404 research outputs found
Chemical pre-processing of cluster galaxies over the past 10 billion years in the IllustrisTNG simulations
We use the IllustrisTNG simulations to investigate the evolution of the
mass-metallicity relation (MZR) for star-forming cluster galaxies as a function
of the formation history of their cluster host. The simulations predict an
enhancement in the gas-phase metallicities of star-forming cluster galaxies
(10^9< M_star<10^10 M_sun) at z<1.0 in comparisons to field galaxies. This is
qualitatively consistent with observations. We find that the metallicity
enhancement of cluster galaxies appears prior to their infall into the central
cluster potential, indicating for the first time a systematic "chemical
pre-processing" signature for {\it infalling} cluster galaxies. Namely,
galaxies which will fall into a cluster by z=0 show a ~0.05 dex enhancement in
the MZR compared to field galaxies at z<0.5. Based on the inflow rate of gas
into cluster galaxies and its metallicity, we identify that the accretion of
pre-enriched gas is the key driver of the chemical evolution of such galaxies,
particularly in the stellar mass range (10^9< M_star<10^10 M_sun). We see
signatures of an environmental dependence of the ambient/inflowing gas
metallicity which extends well outside the nominal virial radius of clusters.
Our results motivate future observations looking for pre-enrichment signatures
in dense environments.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
Synthetic Galaxy Images and Spectra from the Illustris Simulation
We present our methods for generating a catalog of 7,000 synthetic images and
40,000 integrated spectra of redshift z = 0 galaxies from the Illustris
Simulation. The mock data products are produced by using stellar population
synthesis models to assign spectral energy distributions (SED) to each star
particle in the galaxies. The resulting synthetic images and integrated SEDs
therefore properly reflect the spatial distribution, stellar metallicity
distribution, and star formation history of the galaxies. From the synthetic
data products it is possible to produce monochromatic or color-composite
images, perform SED fitting, classify morphology, determine galaxy structural
properties, and evaluate the impacts of galaxy viewing angle. The main
contribution of this paper is to describe the production, format, and
composition of the image catalog that makes up the Illustris Simulation
Obsevatory. As a demonstration of this resource, we derive galactic stellar
mass estimates by applying the SED fitting code FAST to the synthetic galaxy
products, and compare the derived stellar masses against the true stellar
masses from the simulation. We find from this idealized experiment that
systematic biases exist in the photometrically derived stellar mass values that
can be reduced by using a fixed metallicity in conjunction with a minimum
galaxy age restriction.Comment: 21 pages, 17 figures, submitted to MNRAS. Comments welcom
The SINS survey of z~2 galaxy kinematics: properties of the giant star forming clumps
We have studied the properties of giant star forming clumps in five z~2
star-forming disks with deep SINFONI AO spectroscopy at the ESO VLT. The clumps
reside in disk regions where the Toomre Q-parameter is below unity, consistent
with their being bound and having formed from gravitational instability. Broad
H{\alpha}/[NII] line wings demonstrate that the clumps are launching sites of
powerful outflows. The inferred outflow rates are comparable to or exceed the
star formation rates, in one case by a factor of eight. Typical clumps may lose
a fraction of their original gas by feedback in a few hundred million years,
allowing them to migrate into the center. The most active clumps may lose much
of their mass and disrupt in the disk. The clumps leave a modest imprint on the
gas kinematics. Velocity gradients across the clumps are 10-40 km/s/kpc,
similar to the galactic rotation gradients. Given beam smearing and clump
sizes, these gradients may be consistent with significant rotational support in
typical clumps. Extreme clumps may not be rotationally supported; either they
are not virialized, or they are predominantly pressure supported. The velocity
dispersion is spatially rather constant and increases only weakly with star
formation surface density. The large velocity dispersions may be driven by the
release of gravitational energy, either at the outer disk/accreting streams
interface, and/or by the clump migration within the disk. Spatial variations in
the inferred gas phase oxygen abundance are broadly consistent with inside-out
growing disks, and/or with inward migration of the clumps.Comment: accepted Astrophys. Journal, February 9, 201
From rings to bulges: evidence for rapid secular galaxy evolution at z~2 from integral field spectroscopy in the SINS survey
We present Ha integral field spectroscopy of well resolved, UV/optically
selected z~2 star-forming galaxies as part of the SINS survey with SINFONI on
the ESO VLT. Our laser guide star adaptive optics and good seeing data show the
presence of turbulent rotating star forming rings/disks, plus central
bulge/inner disk components, whose mass fractions relative to total dynamical
mass appears to scale with [NII]/Ha flux ratio and star formation age. We
propose that the buildup of the central disks and bulges of massive galaxies at
z~2 can be driven by the early secular evolution of gas-rich proto-disks. High
redshift disks exhibit large random motions. This turbulence may in part be
stirred up by the release of gravitational energy in the rapid cold accretion
flows along the filaments of the cosmic web. As a result dynamical friction and
viscous processes proceed on a time scale of <1 Gyr, at least an order of
magnitude faster than in z~0 disk galaxies. Early secular evolution thus drives
gas and stars into the central regions and can build up exponential disks and
massive bulges, even without major mergers. Secular evolution along with
increased efficiency of star formation at high surface densities may also help
to account for the short time scales of the stellar buildup observed in massive
galaxies at z~2.Comment: accepted Astrophysical Journal, main July 8 200
Galaxy morphology and star formation in the Illustris Simulation at
We study how optical galaxy morphology depends on mass and star formation rate (SFR) in the Illustris Simulation. To do so, we measure automated galaxy structures in 10 808 simulated galaxies at z = 0 with stellar masses 10[superscript 9.7] < M*/Mȯ < 10[superscript12.3]. We add observational realism to idealized synthetic images and measure non-parametric statistics in rest-frame optical and near-IR images from four directions. We find that Illustris creates a morphologically diverse galaxy population, occupying the observed bulge strength locus and reproducing median morphology trends versus stellar mass, SFR, and compactness. Morphology correlates realistically with rotation, following classification schemes put forth by kinematic surveys. Type fractions as a function of environment agree roughly with data. These results imply that connections among mass, star formation, and galaxy structure arise naturally from models matching global star formation and halo occupation functions when simulated with accurate methods. This raises a question of how to construct experiments on galaxy surveys to better distinguish between models. We predict that at fixed halo mass near 10[superscript 12] Mȯ, disc-dominated galaxies have higher stellar mass than bulge-dominated ones, a possible consequence of the Illustris feedback model. While Illustris galaxies at M* ∼ 10[superscript 11] Mȯ have a reasonable size distribution, those at M* ∼ 10[superscript 10] Mȯ have half-light radii larger than observed by a factor of 2. Furthermore, at M* ∼ 10[superscript 10.5]–10[superscript 11] Mȯ, a relevant fraction of Illustris galaxies have distinct ‘ring-like’ features, such that the bright pixels have an unusually wide spatial extent
Bulge growth through disk instabilities in high-redshift galaxies
The role of disk instabilities, such as bars and spiral arms, and the
associated resonances, in growing bulges in the inner regions of disk galaxies
have long been studied in the low-redshift nearby Universe. There it has long
been probed observationally, in particular through peanut-shaped bulges. This
secular growth of bulges in modern disk galaxies is driven by weak,
non-axisymmetric instabilities: it mostly produces pseudo-bulges at slow rates
and with long star-formation timescales. Disk instabilities at high redshift
(z>1) in moderate-mass to massive galaxies (10^10 to a few 10^11 Msun of stars)
are very different from those found in modern spiral galaxies. High-redshift
disks are globally unstable and fragment into giant clumps containing 10^8-10^9
Msun of gas and stars each, which results in highly irregular galaxy
morphologies. The clumps and other features associated to the violent
instability drive disk evolution and bulge growth through various mechanisms,
on short timescales. The giant clumps can migrate inward and coalesce into the
bulge in a few 10^8 yr. The instability in the very turbulent media drives
intense gas inflows toward the bulge and nuclear region. Thick disks and
supermassive black holes can grow concurrently as a result of the violent
instability. This chapter reviews the properties of high-redshift disk
instabilities, the evolution of giant clumps and other features associated to
the instability, and the resulting growth of bulges and associated sub-galactic
components.Comment: 37 pages, 9 figures. Invited refereed review to appear in "Galactic
Bulges", E. Laurikainen, D. Gadotti, R. Peletier (eds.), Springe
Gas Accretion as a Dominant Formation Mode in Massive Galaxies from the GOODS NICMOS Survey
The ability to resolve all processes which drive galaxy formation is one of
the most fundamental goals in extragalactic astronomy. While star formation
rates and the merger history are now measured with increasingly high certainty,
the role of gas accretion from the intergalactic medium in supplying gas for
star formation still remains largely unknown. We present in this paper indirect
evidence for the accretion of gas into massive galaxies with initial stellar
masses M_*>10^{11} M_sol and following the same merger adjusted co-moving
number density at lower redshifts during the epoch 1.5 < z < 3, using results
from the GOODS NICMOS Survey (GNS). We show that the measured gas mass
fractions of these massive galaxies are inconsistent with the observed star
formation history for the same galaxy population. We further demonstrate that
this additional gas mass cannot be accounted for by cold gas delivered through
minor and major mergers. We also consider the effects of gas outflows and gas
recycling due to stellar evolution in these calculations. We argue that to
sustain star formation at the observed rates there must be additional methods
for increasing the cold gas mass, and that the likeliest method for
establishing this supply of gas is by accretion from the intergalactic medium.
We calculate that the average gas mass accretion rate into these massive
galaxies between 1.5 < z < 3.0, is \dot{M} = 96+/-19 M_sol/yr after accounting
for outflowing gas. We show that during this epoch, and for these very massive
galaxies, 49+/-20% of baryonic mass assembly is a result of gas accretion and
unresolved mergers. However, 66+/-20% of all star formation in this epoch is
the result of gas accretion. This reveals that for the most massive galaxies at
1.5< z< 3 gas accretion is the dominant method for instigating new stellar mass
assembly.Comment: MNRAS in press, 11 pages, 5 figure
The role of massive halos in the Star Formation History of the Universe
The most striking feature of the Cosmic Star Formation History (CSFH) of the
Universe is a dramatic drop of the star formation (SF) activity, since z~1. In
this work we investigate if the very same process of assembly and growth of
structures is one of the major drivers of the observed decline. We study the
contribution to the CSFH of galaxies in halos of different masses. This is done
by studying the total SFR-halo mass-redshift plane from redshift 0 to redshift
z~1.6 in a sample of 57 groups and clusters by using the deepest available mid-
and far-infrared surveys conducted with Spitzer MIPS and Herschel PACS and
SPIRE. Our results show that low mass groups provide a 60-80% contribution to
the CSFH at z~1. Such contribution declines faster than the CSFH in the last 8
billion years to less than 10% at z<0.3, where the overall SF activity is
sustained by lower mass halos. More massive systems provide only a marginal
contribution (<10%) at any epoch. A simplified abundance matching method shows
that the large contribution of low mass groups at z~1 is due to a large
fraction (>50%) of very massive, highly star forming Main Sequence galaxies.
Below z~1 a quenching process must take place in massive halos to cause the
observed faster suppression of their SF activity. Such process must be a slow
one though, as most of the models implementing a rapid quenching of the SF
activity in accreting satellites significantly underpredicts the observed SF
level in massive halos at any redshift. Starvation or the transition from cold
to hot accretion would provide a quenching timescale of 1 Gyrs more consistent
with the observations. Our results suggest a scenario in which, due to the
structure formation process, more and more galaxies experience the group
environment and, thus, the associated quenching process. This leads to the
progressive suppression of their SF activity shaping the CSFH below z~1.Comment: 18 pages, 21 figures, accepted for publication by A&
The SINS/zC-SINF Survey of z~2 Galaxy Kinematics: The Nature of Dispersion Dominated Galaxies
We analyze the spectra, spatial distributions and kinematics of Ha, [NII] and
[SII] emission in a sample of 42, z~2.2 UV/optically selected star forming
galaxies (SFGs) from the SINS & zC-SINF surveys, 35 of which were observed in
the adaptive optics mode of SINFONI. This is supplemented by kinematic data
from 48 z~1-2.5 galaxies from the literature. We find that the kinematic
classification of the high-z SFGs as `dispersion dominated' or `rotation
dominated' correlates most strongly with their intrinsic sizes. Smaller
galaxies are more likely `dispersion-dominated' for two main reasons: 1) The
rotation velocity scales linearly with galaxy size but intrinsic velocity
dispersion does not depend on size, and as such, their ratio is systematically
lower for smaller galaxies, and 2) Beam smearing strongly decreases large-scale
velocity gradients and increases observed dispersion much more for galaxies
with sizes at or below the resolution. Dispersion dominated SFGs may thus have
intrinsic properties similar to `rotation dominated' SFGs, but are primarily
more compact, lower mass, less metal enriched and may have higher gas
fractions, plausibly because they represent an earlier evolutionary state.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted by Ap
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