731 research outputs found

    The Balance of Dark and Luminous Mass in Rotating Galaxies

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    A fine balance between dark and baryonic mass is observed in spiral galaxies. As the contribution of the baryons to the total rotation velocity increases, the contribution of the dark matter decreases by a compensating amount. This poses a fine-tuning problem for \LCDM galaxy formation models, and may point to new physics for dark matter particles or even a modification of gravity.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX. Phys. Rev. Letters, in pres

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    Various aspects of the palaeoenvironment of prehistoric man in the Near East are treated on the basis of the pollen record. A review of relevant literature on the subject is given. Information on new research in North and West Turkey is given on three geographical units: the Anatolian steppe, the east-west oriented mountain ridges of the Black Sea forest, and the northern and western lowland. The difference or similarity in time and composition of the pollen record of the units are discussed

    Global Spiral Modes in NGC 1566: Observations and Theory

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    We present an observational and theoretical study of the spiral structure in galaxy NGC 1566. A digitized image of NGC 1566 in I-band was used for measurements of the radial dependence of amplitude variations in the spiral arms. We use the known velocity dispersion in the disk of NGC 1566, together with its rotation curve, to construct linear and 2D nonlinear simulations which are then compared with observations. A two-armed spiral is the most unstable linear global mode in the disk of NGC 1566. The nonlinear simulations are in agreement with the results of the linear modal analysis, and the theoretical surface amplitude and the velocity residual variations across the spiral arms are in qualitative agreement with the observations. The spiral arms found in the linear and nonlinear simulations are considerably shorter than those observed in the disk of NGC 1566. We argue therefore, that the surface density distribution in the disk of the galaxy NGC 1566 was different in the past, when spiral structure in NGC 1566 was linearly growing.Comment: 41 pages, 20 figures, to be published in the Astrophysical Journa

    Dark Matter and Stellar Mass in the Luminous Regions of Disk Galaxies

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    We investigate the correlations among stellar mass (M_*), disk scale length (R_d), and rotation velocity at 2.2 disk scale lengths (V_2.2) for a sample of 81 disk-dominated galaxies (disk/total >= 0.9) selected from the SDSS. We measure V_2.2 from long-slit H-alpha rotation curves and infer M_* from galaxy i-band luminosities (L_i) and g-r colors. We find logarithmic slopes of 2.60+/-0.13 and 3.05+/-0.12 for the L_i-V_2.2 and M_*-V_2.2 relations, somewhat shallower than most previous studies, with intrinsic scatter of 0.13 dex and 0.16 dex. Our direct estimates of the total-to-stellar mass ratio within 2.2R_d, assuming a Kroupa IMF, yield a median ratio of 2.4 for M_*>10^10 Msun and 4.4 for M_*=10^9-10^10 Msun, with large scatter at a given M_* and R_d. The typical ratio of the rotation speed predicted for the stellar disk alone to the observed rotation speed at 2.2R_d is ~0.65. The distribution of R_d at fixed M_* is broad, but we find no correlation between disk size and the residual from the M_*-V_2.2 relation, implying that this relation is an approximately edge-on view of the disk galaxy fundamental plane. Independent of the assumed IMF, this result implies that stellar disks do not, on average, dominate the mass within 2.2R_d. We discuss our results in the context of infall models of disk formation in cold dark matter halos. A model with a disk-to-halo mass ratio m_d=0.05 provides a reasonable match to the R_d-M_* distribution for spin parameters \lambda ranging from ~0.04-0.08, and it yields a reasonable match to the mean M_*-V_2.2 relation. A model with m_d=0.1 predicts overly strong correlations between disk size and M_*-V_2.2 residual. Explaining the wide range of halo-to-disk mass ratios within 2.2R_d requires significant scatter in m_d values, with systematically lower m_d for galaxies with lower M∗M_*.Comment: 18 pages, 2 tables, 7 figures, Accepted to ApJ, Table 1 updated, otherwise minor change

    Radial Profiles of Star Formation in the Far Outer Regions of Galaxy Disks

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    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

    Galaxies with Spiral Structure up to z = 0.87 --Limits on M/L and the Stellar Velocity Dispersion

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    We consider seven distant galaxies with clearly evident spiral structure from HST images. Three of these were chosen from Vogt et al. (1996) (VFP) and have measured rotational velocities. Five were chosen from the Medium Deep Survey and are studied in Sarajedini et al. 1996 (SGGR), and one galaxy is found in both papers. We place upper limits on their mass-to-light ratios (M/L) by computing M/L_B for a maximal disk. We find that these galaxies have maximal disk mass-to-light ratios M/L_B = 1.5 - 3.5 M_sol/L_Bsol at the low end, but within the range seen in nearby galaxies. The mass-to-light ratios are low enough to suggest that the galaxies contain a young, rapidly formed stellar population. By using a Toomre stability criterion for formation of spiral structure, we place constraints on the ratio of M/L to the stellar velocity dispersion. If these galaxies have maximal disks they would have to be nearly unstable so as to have small enough velocity dispersions that their disks are not unrealistically thick. This suggests that there is a substantial amount of dark matter present in the luminous regions of the galaxy.Comment: AAS Latex + PS Figure, accepted for publication in A

    Variants colorés chez le Mouton Néerlandais des Landes de bruyÚre (Heideschaap)

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    Une premiĂšre Ă©tude dans 2 troupeaux de moutons des Landes de BruyĂšre en Hollande, rĂ©vĂšle un biallĂ©lisme pour les loci colorĂ©s A, Agouti, B, Brun, E, Extension et S, Panachuve irrĂ©guliĂšre : Awh et a en A, B et b en B, E+ et Ed en E, Sb et S+ en S. Il y aurait peut-ĂȘtre aussi un autre variant de panachure et un autre facteur en Agouti. ComparĂ© Ă  des races multivariantes comme l’Islandaise, la Corse ou le Vieux NorvĂ©gien, il s’agit d’une variabilitĂ© modĂ©rĂ©e. On pense que la variabilitĂ© fondamentale a subi une premiĂšre rĂ©duction puis s’est stabilisĂ©e Ă  son stade actuel pour une raison encore mal Ă©claircie.A preliminary study in two Heathsheep flocks shows a biallelism at the following coat colour loci : Agouti A (Awh, a), Brown B (B, b), Extension E (E+, Ed) and Spotting S (S+, Sb). There is perhaps another variant in Agouti and another piebald allele. Compared to other so called "primitive" breeds (Icelandic, Old Norvegian or Corsican), the colour variability in Heathsheep is moderate. The basic variability may have been reduced in a first stage of evolution then the reduction process stopped for a still unknown reason

    Dark matter within high surface brightness spiral galaxies

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    We present results from a detailed dynamical analysis of five high surface brightness, late type spirals, studied with the aim to quantify the luminous-to-dark matter ratio inside their optical radii. The galaxies' stellar light distribution and gas kinematics have been observed and compared to hydrodynamic gas simulations, which predict the 2D gas dynamics arising in response to empirical gravitational potentials, which are combinations of differing stellar disk and dark halo contributions. The gravitational potential of the stellar disk was derived from near-infrared photometry, color-corrected to constant (M/L); the dark halo was modelled by an isothermal sphere with a core. Hydrodynamic gas simulations were performed for each galaxy for a sequence of five different mass fractions of the stellar disk and for a wide range of spiral pattern speeds. These two parameters mainly determine the modelled gas distribution and kinematics. The agreement between the non-axisymmetric part of the simulated and observed gas kinematics permitted us to conclude that the galaxies with the highest rotation velocities tend to possess near-maximal stellar disks. In less massive galaxies, with v_max<200 km/s, the mass of the dark halo at least equals the stellar mass within 2-3 R_disk. The simulated gas morphology provides a powerful tool to determine the dominant spiral pattern speed. The corotation radius for all galaxies was found to be constant at R_corotation ~ 3 R_disk and encloses the strong part of the stellar spiral in all cases.Comment: 28 pages, 7 figures; to appear in the Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 586, March 200
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