78 research outputs found
Cold Molecular Gas in Merger Remnants. I. Formation of Molecular Gas Disks
We present the 1 kpc resolution 12CO imaging study of 37 optically selected local merger remnants using new and archival interferometric maps obtained with ALMA, CARMA, the Submillimeter Array, and the Plateau de Bure Interferometer. We supplement a sub-sample with single-dish measurements obtained at the Nobeyama Radio Observatory 45 m telescope for estimating the molecular gas mass (107 – 11 M ☉) and evaluating the missing flux of the interferometric measurements. Among the sources with robust CO detections, we find that 80% (24/30) of the sample show kinematical signatures of rotating molecular gas disks (including nuclear rings) in their velocity fields, and the sizes of these disks vary significantly from 1.1 kpc to 9.3 kpc. The size of the molecular gas disks in 54% of the sources is more compact than the K-band effective radius. These small gas disks may have formed from a past gas inflow that was triggered by a dynamical instability during a potential merging event. On the other hand, the rest (46%) of the sources have gas disks that are extended relative to the stellar component, possibly forming a late-type galaxy with a central stellar bulge. Our new compilation of observational data suggests that nuclear and extended molecular gas disks are common in the final stages of mergers. This finding is consistent with recent major-merger simulations of gas-rich progenitor disks. Finally, we suggest that some of the rotation-supported turbulent disks observed at high redshifts may result from galaxies that have experienced a recent major merger
Evidence of boosted 13CO/12CO ratio in early-type galaxies in dense environments
We present observations of CO(1-0) in 17 Combined Array for Research
in Millimeter Astronomy (CARMA) Atlas3D early-type galaxies (ETGs), obtained
simultaneously with CO(1-0) observations. The CO in six ETGs is
sufficiently bright to create images. In these 6 sources, we do not detect any
significant radial gradient in the CO/CO ratio between the
nucleus and the outlying molecular gas. Using the CO channel maps as 3D
masks to stack the CO emission, we are able to detect 15/17 galaxies to
(and 12/17 to at least 5) significance in a spatially
integrated manner. Overall, ETGs show a wide distribution of
CO/CO ratios, but Virgo cluster and group galaxies preferentially
show a CO/CO ratio about 2 times larger than field galaxies,
although this could also be due to a mass dependence, or the CO spatial extent
(). ETGs whose gas has a morphologically-settled
appearance also show boosted CO/CO ratios. We hypothesize that
this variation could be caused by (i) the extra enrichment of gas from
molecular reprocessing occurring in low-mass stars (boosting the abundance of
C to C in the absence of external gas accretion), (ii) much
higher pressure being exerted on the midplane gas (by the intracluster medium)
in the cluster environment than in isolated galaxies, or (iii) all but the
densest molecular gas clumps being stripped as the galaxies fall into the
cluster. Further observations of CO in dense environments, particularly
of spirals, as well as studies of other isotopologues, should be able to
distinguish between these hypotheses.Comment: 13 pages, 3 tables, 7 figures, accepted by MNRA
Quantifying non-star formation associated 8um dust emission in NGC 628
Combining Ha and IRAC images of the nearby spiral galaxy NGC 628, we find
that between 30-43% of its 8um dust emission is not related to recent star
formation. Contributions from dust heated by young stars are separated by
identifying HII regions in the Ha map and using these areas as a mask to
determine the 8um dust emission that must be due to heating by older stars.
Corrections are made for sub-detection-threshold HII regions, photons escaping
from HII regions and for young stars not directly associated to HII regions
(i.e. 10-100 Myr old stars). A simple model confirms this amount of 8um
emission can be expected given dust and PAH absorption cross-sections, a
realistic star-formation history, and the observed optical extinction values. A
Fourier power spectrum analysis indicates that the 8um dust emission is more
diffuse than the Ha emission (and similar to observed HI), supporting our
analysis that much of the 8um-emitting dust is heated by older stars. The 8um
dust-to-Ha emission ratio declines with galactocentric radius both within and
outside of HII regions, probably due to a radial increase in disk transparency.
In the course of this work, we have also found that intrinsic diffuse Ha
fractions may be lower than previously thought in galaxies, if the differential
extinction between HII regions and diffuse regions is taken into account.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, accepted in Ap
Star Formation in Nearby Early-Type Galaxies: The Radio Continuum Perspective
We present a 1.4 GHz Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) study of a sample
of early-type galaxies (ETGs) from the volume- and magnitude-limited ATLAS-3D
survey. The radio morphologies of these ETGs at a resolution of 5" are diverse
and include sources that are compact on sub-kpc scales, resolved structures
similar to those seen in star-forming spiral galaxies, and kpc-scale radio
jets/lobes associated with active nuclei. We compare the 1.4 GHz, molecular
gas, and infrared (IR) properties of these ETGs. The most CO-rich ATLAS-3D ETGs
have radio luminosities consistent with extrapolations from H_2-mass-derived
star formation rates from studies of late-type galaxies. These ETGs also follow
the radio-IR correlation. However, ETGs with lower molecular gas masses tend to
have less radio emission relative to their CO and IR emission compared to
spirals. The fraction of galaxies in our sample with high IR-radio ratios is
much higher than in previous studies, and cannot be explained by a systematic
underestimation of the radio luminosity due to the presence extended,
low-surface-brightness emission that was resolved-out in our VLA observations.
In addition, we find that the high IR-radio ratios tend to occur at low IR
luminosities, but are not associated with low dynamical mass or metallicity.
Thus, we have identified a population of ETGs that have a genuine shortfall of
radio emission relative to both their IR and molecular gas emission. A number
of mechanisms may conspire to cause this radio deficiency, including a
bottom-heavy stellar initial mass function, weak magnetic fields, a higher
prevalence of environmental effects compared to spirals and enhanced cosmic ray
losses.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRA
The molecular polar disc in NGC 2768
We present CO(1-0) and CO(2-1) maps of the molecular polar disc in the
elliptical galaxy NGC 2768 obtained at the IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer.
The maps have a resolution of 2.6" x 2.3" and 1.2" x 1.2" for the CO(1-0) and
CO(2-1) lines, respectively. The CO maps complete the unique picture of the
interstellar medium (ISM) of NGC 2768; the dust, molecular gas, ionised gas and
neutral hydrogen (HI) trace the recent acquisition of cold and cool gas over
two orders of magnitude in radii (and much more in density). In agreement with
the other ISM components, the CO distribution extends nearly perpendicularly to
the photometric major axis of the galaxy. Velocity maps of the CO show a
rotating polar disc or ring in the inner kiloparsec. This cool gas could lead
to kinematic substructure formation within NGC 2768. However, the stellar
velocity field and H-beta absorption linestrength maps from the optical
integral-field spectrograph SAURON give no indication of a young and
dynamically cold stellar population coincident with the molecular polar disc.
Very recent or weak star formation, undetectable in linestrengths, nevertheless
remains a possibility and could be at the origin of some of the ionised gas
observed. Millimetre continuum emission was also detected in NGC 2768, now one
of only a few low-luminosity active galactic nuclei with observed millimetre
continuum emission.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 11 pages, 8 figure
The ATLAS3D project - XXVII : Cold gas and the colours and ages of early-type galaxies
Date of Acceptance: 16/12/2013We present a study of the cold gas contents of the ATLAS3D early-type galaxies, in the context of their optical colours, near-ultraviolet colours and Hβ absorption line strengths. Early-type (elliptical and lenticular) galaxies are not as gas poor as previously thought, and at least 40 per cent of local early-type galaxies are now known to contain molecular and/or atomic gas. This cold gas offers the opportunity to study recent galaxy evolution through the processes of cold gas acquisition, consumption (star formation) and removal. Molecular and atomic gas detection rates range from 10 to 34 per cent in red sequence early-type galaxies, depending on how the red sequence is defined, and from 50 to 70 per cent in blue early-type galaxies. Notably, massive red sequence early-type galaxies (stellar masses >5 × 1010 M⊙, derived from dynamical models) are found to have H I masses up to M(H I)/M* ∼ 0.06 and H2 masses up to M(H2)/M* ∼ 0.01. Some 20 per cent of all massive early-type galaxies may have retained atomic and/or molecular gas through their transition to the red sequence. However, kinematic and metallicity signatures of external gas accretion (either from satellite galaxies or the intergalactic medium) are also common, particularly at stellar masses ≤5 × 1010 M⊙, where such signatures are found in ∼50 per cent of H2-rich early-type galaxies. Our data are thus consistent with a scenario in which fast rotator early-type galaxies are quenched former spiral galaxies which have undergone some bulge growth processes, and in addition, some of them also experience cold gas accretion which can initiate a period of modest star formation activity. We discuss implications for the interpretation of colour–magnitude diagramsPeer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
Connection between dynamically derived initial mass function normalization and stellar population parameters
Date of Acceptance: 10/08/2014We report on empirical trends between the dynamically determined stellar initial mass function (IMF) and stellar population properties for a complete, volume-limited sample of 260 early-type galaxies from the ATLAS3D project. We study trends between our dynamically derived IMF normalization αdyn ≡ (M/L)stars/(M/L)Salp and absorption line strengths, and interpret these via single stellar population-equivalent ages, abundance ratios (measured as [α/Fe]), and total metallicity, [Z/H]. We find that old and alpha-enhanced galaxies tend to have on average heavier (Salpeter-like) mass normalization of the IMF, but stellar population does not appear to be a good predictor of the IMF, with a large range of αdyn at a given population parameter. As a result, we find weak αdyn-[α/Fe] and αdyn -Age correlations and no significant αdyn -[Z/H] correlation. The observed trends appear significantly weaker than those reported in studies that measure the IMF normalization via the low-mass star demographics inferred through stellar spectral analysis.Peer reviewe
Molecular gas and star formation in early-type galaxies
We present new mm interferometric and optical integral-field unit (IFU)
observations and construct a sample of 12 E and S0 galaxies with molecular gas
which have both CO and optical maps. The galaxies contain 2 x 10^7 to 5 x 10^9
M\odot of molecular gas distributed primarily in central discs or rings (radii
0.5 to 4 kpc). The molecular gas distributions are always coincident with
distributions of optically-obscuring dust that reveal tightly-wound spiral
structures in many cases. The ionised gas always approximately corotates with
the molecular gas, evidencing a link between these two gas components, yet star
formation is not always the domi- nant ionisation source. The galaxies with
less molecular gas tend to have [O III]/H{\beta} emission-line ratios at high
values not expected for star formation. Most E/S0s with molecular gas have
young or intermediate age stellar populations based on optical colours,
ultraviolet colours and absorption linestrengths. The few that appear purely
old lie close to the limit where such populations would be undetectable based
on the mass fractions of expected young to observed old stars. The 8{\mu}m
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) and 24{\mu}m emission yield similar star
formation rate estimates of E/S0s, but the total infrared overpredicts the rate
due to a contribution to dust heating from older stars. The radio-far infrared
relation also has much more scatter than for other star-forming galaxies.
However, despite these biases and additional scatter, the derived star
formation rates locate the E/S0 galaxies within the large range of the
Schmidt-Kennicutt and constant efficiency star formation laws. Thus the star
formation process in E/S0s is not overwhelmingly different than in other
star-forming galaxies, although one of the more reliable tracers (24{\mu}m)
points to a possible lower star-formation efficiency at a given gas surface
density.Comment: submitted to MNRA
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