68 research outputs found
The angular momentum-mass relation: a fundamental law from dwarf irregulars to massive spirals
In a CDM Universe, the specific stellar angular momentum ()
and stellar mass () of a galaxy are correlated as a consequence of the
scaling existing for dark matter haloes ().
The shape of this law is crucial to test galaxy formation models, which are
currently discrepant especially at the lowest masses, allowing to constrain
fundamental parameters, e.g. the retained fraction of angular momentum. In this
study, we accurately determine the empirical relation (Fall
relation) for 92 nearby spiral galaxies (from S0 to Irr) selected from the
Spitzer Photometry and Accurate Rotation Curves (SPARC) sample in the
unprecedented mass range . We
significantly improve all previous estimates of the Fall relation by
determining profiles homogeneously for all galaxies, using extended HI
rotation curves, and selecting only galaxies for which a robust could
be measured (converged radial profile). We find the relation to be
well described by a single, unbroken power-law
over the entire mass range, with and orthogonal intrinsic
scatter of dex. We finally discuss some implications for galaxy
formation models of this fundamental scaling law and, in particular, the fact
that it excludes models in which discs of all masses retain the same fraction
of the halo angular momentum.Comment: A&A Letters, accepte
A novel 3D technique to study the kinematics of lensed galaxies
We present a 3D Bayesian method to model the kinematics of strongly lensed
galaxies from spatially-resolved emission-line observations. This technique
enables us to simultaneously recover the lens-mass distribution and the source
kinematics directly from the 3D data cube. We have tested this new method with
simulated OSIRIS observations for nine star-forming lensed galaxies with
different kinematic properties. The simulated rotation curves span a range of
shapes which are prototypes of different morphological galaxy types, from dwarf
to massive spiral galaxies. We have found that the median relative accuracy on
the inferred lens and kinematic parameters are at the level of 1 and 2 per
cent, respectively. We have also tested the robustness of the technique against
different inclination angles, signal-to-noise ratios, the presence of warps or
non-circular motions and we have found that the accuracy stays within a few per
cent in most cases. This technique represents a significant step forward with
respect to the methods used until now, as the lens parameters and the
kinematics of the source are derived from the same 3D data. This enables us to
study the possible degeneracies between the two and estimate the uncertainties
on all model parameters consistently.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
(3D) BAROLO: a new 3D algorithm to derive rotation curves of galaxies
We present 3D3DBAROLO,† a new code that derives rotation curves of galaxies from emission-line observations. This software fits 3D tilted-ring models to spectroscopic data cubes and can be used with a variety of observations: from H I and molecular lines to optical/IR recombination lines. We describe the structure of the main algorithm and show that it performs much better than the standard 2D approach on velocity fields. A number of successful applications, from high to very low spatial resolution data are presented and discussed. 3D3DBAROLO can recover the true rotation curve and estimate the intrinsic velocity dispersion even in barely resolved galaxies (∼2 resolution elements) provided that the signal to noise of the data is larger than 2–3. It can also be run automatically thanks to its source-detection and first-estimate modules, which make it suitable for the analysis of large 3D data sets. These features make 3D3DBAROLO a uniquely useful tool to derive reliable kinematics for both local and high-redshift galaxies from a variety of different instruments including the new generation Integral Field Units, ALMA and the SKA pathfinders
Gas accretion from minor mergers in local spiral galaxies
We quantify the gas accretion rate from minor mergers onto star-forming galaxies in the local Universe using Hi observations of 148 nearby spiral galaxies (WHISP sample). We developed a dedicated code that iteratively analyses Hi data-cubes, finds dwarf gas-rich satellites around larger galaxies, and estimates an upper limit to the gas accretion rate. We found that 22% of the galaxies have at least one detected dwarf companion. We made the very stringent assumption that all satellites are going to merge in the shortest possible time, transferring all their gas to the main galaxies. This leads to an estimate of the maximum gas accretion rate of 0.28 M⊙ yr-1, about five times lower than the average star formation rate of the sample. Given the assumptions, our accretion rate is clearly an overestimate. Our result strongly suggests that minor mergers do not play a significant role in the total gas accretion budget in local galaxies
Dark matter halos and scaling relations of extremely massive spiral galaxies from extended H I rotation curves
We present new and archival atomic hydrogen (H I ) observations of 15 of the most massive spiral galaxies in the local Universe ( M (* )> 10 (11) M-?). From 3D kinematic modeling of the datacubes, we derive extended HI rotation curves, and from these, we estimate masses of the dark matter halos and specific angular momenta of the discs. We confirm that massive spiral galaxies lie at the upper ends of the Tully-Fisher relation (mass vs velocity, M infinity V (4) ) and Fall relation (specific angular momentum vs mass, j infinity M (0.6) ), in both stellar and baryonic forms, with no significant deviations from single power laws. We study the connections between baryons and dark matter through the stellar (and baryon)-to-halo ratios of mass f(M) equivalent to M (*) /M-h and specific angular momentum f (j, *) equivalent to j( *) /j(h) and f( j, bar) equivalent to j(bar) /j(h). Combining our sample with others from the literature for less massive disc-dominated galaxies, we find that f(M) rises monotonically with M (*) and M-h (instead of the inverted-U shaped f(M) for spheroid-dominated galaxies), while f (j, *) and f( j, bar) are essentially constant near unity o v er four decades in mass. Our results indicate that disc galaxies constitute a self-similar population of objects closely linked to the self-similarity of their dark halos. This picture is reminiscent of early analytical models of galaxy formation wherein discs grow by relatively smooth and gradual inflow, isolated from disruptive events such as major mergers and strong active galactic nuclei feedback, in contrast to the more chaotic growth of spheroids.National Science Foundation (NSF) 1616177European Research Council (ERC)
European Commission 101040751
ERC under the European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation program 834148Brinson FoundationMCIN/AEI PID2020-114414GB-100Junta de Andalucia P20_00334
FEDER/Junta de Andalucia-Consejeria de Transformacion Economica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades A-FQM-510-UGR20
NSF/AST-171482
LITTLE THINGS in 3D: robust determination of the circular velocity of dwarf irregular galaxies
Dwarf Irregular galaxies (dIrrs) are the smallest stellar systems with
extended HI discs. The study of the kinematics of such discs is a powerful tool
to estimate the total matter distribution at these very small scales. In this
work, we study the HI kinematics of 17 galaxies extracted from the `Local
Irregulars That Trace Luminosity Extremes, The HI Nearby Galaxy Survey' (LITTLE
THINGS). Our approach differs significantly from previous studies in that we
directly fit 3D models (two spatial dimensions plus one spectral dimension)
using the software BAROLO, fully exploiting the information in the
HI datacubes. For each galaxy we derive the geometric parameters of the HI disc
(inclination and position angle), the radial distribution of the surface
density, the velocity-dispersion () profile and the rotation curve.
The circular velocity (V), which traces directly the galactic
potential, is then obtained by correcting the rotation curve for the asymmetric
drift. As an initial application, we show that these dIrrs lie on a baryonic
Tully-Fisher relation in excellent agreement with that seen on larger scales.
The final products of this work are high-quality, ready-to-use kinematic data
( and ) that we make publicly available. These
can be used to perform dynamical studies and improve our understanding of these
low-mass galaxies.Comment: 36 pages, 28 figures, 2 tables. Submitted to MNRAS (revised version
after the referee report). The final rotation curves can be downloaded from
http://www.filippofraternali.com/styled-9/index.htm
Kinematics of local and high-z galaxies through 3D modeling of emission-line datacubes
The kinematics is a fundamental tool to infer the dynamical structure of galaxies and to understand their formation and evolution. Spectroscopic observations of gas emission lines are often used to derive rotation curves and velocity dispersions. It is however difficult to disentangle these two quantities in low spatial-resolution data because of beam smearing.
In this thesis, we present 3D-Barolo, a new software to derive the gas kinematics of disk galaxies from emission-line data-cubes. The code builds tilted-ring models in the 3D observational space and compares them with the actual data-cubes. 3D-Barolo works with data at a wide range of spatial resolutions without being affected by instrumental biases. We use 3D-Barolo to derive rotation curves and velocity dispersions of several galaxies in both the local and the high-redshift Universe. We run our code on HI observations of nearby galaxies and we compare our results with 2D traditional approaches. We show that a 3D approach to the derivation of the gas kinematics has to be preferred to a 2D approach whenever a galaxy is resolved with less than about 20 elements across the disk.
We moreover analyze a sample of galaxies at z~1, observed in the H-alpha line with the KMOS/VLT spectrograph. Our 3D modeling reveals that the kinematics of these high-z systems is comparable to that of local disk galaxies, with steeply-rising rotation curves followed by a flat part and H-alpha velocity dispersions of 15-40 km/s over the whole disks. This evidence suggests that disk galaxies were already fully settled about 7-8 billion years ago.
In summary, 3D-Barolo is a powerful and robust tool to separate physical and instrumental effects and to derive a reliable kinematics. The analysis of large samples of galaxies at different redshifts with 3D-Barolo will provide new insights on how galaxies assemble and evolve throughout cosmic time
Galaxy spin as a formation probe:the stellar-to-halo specific angular momentum relation
We derive the stellar-to-halo specific angular momentum relation (SHSAMR) of
galaxies at by combining i) the standard CDM tidal torque theory
ii) the observed relation between stellar mass and specific angular momentum
(Fall relation) and iii) various determinations of the stellar-to-halo mass
relation (SHMR). We find that the ratio of the
specific angular momentum of stars to that of the dark matter i) varies with
mass as a double power-law, ii) it always has a peak in the mass range explored
and iii) it is times larger for spirals than for ellipticals. The results
have some dependence on the adopted SHMR and we provide fitting formulae in
each case. For any choice of the SHMR, the peak of occurs at the same
mass where the stellar-to-halo mass ratio has a
maximum. This is mostly driven by the straightness and tightness of the Fall
relation, which requires and to be correlated with each other
roughly as , as expected if the outer and more angular
momentum rich parts of a halo failed to accrete onto the central galaxy and
form stars (biased collapse). We also confirm that the difference in the
angular momentum of spirals and ellipticals at a given mass is too large to be
ascribed only to different spins of the parent dark-matter haloes (spin bias).Comment: matches MNRAS published versio
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