7,543 research outputs found
The Herschel Virgo Cluster Survey - II. Truncated dust disks in H I-deficient spirals
By combining Herschel-SPIRE observations obtained as part of the Herschel Virgo Cluster Survey with 21 cm Hi data from the literature, we investigate the role of the cluster environment on the dust content of Virgo spiral galaxies. We show for the first time that the extent of the dust disk is significantly reduced in Hi-deficient galaxies, following remarkably well the observed “truncation” of the Hi disk. The ratio of the submillimetre-to-optical diameter correlates with the Hi-deficiency, suggesting that the cluster environment is able to strip dust as well as gas. These results provide important insights not only into the evolution of cluster galaxies but also into the metal enrichment of the intra-cluster medium
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 migration of nearby spirals from the blue to red sequence: AGN feedback or environmental effects?
We combine ultraviolet to near-infrared photometry with HI 21cm line
observations for a complete volume-limited sample of nearby galaxies in
different environments (from isolated galaxies to Virgo cluster members), to
study the migration of spirals from the blue to the red sequence. Although our
analysis confirms that, in the transition region between the two sequences, a
high fraction of spirals host active galactic nuclei (AGN), it clearly shows
that late-types with quenched star formation are mainly HI deficient galaxies
preferentially found in the Virgo cluster. This not only suggests that
environmental effects could play a significant role in driving the migration of
local galaxies from the blue sequence, but it also implies that a physical link
between AGN feedback and quenching may not be assumed from a correlation
between nuclear activity and colour.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 6 pages, 1 figur
A Variational Formulation of Symplectic Noncommutative Mechanics
The standard lore in noncommutative physics is the use of first order
variational description of a dynamical system to probe the space
noncommutativity and its consequences in the dynamics in phase space. As the
ultimate goal is to understand the inherent space noncommutativity we propose a
variational principle for noncommutative dynamical systems in configuration
space, based on results of our previous work [14]. We hope that this
variational formulation in configuration space can be of help to elucidate the
definition of some global and dynamical properties of classical and quantum
noncommutative space.Comment: 17 pages, Latex. Accepted for publication in IJGMM
An extragalactic HII region in the Virgo cluster
We present spectroscopic observations for six emission-line objects projected
onto the Virgo cluster. These sources have been selected from narrow band
(H\alpha+[NII]) images showing faint detectable continuum emission and EW>100
Angstrom. Five of these sources result [OIII]\lambda 5007 emitters at z ~ 0.31,
while one 122603+130724 is confirmed to be an HII region belonging to the Virgo
cluster. This point-like source has a recessional velocity of ~ 200 km/s, and
is associated with the giant galaxy VCC873 (NGC 4402). It has a higher
luminosity, star formation rate and metallicity than the extragalactic HII
region recently discovered near the Virgo galaxy VCC836 by Gerhard et al.
(2002).Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication on A&A. High
resolution figures and FITS images available at
http://goldmine.mib.infn.it/papers/vcc873.htm
The selective effect of environment on the atomic and molecular gas-to-dust ratio of nearby galaxies in the Herschel Reference Survey
We combine dust, atomic (HI) and molecular (H) hydrogen mass
measurements for 176 galaxies in the Herschel Reference Survey to investigate
the effect of environment on the gas-to-dust mass ()
ratio of nearby galaxies. We find that, at fixed stellar mass, the average
ratio varies by no more than a factor of 2
when moving from field to cluster galaxies, with Virgo galaxies being slightly
more dust rich (per unit of gas) than isolated systems. Remarkably, once the
molecular and atomic hydrogen phases are investigated separately, we find that
\hi-deficient galaxies have at the same time lower
ratio but higher ratio than \hi-normal systems. In
other words, they are poorer in atomic but richer in molecular hydrogen if
normalized to their dust content. By comparing our findings with the
predictions of theoretical models, we show that the opposite behavior observed
in the and ratios is
fully consistent with outside-in stripping of the interstellar medium (ISM),
and is simply a consequence of the different distribution of dust, \hi\ and
H across the disk. Our results demonstrate that the small environmental
variations in the total ratio, as well as in the
gas-phase metallicity, do not automatically imply that environmental mechanisms
are not able to affect the dust and metal content of the ISM in galaxies.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
The bolometric and UV attenuation in normal spiral galaxies of the Herschel Reference Survey
The dust in nearby galaxies absorbs a fraction of the
UV-optical-near-infrared radiation produced by stars. This energy is
consequently re-emitted in the infrared. We investigate the portion of the
stellar radiation absorbed by spiral galaxies from the HRS by modelling their
UV-to-submillimetre spectral energy distributions. Our models provide an
attenuated and intrinsic SED from which we find that on average 32 % of all
starlight is absorbed by dust. We define the UV heating fraction as the
percentage of dust luminosity that comes from absorbed UV photons and find that
this is 56 %, on average. This percentage varies with morphological type, with
later types having significantly higher UV heating fractions. We find a strong
correlation between the UV heating fraction and specific star formation rate
and provide a power-law fit. Our models allow us to revisit the IRX-AFUV
relations, and derive these quantities directly within a self-consistent
framework. We calibrate this relation for different bins of NUV-r colour and
provide simple relations to relate these parameters. We investigated the
robustness of our method and we conclude that the derived parameters are
reliable within the uncertainties which are inherent to the adopted SED model.
This calls for a deeper investigation on how well extinction and attenuation
can be determined through panchromatic SED modelling.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
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