1,318 research outputs found
Multiple merging in the Abell cluster 1367
We present a dynamical analysis of the central ~1.3 square degrees of the
cluster of galaxies Abell 1367, based on 273 redshift measurements (of which
119 are news). From the analysis of the 146 confirmed cluster members we derive
a significantly non-Gaussian velocity distribution, with a mean location C_{BI}
= 6484+/-81 km/s and a scale S_{BI} = 891+/-58 km/s. The cluster appears
elongated from the North-West to the South-East with two main density peaks
associated with two substructures. The North-West subcluster is probably in the
early phase of merging into the South-East substructure (~ 0.2 Gyr before core
crossing). A dynamical study of the two subclouds points out the existence of a
group of star-forming galaxies infalling into the core of the South-East
subcloud and suggests that two other groups are infalling into the NW and SE
subclusters respectively. These three subgroups contain a higher fraction of
star-forming galaxies than the cluster core, as expected during merging events.
Abell 1367 appears as a young cluster currently forming at the intersection of
two filaments.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for publication on A&A. High
resolution figures at http://goldmine.mib.infn.it/papers/a1367.htm
The origin of the mu_e - M_B and Kormendy relations in dwarf elliptical galaxies
The present work is aimed at studying the distribution of galaxies of
different types and luminosities along different structural scaling relations
to see whether massive and dwarf ellipticals have been shaped by the same
formation process. This exercise is here done by comparing the distribution of
Virgo cluster massive and dwarf ellipticals and star forming galaxies along the
B band effective surface brightness and effective radius vs. absolute magnitude
relations and the Kormendy relation to the predictions of models tracing the
effects of ram-pressure stripping on disc galaxies entering the cluster
environment and galaxy harassment. Dwarf ellipticals might have been formed
from low luminosity, late-type spirals that recently entered into the cluster
and lost their gas because of a ram-pressure stripping event, stopping their
activity of star formation. The perturbations induced by the abrupt decrease of
the star formation activity are sufficient to modify the structural properties
of disc galaxies into those of dwarf ellipticals. Galaxy harassment induce a
truncation of the disc and generally an increase of the effective surface
brightness of the perturbed galaxies. The lack of dynamical simulations of
perturbed galaxies spanning a wide range in luminosity prevents us to drive any
firm conclusion on a possible harassment-induced origin of the low surface
brightness dwarf elliptical galaxy population inhabiting the Virgo cluster.
Although the observed scaling relations are consistent with the idea that the
distribution of elliptical galaxies along the mentioned scaling relation is
just due to a gradual variation with luminosity of the Sersic index n, the
comparison with models indicates that dwarf ellipticals might have been formed
by a totally different process than giant ellipticalsComment: Accepted for publication on A&
The GALEX Ultraviolet Virgo Cluster Survey (GUViCS). II. Constraints on star formation in ram-pressure stripped gas
Context: Several galaxies in the Virgo cluster are known to have large HI gas
tails related to a recent ram-pressure stripping event. The Virgo cluster has
been extensively observed at 1539 A in the far-ultraviolet for the GALEX
Ultraviolet Virgo Cluster Survey (GUViCS), and in the optical for the Next
Generation Virgo Survey (NGVS), allowing a study of the stellar emission
potentially associated with the gas tails of 8 cluster members. On the
theoretical side, models of ram-pressure stripping events have started to
include the physics of star formation. Aim: We aim to provide quantitative
constraints on the amount of star formation taking place in the ram-pressure
stripped gas, mainly on the basis of the far-UV emission found in the GUViCS
images in relation with the gas content of the tails. Methods: We have
performed three comparisons of the young stars emission with the gas column
density: visual, pixel-by-pixel and global. We have compared our results to
other observational and theoretical studies. Results: We find that the level of
star formation taking place in the gas stripped from galaxies by ram-pressure
is low with respect to the available amount of gas. Star formation is lower by
at least a factor 10 compared to the predictions of the Schmidt Law as
determined in regular spiral galaxy disks. It is also lower than measured in
dwarfs galaxies and the outer regions of spirals, and than predicted by some
numerical simulations. We provide constraints on the star formation efficiency
in the ram-pressure stripped gas tails, and compare these with current models.Comment: Accepted in A&A, 17 pages (including the appendix and "on-line"
figures of the paper
The effect of the environment on the HI scaling relations
We use a volume-, magnitude-limited sample of nearby galaxies to investigate
the effect of the environment on the HI scaling relations. We confirm that the
HI-to-stellar mass ratio anti correlates with stellar mass, stellar mass
surface density and NUV-r colour across the whole range of parameters covered
by our sample (10^9 <M*<10^11 Msol, 7.5 <mu*<9.5 Msol kpc^-2, 2<NUV-r<6 mag).
These scaling relations are also followed by galaxies in the Virgo cluster,
although they are significantly offset towards lower gas content.
Interestingly, the difference between field and cluster galaxies gradually
decreases moving towards massive, bulge-dominated systems. By comparing our
data with the predictions of chemo-spectrophotometric models of galaxy
evolution, we show that starvation alone cannot explain the low gas content of
Virgo spirals and that only ram-pressure stripping is able to reproduce our
findings. Finally, motivated by previous studies, we investigate the use of a
plane obtained from the relations between the HI-to-stellar mass ratio, stellar
mass surface density and NUV-r colour as a proxy for the HI deficiency
parameter. We show that the distance from the `HI gas fraction plane' can be
used as an alternative estimate for the HI deficiency, but only if carefully
calibrated on pre-defined samples of `unperturbed' systems.Comment: Accepted for publication on MNRAS main journal. 11 pages, 6 figures,
1 tabl
High mass star formation in normal late-type galaxies: observational constraints to the IMF
We use Halpha and FUV GALEX data for a large sample of nearby objects to
study the high mass star formation activity of normal late-type galaxies. The
data are corrected for dust attenuation using the most accurate techniques at
present available, namely the Balmer decrement and the total far-infrared to
FUV flux ratio. The sample shows a highly dispersed distribution in the Halpha
to FUV flux ratio indicating that two of the most commonly used star formation
tracers give star formation rates with uncertainties up to a factor of 2-3. The
high dispersion is due to the presence of AGN, where the UV and the Halpha
emission can be contaminated by nuclear activity, highly inclined galaxies, for
which the applied extinction corrections are probably inaccurate, or starburst
galaxies, where the stationarity in the star formation history required for
transforming Halpha and UV luminosities into star formation rates is not
satisfied. Excluding these objects we reach an uncertainty of ~50% on the SFR.
The Halpha to FUV flux ratio increases with their total stellar mass. If
limited to normal star forming galaxies, however, this relationship reduces to
a weak trend that might be totally removed using different extinction
correction recipes. In these objects the Halpha to FUV flux ratio seems also
barely related with the FUV-H colour, the H band effective surface brightness,
the total star formation activity and the gas fraction. The data are consistent
with a Kroupa and Salpeter initial mass function in the high mass stellar range
and imply, for a Salpeter IMF, that the variations of the slope cannot exceed
0.25, from g=2.35 for massive galaxies to g=2.60 in low luminosity systems. We
show however that these observed trends, if real, can be due to the different
micro history of star formation in massive galaxies with respect to dwarf.Comment: Accepted for publication on Ap
The IRX-beta relation on sub-galactic scales in star-forming galaxies of the Herschel Reference Survey
UV and optical surveys are essential to gain insight into the processes
driving galaxy formation and evolution. The rest-frame UV emission is key to
measure the cosmic SFR. However, UV light is strongly reddened by dust. In
starburst galaxies, the UV colour and the attenuation are linked, allowing to
correct for dust extinction. Unfortunately, evidence has been accumulating that
the relation between UV colour and attenuation is different for normal
star-forming galaxies when compared to starburst galaxies. It is still not
understood why star-forming galaxies deviate from the UV colour-attenuation
relation of starburst galaxies. Previous work and models hint that the role of
the shape of the attenuation curve and the age of stellar populations have an
important role. In this paper we aim at understanding the fundamental reasons
to explain this deviation. We have used the CIGALE SED fitting code to model
the far UV to the far IR emission of a set of 7 reasonably face-on spiral
galaxies from the HRS. We have explored the influence of a wide range of
physical parameters to quantify their influence and impact on the accurate
determination of the attenuation from the UV colour, and why normal galaxies do
not follow the same relation as starburst galaxies. We have found that the
deviation can be best explained by intrinsic UV colour differences between
different regions in galaxies. Variations in the shape of the attenuation curve
can also play a secondary role. Standard age estimators of the stellar
populations prove to be poor predictors of the intrinsic UV colour. These
results are also retrieved on a sample of 58 galaxies when considering their
integrated fluxes. When correcting the emission of normal star-forming galaxies
for the attenuation, it is crucial to take into account possible variations in
the intrinsic UV colour as well as variations of the shape of the attenuation
curve.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 18 pages, 14 figures. The paper with
high resolution figures can be downloaded at
http://www.oamp.fr/people/mboquien/HRS/boquien_IRX_beta.pd
Non-linear Dependence of L(B) on L(FIR) and M(H2) among Spiral Galaxies and Effects of Tidal Interaction
Through the study of a carefully selected sample of isolated spiral galaxies,
we have established that two important global physical quantities for tracing
star forming activities, L(FIR) and M(H2), have non-linear dependence on
another commonly cited global quantity L(B). Furthermore we show that simple
power law relations can effectively describe these non-linear relations for
spiral galaxies spanning four orders of magnitude in FIR and M(H2) and nearly
three orders of magnitude in L(B). While the existence of non-linear dependence
of M(H2) (assuming a constant CO-to-H2 conversion) and L(FIR) on optical
luminosity L(B) has been previously noted in the literature, an improper
normalization of simple scaling by L(B) has been commonly used in many previous
studies to claim enhanced molecular gas content and induced activities among
tidally interacting and other types of galaxies. We remove these non-linear
effects using the template relations derived from the isolated galaxy sample
and conclude that strongly interacting galaxies do not have enhanced molecular
gas content, contrary to previous claims. With these non-linear relations among
L(B), L(FIR) and M(H2) properly taken into account, we confirm again that the
FIR emission and the star formation efficiency L(FIR)/M(H2) are indeed enhanced
by tidal interactions. Virgo galaxies show the same level of M(H2) and L(FIR)
as isolated galaxies. We do not find any evidence for enhanced star forming
activity among barred galaxies.Comment: 19 pages and 5 figures, requires AAS style files, ApJ, accepte
1.65 micrometers (H-band) surface photometry of galaxies. III: observations of 558 galaxies with the TIRGO 1.5m telescope
We present near-infrared H-band (1.65 micron) surface photometry of 558
galaxies in the Coma Supercluster and in the Virgo cluster. This data set,
obtained with the Arcetri NICMOS3 camera ARNICA mounted on the Gornergrat
Infrared Telescope, is aimed at complementing, with observations of mostly
early-type objects, our NIR survey of spiral galaxies in these regions,
presented in previous papers of this series. Magnitudes at the optical radius,
total magnitudes, isophotal radii and light concentration indices are derived.
We confirm the existence of a positive correlation between the near-infrared
concentration index and the galaxy H-band luminosity. (Tables 1 and 2 are only
available in electronic form upon request to [email protected])Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
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