, O/H, Y and
gas fraction observations, where N/O and O/H are the relative abundances by
number of nitrogen to oxygen and oxygen to hydrogen, respectively. Y is the
abundance by mass of helium. Closed models as well as models including enriched
outflow, ordinary outflow and ordinary outflow combined with inflow are
considered.The bursts are assumed to be instantaneous but ordered in pairs to
explain the scatter in N/O-O/H. The method of gas fraction fitting is revised,
and it is found that it is very important to specify whether dwarf irregulars
(dIrrs) or blue compact galaxies (BCGs) are considered. Effective enriched
winds fail when fitting N/O, whereas closed models, models with ordinary winds
or a combination of ordinary winds and inflow are all viable.Comment: 22 pages, 25 figures, MNRAS LaTeX forma
Kinematics of the Outer Stellar Halo
We have tested whether the simple model for the kinematics of the Galactic
stellar halo (in particular the outer halo) proposed by Sommer-Larsen, Flynn
and Christensen (SLFC) is physically realizable, by directly integrating
particles in a 3-D model of the Galactic potential. We are able to show that
the SLFC solution can be realized in terms of a distribution of particles with
stationary statistical properties in phase-space. Hence, the SLFC model, which
shows a notable change in the anisotropy from markedly radial at the sun to
markedly tangential beyond about Galactocentric radius r=20 kpc, seems a
tenable description of outer halo kinematics.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS. also
available at http://astro.utu.fi/~cflynn/papers/fslc4/fslc4.htm
- …