392 research outputs found
Tidally Induced Offset Disks in Magellanic Spiral Galaxies
Magellanic spiral galaxies are a class of one-armed systems that often
exhibit an offset stellar bar, and are rarely found around massive spiral
galaxies. Using a set of N-body and hydrodynamic simulations we consider a
dwarf-dwarf galaxy interaction as the driving mechanism for the formation of
this peculiar class of systems. We investigate here the relation between the
dynamical, stellar and gaseous disk center and the bar. In all our simulations
the bar center always coincides with the dynamical center, while the stellar
disk becomes highly asymmetric during the encounter causing the photometric
center of the Magellanic galaxy disk to become mismatched with both the bar and
the dynamical center. The disk asymmetries persist for almost 2 Gyrs, the time
that it takes for the disk to be re-centered with the bar, and well after the
companion has passed. This explains the nature of the offset bar found in many
Magellanic-type galaxies, including the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) and NGC
3906. In particular, these results, once applied to the LMC, suggest that the
dynamical center should reside in the bar center instead of the HI center as
previously assumed, pointing to a variation in the current estimate of the
north component of the LMC proper motion.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, corrected for referee comment
Bulgeless Galaxies and their Angular Momentum Problem
The specific angular momentum of Cold Dark Matter (CDM) halos in a
CDM universe is investigated. Their dimensionless specific angular
momentum with and
the virial velocity and virial radius, respectively depends strongly
on their merging histories. We investigate a set of CDM simulations
and explore the specific angular momentum content of halos formed through
various merging histories. Halos with a quiet merging history, dominated by
minor mergers and accretion until the present epoch, acquire by tidal torques
on average only 2% to 3% of the angular momentum required for their rotational
support (). This is in conflict with observational data for a
sample of late-type bulgeless galaxies which indicates that those galaxies
reside in dark halos with exceptionally high values of . Minor mergers and accretion preserve or slowly increase the
specific angular momentum of dark halos with time. This mechanism is however
not efficient enough in order to explain the observed spin values for late-type
dwarf galaxies. Energetic feedback processes have been invoked to solve the
problem that gas loses a large fraction of its specific angular momentum during
infall. Under the assumption that dark halos hosting bulgeless galaxies acquire
their mass via quiescent accretion, our results indicate yet another serious
problem: the specific angular momentum gained during the formation of these
objects is not large enough to explain their observed rotational
properties,even if no angular momentum would be lost during gas infall.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. To appear in September 1, 2004, issue of ApJ
Letter
The Fossil Phase in the Life of a Galaxy Group
We investigate the origin and evolution of fossil groups in a concordance
LCDM cosmological simulation. We consider haloes with masses between
(1-5)\times10^{13} \hMsun and study the physical mechanisms that lead to the
formation of the large gap in magnitude between the brightest and the second
most bright group member, which is typical for these fossil systems. Fossil
groups are found to have high dark matter concentrations, which we can relate
to their early formation time. The large magnitude-gaps arise after the groups
have build up half of their final mass, due to merging of massive group
members. We show that the existence of fossil systems is primarily driven by
the relatively early infall of massive satellites, and that we do not find a
strong environmental dependence for these systems. In addition, we find
tentative evidence for fossil group satellites falling in on orbits with
typically lower angular momentum, which might lead to a more efficient merger
onto the host. We find a population of groups at higher redshifts that go
through a ``fossil phase'': a stage where they show a large magnitude-gap,
which is terminated by renewed infall from their environment.Comment: 9 pages and 8 figures, submitted to MNRA
Fossil group origins - VI. Global X-ray scaling relations of fossil galaxy clusters
We present the first pointed X-ray observations of 10 candidate fossil galaxy
groups and clusters. With these Suzaku observations, we determine global
temperatures and bolometric X-ray luminosities of the intracluster medium (ICM)
out to for six systems in our sample. The remaining four systems show
signs of significant contamination from non-ICM sources. For the six objects
with successfully determined properties, we measure global
temperatures in the range ,
bolometric X-ray luminosities of , and estimate masses,
as derived from , of .
Fossil cluster scaling relations are constructed for a sample that combines our
Suzaku observed fossils with fossils in the literature. Using measurements of
global X-ray luminosity, temperature, optical luminosity, and velocity
dispersion, scaling relations for the fossil sample are then compared with a
control sample of non-fossil systems. We find the fits of our fossil cluster
scaling relations are consistent with the relations for normal groups and
clusters, indicating fossil clusters have global ICM X-ray properties similar
to those of comparable mass non-fossil systems.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, 8 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Fossil group origins V. The dependence of the luminosity function on the magnitude gap
In nature we observe galaxy aggregations that span a wide range of magnitude
gaps between the two first-ranked galaxies of a system (). There
are systems with gaps close to zero (e.g., the Coma cluster), and at the other
extreme of the distribution, the largest gaps are found among the so-called
fossil systems. Fossil and non-fossil systems could have different galaxy
populations that should be reflected in their luminosity functions. In this
work we study, for the first time, the dependence of the luminosity function
parameters on using data obtained by the fossil group origins
(FOGO) project. We constructed a hybrid luminosity function for 102 groups and
clusters at . We stacked all the individual luminosity functions,
dividing them into bins of , and studied their best-fit
Schechter parameters. We additionally computed a relative luminosity function,
expressed as a function of the central galaxy luminosity, which boosts our
capacity to detect differences, especially at the bright end. We find trends as
a function of at both the bright and faint ends of the
luminosity function. In particular, at the bright end, the larger the magnitude
gap, the fainter the characteristic magnitude . We also find
differences at the faint end. In this region, the larger the gap, the flatter
the faint-end slope . The differences found at the bright end support a
dissipationless, dynamical friction-driven merging model for the growth of the
central galaxy in group- and cluster-sized halos. The differences in the faint
end cannot be explained by this mechanism. Other processes, such as enhanced
tidal disruption due to early infall and/or prevalence of eccentric orbits, may
play a role. However, a larger sample of systems with is
needed to establish the differences at the faint end.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Fresh Activity in Old Systems: Radio AGN in Fossil Groups of Galaxies
We present the first systematic 1.4 GHz Very Large Array radio continuum
survey of fossil galaxy group candidates. These are virialized systems believed
to have assembled over a gigayear in the past through the merging of galaxy
group members into a single, isolated, massive elliptical galaxy and featuring
an extended hot X-ray halo. We use new photometric and spectroscopic data from
SDSS Data Release 7 to determine that three of the candidates are clearly not
fossil groups. Of the remaining 30 candidates, 67% contain a radio-loud
(L_1.4GHz > 10^23 W Hz^-1) active galactic nucleus (AGN) at the center of their
dominant elliptical galaxy. We find a weak correlation between the radio
luminosity of the AGN and the X-ray luminosity of the halo suggesting that the
AGN contributes to energy deposition into the intragroup medium. We only find a
correlation between the radio and optical luminosity of the central elliptical
galaxy when we include X-ray selected, elliptically dominated non-fossil
groups, indicating a weak relationship between AGN strength and the mass
assembly history of the groups. The dominant elliptical galaxy of fossil groups
is on average roughly an order of magnitude more luminous than normal group
elliptical galaxies in optical, X-ray, and radio luminosities and our findings
are consistent with previous results that the radio-loud fraction in elliptical
galaxies is linked to the stellar mass of a population. The current level of
activity in fossil groups suggests that AGN fueling continues long after the
last major merger. We discuss several possibilities for fueling the AGN at the
present epoch.Comment: Accepted for publication in A
The fossil phase in the life of a galaxy group
We investigate the origin and evolution of fossil groups in a concordance ΛCDM cosmological simulation. We consider haloes with masses between 1 × 1013 and 5 × 1013h−1M⊙, and study the physical mechanisms that lead to the formation of the large gap in magnitude between the brightest and the second most bright group member, which is typical for these fossil systems. Fossil groups are found to have high dark matter concentrations, which we can relate to their early formation time. The large magnitude gaps arise after the groups have built up half of their final mass, due to merging of massive group members. We show that the existence of fossil systems is primarily driven by the relatively early infall of massive satellites, and that we do not find a strong environmental dependence for these systems. In addition, we find tentative evidence for fossil group satellites falling in on orbits with typically lower angular momentum, which might lead to a more efficient merger on to the host. We find a population of groups at higher redshifts that go through a ‘fossil phase': a stage where they show a large magnitude gap, which is terminated by renewed infall from their environmen
Fossil Groups Origins III. Characterization of the sample and observational properties of fossil systems
(Abridged) Fossil systems are group- or cluster-sized objects whose
luminosity is dominated by a very massive central galaxy. In the current cold
dark matter scenario, these objects formed hierarchically at an early epoch of
the Universe and then slowly evolved until present day. That is the reason why
they are called {\it fossils}. We started an extensive observational program to
characterize a sample of 34 fossil group candidates spanning a broad range of
physical properties. Deep band images were taken for each candidate and
optical spectroscopic observations were obtained for 1200 galaxies. This
new dataset was completed with SDSS DR7 archival data to obtain robust cluster
membership and global properties of each fossil group candidate. For each
system, we recomputed the magnitude gaps between the two brightest galaxies
() and the first and fourth ranked galaxies ()
within 0.5 . We consider fossil systems those with mag or mag within the errors. We find
that 15 candidates turned out to be fossil systems. Their observational
properties agree with those of non-fossil systems. Both follow the same
correlations, but fossils are always extreme cases. In particular, they host
the brightest central galaxies and the fraction of total galaxy light enclosed
in the central galaxy is larger in fossil than in non-fossil systems. Finally,
we confirm the existence of genuine fossil clusters. Combining our results with
others in the literature, we favor the merging scenario in which fossil systems
formed due to mergers of galaxies. The large magnitude gap is a
consequence of the extreme merger ratio within fossil systems and therefore it
is an evolutionary effect. Moreover, we suggest that at least one candidate in
our sample could represent a transitional fossil stage.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Fossil Groups Origins III. The relation between optical and X-ray luminosities
This study is part of the FOssil Groups Origin (FOGO) project which aims at
carrying out a systematic and multiwavelength study of a large sample of fossil
systems. Here we focus on the relation between the optical luminosity (Lopt)
and X-ray luminosity (Lx). Out of a sample of 28 candidate fossil systems, we
consider a sample of 12 systems whose fossil classification has been confirmed
by a companion study. They are compared with the complementary sample of 16
systems whose fossil nature is not confirmed and with a subsample of 102 galaxy
systems from the RASS-SDSS galaxy cluster survey. Fossil and normal systems
span the same redshift range 0<z<0.5 and have the same Lx distribution. For
each fossil system, the Lx in the 0.1-2.4 keV band is computed using data from
the ROSAT All Sky Survey. For each fossil and normal system we homogeneously
compute Lopt in the r-band within the characteristic cluster radius, using data
from the SDSS DR7. We sample the Lx-Lopt relation over two orders of magnitude
in Lx. Our analysis shows that fossil systems are not statistically
distinguishable from the normal systems both through the 2D KS test and the fit
of the Lx-Lopt relation. The optical luminosity of the galaxy system does
strongly correlate with the X-ray luminosity of the hot gas component,
independently of whether the system is fossil or not. We conclude that our
results are consistent with the classical "merging scenario" of the brightest
galaxy formed via merger/cannibalism of other group galaxies, with conservation
of the optical light. We find no evidence for a peculiar state of the hot
intracluster medium.Comment: A&A, 12 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables, typos corr. and paper re-numbe
XMMU J100750.5+125818: A strong lensing cluster at z=1.082
We report on the discovery of the X-ray luminous cluster XMMU
J100750.5+125818 at redshift 1.082 based on 19 spectroscopic members, which
displays several strong lensing features. SED modeling of the lensed arc
features from multicolor imaging with the VLT and the LBT reveals likely
redshifts ~2.7 for the most prominent of the lensed background galaxies. Mass
estimates are derived for different radii from the velocity dispersion of the
cluster members, M_200 ~ 1.8 10^{14} Msun, from the X-ray spectral parameters,
M_500 ~ 1.0 10^{14} Msun, and the largest lensing arc, M_SL ~ 2.3 10^{13} Msun.
The projected spatial distribution of cluster galaxies appears to be elongated,
and the brightest galaxy lies off center with respect to the X-ray emission
indicating a not yet relaxed structure. XMMU J100750.5+125818 offers excellent
diagnostics of the inner mass distribution of a distant cluster with a
combination of strong and weak lensing, optical and X-ray spectroscopy.Comment: A&A, accepted for publicatio
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