201 research outputs found
Conformal gravity: light deflection revisited and the galactic rotation curve failure
We show how Conformal Gravity (CG) has to satisfy a fine-tuning condition to
describe the rotation curves of disk galaxies without the aid of dark matter.
Interpreting CG as a gauge natural theory yields conservation laws and their
associated superpotentials without ambiguities. We consider the light
deflection of a point-like lens and impose that the two Schwarzschild-like
metrics with and without the lens are identical at infinite distances from the
lens. The energy conservation law implies that the parameter in the
linear term of the metric has to vanish, otherwise the two metrics are
physically inaccessible from each other. This linear term is responsible to
mimic the role of dark matter in disk galaxies and gravitational lensing
systems. Our analysis shows that removing the need of dark matter with CG thus
relies on a fine-tuning condition on . We also illustrate why the
results of previous investigations of gravitational lensing in CG largely
disagree. These discrepancies derive from the erroneous use of the deflection
angle definition adopted in General Relativity, where the vacuum solution is
asymptotically flat, unlike CG. In addition, the lens mass is identified with
various combinations of the metric parameters. However, these identifications
are arbitrary, because the mass is not a conformally invariant quantity, unlike
the conserved charge associated to the energy conservation law. Based on this
conservation law and by removing the fine-tuning condition on , i.e. by
setting , the energy difference between the metric with the
point-like lens and the metric without it defines a conformally invariant
quantity that can in principle be used for (1) a proper derivation of light
deflection in CG, and (2) the identification of the lens mass with a function
of the parameters and of the Schwarzschild-like metric.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figure. Revised version according to the referees
comments. The results reported in the original version remain unchange
Clusters and Groups of Galaxies in the Simulated Local Universe
We compare the properties of galaxy groups extracted from the Updated Zwicky
Catalogue (UZC) with those of groups extracted from N-body simulations of the
local Universe, in a LambdaCDM and a tauCDM cosmology. In the simulations, the
initial conditions of the dark matter density field are set to reproduce the
present time distribution of the galaxies within 80 Mpc/h from the Milky Way.
These initial conditions minimize the uncertainty originated by cosmic
variance, which has affected previous analyses of this small volume of the
Universe. The simulations also model the evolution of the photometric
properties of the galaxy population with semi-analytic prescriptions. The
models yield a galaxy luminosity function sensibly different from that of the
UZC and are unable to reproduce the distribution of groups and their luminosity
content. The discrepancy between the model and the UZC reduces substantially,
if we redistribute the luminosity among the galaxies in the simulation
according to the UZC luminosity function while preserving the galaxy luminosity
rank. The modified LambdaCDM model provides the best match to the UZC: the
abundances of groups by harmonic radius, velocity dispersion, mass and
luminosity are consistent with observations. We find that this model also
reproduces the halo occupation number of groups and clusters. However, the
large-scale distribution of groups is marginally consistent with the UZC and
the redshift-space correlation function of galaxies on scales larger than 6
Mpc/h is still more than 3-sigma smaller than observed. We conclude that
reproducing the properties of the observed groups certainly requires a more
sophisticated treatment of galaxy formation, and possibly an improvement of the
dark matter model.Comment: 20 pages, 18 figures, accepted by MNRAS. Minor revisions according to
referee's comments. Conclusions unchange
Deep spectroscopy in nearby galaxy clusters: III Orbital structure of galaxies in Abell 85
Galaxies in clusters are strongly affected by their environment. They evolve
according to several physical mechanisms that are active in clusters. Their
efficiency can strongly depend on the orbital configuration of the galaxies.
Our aim is to analyse the orbits of the galaxies in the cluster Abell 85, based
on the study of the galaxy velocity anisotropy parameter. We have solved the
Jeans equation under the assumption that the galaxies in A85 are collisionless
objects, within the spherically symmetric gravitational potential of the
virialized cluster. The mass of the cluster was estimated with X-ray and
caustic analyses. We find that the anisotropy profile of the full galaxy
population in A85 is an increasing monotonic function of the distance from the
cluster centre: on average, galaxies in the central region (r/r200 < 0.3) are
on isotropic orbits, while galaxies in the outer regions are on radial orbits.
We also find that the orbital properties of the galaxies strongly depend on
their stellar colour. In particular, blue galaxies are on less radial orbits
than red galaxies. The different families of cluster galaxies considered here
have the pseudo phase-space density profiles Q(r) and Qr(r) consistent with the
profiles expected in virialized dark matter halos in -body simulations. This
result suggests that the galaxies in A85 have reached dynamical equilibrium
within the cluster potential. Our results indicate that the origin of the blue
and red colour of the different galaxy populations is the different orbital
shape rather than the accretion time.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures. Accepted for publication at MNRA
The radial metallicity gradients in the Milky Way thick disk as fossil signatures of a primordial chemical distribution
In this letter we examine the evolution of the radial metallicity gradient
induced by secular processes, in the disk of an -body Milky Way-like galaxy.
We assign a [Fe/H] value to each particle of the simulation according to an
initial, cosmologically motivated, radial chemical distribution and let the
disk dynamically evolve for 6 Gyr. This direct approach allows us to take into
account only the effects of dynamical evolution and to gauge how and to what
extent they affect the initial chemical conditions. The initial [Fe/H]
distribution increases with R in the inner disk up to R ~ 10 kpc and decreases
for larger R. We find that the initial chemical profile does not undergo major
transformations after 6 Gyr of dynamical evolution. The final radial chemical
gradients predicted by the model in the solar neighborhood are positive and of
the same order of those recently observed in the Milky Way thick disk.
We conclude that: 1) the spatial chemical imprint at the time of disk
formation is not washed out by secular dynamical processes, and 2) the observed
radial gradient may be the dynamical relic of a thick disk originated from a
stellar population showing a positive chemical radial gradient in the inner
regions.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, Accepted for publication on Astrophysical
Journal Letter
The Spatial and Kinematic Distributions of Cluster Galaxies in a LCDM Universe -- Comparison with Observations
We combine dissipationless N-body simulations and semi-analytic models of
galaxy formation to study the spatial and kinematic distributions of cluster
galaxies in a LCDM cosmology. We investigate how the star formation rates,
colours and morphologies of galaxies vary as a function of distance from the
cluster centre and compare our results with the CNOC1 survey of galaxies from
15 X-ray luminous clusters in the redshift range 0.18 to 0.55. In our model,
gas no longer cools onto galaxies after they fall into the cluster and their
star formation rates decline on timescales of 1-2 Gyr. Galaxies in cluster
cores have lower star formation rates and redder colours than galaxies in the
outer regions because they were accreted earlier. Our colour and star formation
gradients agree with those those derived from the data. The difference in
velocity dispersions between red and blue galaxies observed in the CNOC1
clusters is also well reproduced by the model. We assume that the morphologies
of cluster galaxies are determined solely by their merging histories.
Morphology gradients in clusters arise naturally, with the fraction of bulge-
dominated galaxies highest in cluster cores. We compare these gradients with
the CNOC1 data and find excellent agreement for bulge-dominated galaxies. The
simulated clusters contain too few galaxies of intermediate bulge-to-disk
ratio, suggesting that additional processes may influence the morphological
evolution of disk-dominated galaxies in clusters. Although the properties of
the cluster galaxies in our model agree extremely well with the data, the same
is not true of field galaxies. Both the star formation rates and the colours of
bright field galaxies appear to evolve much more strongly from redshift 0.2 to
0.4 in the CNOC1 field sample than in our simulations.Comment: 17 pages, sumitted to MNRAS. Simulation outputs, halo catalogs,
merger trees and galaxy catalogs are now available at
http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/GIF
Deep spectroscopic luminosity function of Abell 85: no evidence for a steep upturn of the faint-end slope
We present a new deep determination of the spectroscopic LF within the virial
radius of the nearby and massive Abell\,85 (A85) cluster down to the dwarf
regime (M* + 6) using VLT/VIMOS spectra for galaxies with m mag and mag arcsec. The
resulting LF from 438 cluster members is best modelled by a double Schechter
function due to the presence of a statistically significant upturn at the
faint-end. The amplitude of this upturn (),
however, is much smaller than that of the SDSS composite photometric cluster LF
by Popesso et al. 2006, -2. The faint-end slope of the LF in
A85 is consistent, within the uncertainties, with that of the field. The red
galaxy population dominates the LF at low luminosities, and is the main
responsible for the upturn. The fact that the slopes of the spectroscopic LFs
in the field and in a cluster as massive as A85 are similar suggests that the
cluster environment does not play a major role in determining the abundance of
low-mass galaxies.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted at MNRAS lette
X-ray Emitting GHz-Peaked Spectrum Galaxies: Testing a Dynamical-Radiative Model with Broad-Band Spectra
In a dynamical-radiative model we recently developed to describe the physics
of compact, GHz-Peaked-Spectrum (GPS) sources, the relativistic jets propagate
across the inner, kpc-sized region of the host galaxy, while the electron
population of the expanding lobes evolves and emits synchrotron and
inverse-Compton (IC) radiation. Interstellar-medium gas clouds engulfed by the
expanding lobes, and photoionized by the active nucleus, are responsible for
the radio spectral turnover through free-free absorption (FFA) of the
synchrotron photons. The model provides a description of the evolution of the
spectral energy distribution (SED) of GPS sources with their expansion,
predicting significant and complex high-energy emission, from the X-ray to the
gamma-ray frequency domain. Here, we test this model with the broad-band SEDs
of a sample of eleven X-ray emitting GPS galaxies with Compact-Symmetric-Object
(CSO) morphology, and show that: (i) the shape of the radio continuum at
frequencies lower than the spectral turnover is indeed well accounted for by
the FFA mechanism; (ii) the observed X-ray spectra can be interpreted as
non-thermal radiation produced via IC scattering of the local radiation fields
off the lobe particles, providing a viable alternative to the thermal,
accretion-disk dominated scenario. We also show that the relation between the
hydrogen column densities derived from the X-ray (N_H) and radio (N_HI) data of
the sources is suggestive of a positive correlation, which, if confirmed by
future observations, would provide further support to our scenario of
high-energy emitting lobes.Comment: 29 pages, 3 figures, 6 tables; to appear in ApJ. A few clarifications
included, according to referee's suggestion
Implications for dwarf spheroidal mass content from interloper removal
Using the caustic method, we identify the member stars of five dwarf
spheroidal (dSph) galaxies of the Milky Way, the smallest dark matter (DM)
dominated systems in the Universe. After our interloper rejection, we compute
line-of-sight velocity dispersion profiles that are substantially smoother than
previous results. Moreover, two dSphs have line-of-sight velocity dispersions
20% smaller than previous calculations suggested. Our Jeans modelling confirms
that the DM content interior to 300pc is roughly constant with satellite
luminosity. Finally, if we assume that MOND provides the true law of gravity,
our identification of interlopers implies that four dSphs have mass-to-light
ratios in agreement with stellar population synthesis models, whereas Carina
still has a mass-to-light ratio a factor of two too large and remains a problem
for MOND.Comment: A&A accepted, 13 pages, 14 figures, 4 table
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