50 research outputs found
The connection between star formation and stellar mass: Specific star formation rates to redshift one
We investigate the contribution of star formation to the growth of stellar
mass in galaxies over the redshift range 0.5 < z < 1.1 by studying the redshift
evolution of the specific star formation rate (SSFR), defined as the star
formation rate per unit stellar mass. We use an I-band selected sample of 6180
field galaxies from the Munich Near-Infrared Cluster Survey (MUNICS) with
spectroscopically calibrated photometric redshifts. The SSFR decreases with
stellar mass at all redshifts. The low SSFRs of massive galaxies indicates that
star formation does not significantly change their stellar mass over this
redshift range: The majority of massive galaxies have assembled the bulk of
their mass before redshift unity. Furthermore, these highest mass galaxies
contain the oldest stellar populations at all redshifts. The line of maximum
SSFR runs parallel to lines of constant star formation rate. With increasing
redshift, the maximum SFR is generally increasing for all stellar masses, from
SFR ~ 5 M_sun/yr at z = 0.5 to SFR ~ 10 M_sun/yr at z = 1.1. We also show that
the large SSFRs of low-mass galaxies cannot be sustained over extended periods
of time. Finally, our results do not require a substantial contribution of
merging to the growth of stellar mass in massive galaxies over the redshift
range probed. We note that highly obscured galaxies which remain undetected in
our sample do not affect these findings for the bulk of the field galaxy
population.Comment: 5 pages, 3 colour figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
A Near-Infrared Selected Galaxy Redshift Survey
This thesis presents work on galaxy evolution at redshifts 0 < z < 1.5 from a near-infrared selected galaxy redshift survey and much larger optically selected galaxy catalogues where distances were derived from photometric redshifts. Changes in the galaxy population are characterised by the evolution of luminosity functions, luminosity density, star-formation rate density and specific star-formation rate. We find that the galaxy luminosity function changes with increasing redshift in the sense that the characteristic luminosity increases but the number density decreases. This effect is smaller at rest-frame near-infrared wavelengths and gets more pronounced at shorter wavelengths. Furthermore, we use the specific star-formation rate to investigate the build-up of stellar mass in galaxies showing that the most massive galaxies formed the bulk of their stellar population at very early times whereas low-mass galaxies still show ongoing (maybe episodic) star-formation activity
Climate Modelling of Mass-Extinction Events: A Review
Despite tremendous interest in the topic and decades of research, the origins
of the major losses of biodiversity in the history of life on Earth remain
elusive. A variety of possible causes for these mass-extinction events have
been investigated, including impacts of asteroids or comets, large-scale
volcanic eruptions, effects from changes in the distribution of continents
caused by plate tectonics, and biological factors, to name but a few. Many of
these suggested drivers involve or indeed require changes of the Earth's
climate, which then affect the biosphere of our planet causing a global
reduction in the diversity of biological species. It can be argued, therefore,
that a detailed understanding of these climatic variations and their effects on
ecosystems are prerequisites for a solution to the enigma of biological
extinctions. Apart from investigations of paleoclimate data of the time periods
of mass extinctions, climate-modelling experiments should be able to shed some
light on these dramatic events. Somewhat surprisingly, however, only few
comprehensive modelling studies of the climate changes associated with
extinction events have been undertaken. These studies will be reviewed in this
paper. Furthermore, the role of modelling in extinction research in general and
suggestions for future research are discussed.Comment: Accepted for publication in the International Journal of
Astrobiology; 10 page
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A Pronounced Spike in Ocean Productivity Triggered by the Chicxulub Impact
There is increasing evidence linking the mass-extinction event at the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary to an asteroid impact near Chicxulub, Mexico. Here we use model simulations to explore the combined effect of sulfate aerosols, carbon dioxide and dust from the impact on the oceans and the marine biosphere in the immediate aftermath of the impact. We find a strong temperature decrease, a brief algal bloom caused by nutrients from both the deep ocean and the projectile, and moderate surface ocean acidification. Comparing the modeled longer-term post-impact warming and changes in carbon isotopes with empirical evidence points to a substantial release of carbon from the terrestrial biosphere. Overall, our results shed light on the decades to centuries after the Chicxulub impact which are difficult to resolve with proxy data
Specific star formation rates to redshift 5 from the FORS Deep Field and the GOODS-S Field
We explore the build-up of stellar mass in galaxies over a wide redshift
range 0.4 < z < 5.0 by studying the evolution of the specific star formation
rate (SSFR), defined as the star formation rate per unit stellar mass, as a
function of stellar mass and age. Our work is based on a combined sample of ~
9000 galaxies from the FORS Deep Field and the GOODS-S field, providing high
statistical accuracy and relative insensitivity against cosmic variance. As at
lower redshifts, we find that lower-mass galaxies show higher SSFRs than higher
mass galaxies, although highly obscured galaxies remain undetected in our
sample. Furthermore, the highest mass galaxies contain the oldest stellar
populations at all redshifts, in principle agreement with the existence of
evolved, massive galaxies at 1 < z < 3. It is remarkable, however, that this
trend continues to very high redshifts of z ~ 4. We also show that with
increasing redshift the SSFR for massive galaxies increases by a factor of ~
10, reaching the era of their formation at z ~ 2 and beyond. These findings can
be interpreted as evidence for an early epoch of star formation in the most
massive galaxies, and ongoing star-formation activity in lower mass galaxies.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL; 4 pages, 2 color figures, uses
emulateapj.cl
The Munich Near-Infrared Cluster Survey (MUNICS) - IX. Galaxy Evolution to z ~ 2 From Optically Selected Catalogues
(Abridged) We present B, R, and I-band selected galaxy catalogues based on
the Munich Near-Infrared Cluster Survey (MUNICS) which, together with the
K-selected sample, serve as an important probe of galaxy evolution in the
redshift range 0 < z < 2. Furthermore, used in comparison they are ideally
suited to study selection effects. The construction of the B, R, and I-selected
photometric catalogues, containing ~9000, ~9000, and ~6000 galaxies,
respectively, is described in detail. The catalogues reach 50% completeness
limits for point sources of B ~ 24.5mag, R ~ 23.5mag, and I ~ 22.5mag and cover
an area of about 0.3 square degrees. Photometric redshifts are derived for all
galaxies with an accuracy of dz/(1+z) ~ 0.057. We investigate the influence of
selection band and environment on the specific star formation rate (SSFR). We
find that K-band selection indeed comes close to selection in stellar mass,
while B-band selection purely selects galaxies in star formation rate. We use a
galaxy group catalogue constructed on the K-band selected MUNICS sample to
study possible differences of the SSFR between the field and the group
environment, finding a marginally lower average SSFR in groups as compared to
the field, especially at lower redshifts. The field-galaxy luminosity function
in the B and R band as derived from the R-selected sample evolves out to z ~ 2
in the sense that the characteristic luminosity increases but the number
density decreases. This effect is smaller at longer rest-frame wavelengths and
gets more pronounced at shorter wavelengths. Parametrising the redshift
evolution of the Schechter parameters as M*(z) = M*(0) + a ln(1+z) and Phi*(z)
= Phi*(0) (1+z)^b we find evolutionary parameters a ~ -2.1 and b ~ -2.5 for the
B band, and a ~ -1.4 and b ~ -1.8 for the R band.Comment: 23 pages, 19 figures; accepted for publication in MNRAS; version with
high-resolution figures will be made available at
http://www.usm.uni-muenchen.de/people/feulner/munics9/preprint_munics9.pd
Investigating Mesozoic Climate Trends and Sensitivities With a Large Ensemble of Climate Model Simulations
The Mesozoic era (âŒ252 to 66 million years ago) was a key interval in Earth's evolution toward its modern state, witnessing the breakup of the supercontinent Pangaea and significant biotic innovations like the early evolution of mammals. Plate tectonic dynamics drove a fundamental climatic transition from the early Mesozoic supercontinent toward the Late Cretaceous fragmented continental configuration. Here, key aspects of Mesozoic long-term environmental changes are assessed in a climate model ensemble framework. We analyze so far the most extended ensemble of equilibrium climate states simulated for evolving Mesozoic boundary conditions covering the period from 255 to 60 Ma in 5âMyr timesteps. Global mean temperatures are generally found to be elevated above the present and exhibit a baseline warming trend driven by rising sea levels and increasing solar luminosity. Warm (Triassic and mid-Cretaceous) and cool (Jurassic and end-Cretaceous) anomalies result from pCO2 changes indicated by different reconstructions. Seasonal and zonal temperature contrasts as well as continental aridity show an overall decrease from the Late Triassic-Early Jurassic to the Late Cretaceous. Meridional temperature gradients are reduced at higher global temperatures and less land area in the high latitudes. With systematic sensitivity experiments, the influence of paleogeography, sea level, vegetation patterns, pCO2, solar luminosity, and orbital configuration on these trends is investigated. For example, long-term seasonality trends are driven by paleogeography, but orbital cycles could have had similar-scale effects on shorter timescales. Global mean temperatures, continental humidity, and meridional temperature gradients are, however, also strongly affected by pCO2
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Coupling framework (1.0) for the PISM (1.1.4) ice sheet model and the MOM5 (5.1.0) ocean model via the PICO ice shelf cavity model in an Antarctic domain
The past and future evolution of the Antarctic Ice Sheet is largely controlled by interactions between the ocean and floating ice shelves. To investigate these interactions, coupled ocean and ice sheet model configurations are required. Previous modelling studies have mostly relied on high-resolution configurations, limiting these studies to individual glaciers or regions over short timescales of decades to a few centuries. We present a framework to couple the dynamic ice sheet model PISM (Parallel Ice Sheet Model) with the global ocean general circulation model MOM5 (Modular Ocean Model) via the ice shelf cavity model PICO (Potsdam Ice-shelf Cavity mOdel). As ice shelf cavities are not resolved by MOM5 but are parameterized with the PICO box model, the framework allows the ice sheet and ocean components to be run at resolutions of 16âkm and 3â respectively. This approach makes the coupled configuration a useful tool for the analysis of interactions between the Antarctic Ice Sheet and the global ocean over time spans of the order of centuries to millennia. In this study, we describe the technical implementation of this coupling framework: sub-shelf melting in the ice sheet component is calculated by PICO from modelled ocean temperatures and salinities at the depth of the continental shelf, and, vice versa, the resulting mass and energy fluxes from melting at the iceâocean interface are transferred to the ocean component. Mass and energy fluxes are shown to be conserved to machine precision across the considered component domains. The implementation is computationally efficient as it introduces only minimal overhead. Furthermore, the coupled model is evaluated in a 4000 year simulation under constant present-day climate forcing and is found to be stable with respect to the ocean and ice sheet spin-up states. The framework deals with heterogeneous spatial grid geometries, varying grid resolutions, and timescales between the ice and ocean component in a generic way; thus, it can be adopted to a wide range of model set-ups
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CM2Mc-LPJmL v1.0: biophysical coupling of a process-based dynamic vegetation model with managed land to a general circulation model
The terrestrial biosphere is exposed to land-use and climate change, which not only affects vegetation dynamics but also changes landâatmosphere feedbacks. Specifically, changes in land cover affect biophysical feedbacks of water and energy, thereby contributing to climate change. In this study, we couple the well-established and comprehensively validated dynamic global vegetation model LPJmL5 (LundâPotsdamâJena managed Land) to the coupled climate model CM2Mc, the latter of which is based on the atmosphere model AM2 and the ocean model MOM5 (Modular Ocean Model 5), and name it CM2Mc-LPJmL. In CM2Mc, we replace the simple land-surface model LaD (Land Dynamics; where vegetation is static and prescribed) with LPJmL5, and we fully couple the water and energy cycles using the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL) Flexible Modeling System (FMS). Several improvements to LPJmL5 were implemented to allow a fully functional biophysical coupling. These include a sub-daily cycle for calculating energy and water fluxes, conductance of the soil evaporation and plant interception, canopy-layer humidity, and the surface energy balance in order to calculate the surface and canopy-layer temperature within LPJmL5. Exchanging LaD with LPJmL5 and, therefore, switching from a static and prescribed vegetation to a dynamic vegetation allows us to model important biospheric processes, including fire, mortality, permafrost, hydrological cycling and the impacts of managed land (crop growth and irrigation). Our results show that CM2Mc-LPJmL has similar temperature and precipitation biases to the original CM2Mc model with LaD. The performance of LPJmL5 in the coupled system compared to Earth observation data and to LPJmL offline simulation results is within acceptable error margins. The historical global mean temperature evolution of our model setup is within the range of CMIP5 (Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5) models. The comparison of model runs with and without land-use change shows a partially warmer and drier climate state across the global land surface. CM2Mc-LPJmL opens new opportunities to investigate important biophysical vegetationâclimate feedbacks with a state-of-the-art and process-based dynamic vegetation model
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Low atmospheric CO2 levels before the rise of forested ecosystems
The emergence of forests on Earth (~385 million years ago, Ma)1 has been linked to an order-of-magnitude decline in atmospheric CO2 levels and global climatic cooling by altering continental weathering processes, but observational constraints on atmospheric CO2 before the rise of forests carry large, often unbound, uncertainties. Here, we calibrate a mechanistic model for gas exchange in modern lycophytes and constrain atmospheric CO2 levels 410â380 Ma from related fossilized plants with bound uncertainties of approximately ±100 ppm (1 sd). We find that the atmosphere contained ~525â715 ppm CO2 before continents were afforested, and that Earth was partially glaciated according to a palaeoclimate model. A process-driven biogeochemical model (COPSE) shows the appearance of trees with deep roots did not dramatically enhance atmospheric CO2 removal. Rather, shallow-rooted vascular ecosystems could have simultaneously caused abrupt atmospheric oxygenation and climatic cooling long before the rise of forests, although earlier CO2 levels are still unknown