49 research outputs found
Global Dynamics in the Singular Logarithmic Potential
We present an analytical description of the motion in the singular
logarithmic potential. This potential plays an important role in the modeling
of triaxial systems (like elliptical galaxies) or bars in the centers of galaxy
disks. In order to obtain information about the motion near the singularity, we
resort to McGehee -type transformations and regularize the vector field. In the
axis-symmetric case (b=1), we offer a complete description of the global
dynamics. In the non axis-symmetric case (b<1), we prove that all orbits, with
the exception of a negligible set, are centrophobic and retrieve numerically
partial aspects of the orbital structure.Comment: Journal of Physics, A; High res images available at:
http://stacks.iop.org/0305-4470/36/i=28/a=30
The Dominance of Metal-Rich Streams in Stellar Halos: A Comparison Between Substructure in M31 and Lambda-CDM Models
Extensive photometric and spectroscopic surveys of the Andromeda galaxy (M31)
have discovered tidal debris features throughout M31's stellar halo. We present
stellar kinematics and metallicities in fields with identified substructure
from our on-going SPLASH survey of M31 red giant branch stars with the DEIMOS
spectrograph on the Keck II 10-m telescope. Radial velocity criteria are used
to isolate members of the kinematically-cold substructures. The substructures
are shown to be metal-rich relative to the rest of the dynamically hot stellar
population in the fields in which they are found. We calculate the mean
metallicity and average surface brightness of the various kinematical
components in each field, and show that, on average, higher surface brightness
features tend to be more metal-rich than lower surface brightness features.
Simulations of stellar halo formation via accretion in a cosmological context
are used to illustrate that the observed trend can be explained as a natural
consequence of the observed dwarf galaxy mass-metallicity relation. A
significant spread in metallicity at a given surface brightness is seen in the
data; we show that this is due to time effects, namely the variation in the
time since accretion of the tidal streams' progenitor onto the host halo. We
show that in this theoretical framework a relationship between the
alpha-enhancement and surface brightness of tidal streams is expected, which
arises from the varying times of accretion of the progenitor satellites onto
the host halo. Thus, measurements of the alpha-enrichment, metallicity, and
surface brightness of tidal debris can be used to reconstruct the luminosity
and time of accretion onto the host halo of the progenitors of tidal streams.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, published in Ap
Taking the Milky Way for a spin: disc formation in the ARTEMIS simulations
We investigate the formation (spin-up) of galactic discs in the ARTEMIS
simulations of Milky Way-mass galaxies. In almost all galaxies discs spin up at
higher [Fe/H] than the Milky Way (MW). Those that contain an analogue of the
Gaia Sausage-Enceladus (GSE) spin up at a lower average metallicity than those
without. We identify six galaxies with spin-up metallicity similar to that of
the MW, which form their discs Gyr ago. Five of these experience a
merger similar to the GSE. The spin-up times correlate with the halo masses at
early times: galaxies with early spin-up have larger virial masses at a
lookback time Gyr. The fraction of stars accreted from outside the
host galaxy is smaller in galaxies with earlier spin-ups. Accreted fractions
small enough to be comparable to the MW are only found in galaxies with the
earliest disc formation and large initial virial masses ( at Gyr). We find that discs form when
the halo's virial mass reaches a threshold of
, independent of the spin-up
time. We also find that discs form when the central potential is not
particularly steep. Our results indicate that the MW assembled its mass and
formed its disc earlier than the average galaxy of a similar mass.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, submitted to MNRA
Environment from cross-correlations: connecting hot gas and the quenching of galaxies
The observable properties of galaxies depend on both internal processes and
the external environment. In terms of the environmental role, we still do not
have a clear picture of the processes driving the transformation of galaxies.
The use of proxies for environment (e.g., host halo mass, distance to the N^th
nearest neighbour, etc.), as opposed to the real physical conditions (e.g., hot
gas density) may bear some responsibility for this. Here we propose a new
method that directly links galaxies to their local environments, by using
spatial cross-correlations of galaxy catalogues with maps from large-scale
structure surveys (e.g., thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich [tSZ] effect, diffuse X-ray
emission, weak lensing of galaxies or the CMB). We focus here on the quenching
of galaxies and its link to local hot gas properties. Maps of galaxy
overdensity and quenched fraction excess are constructed from volume-limited
SDSS catalogs, which are cross-correlated with tSZ effect and X-ray maps from
Planck and ROSAT, respectively. Strong signals out to Mpc scales are detected
for most cross-correlations and are compared to predictions from the EAGLE and
BAHAMAS cosmological hydrodynamical simulations. The simulations successfully
reproduce many, but not all, of the observed power spectra, with an indication
that environmental quenching may be too efficient in the simulations. We
demonstrate that the cross-correlations are sensitive to both the internal
(e.g., AGN and stellar feedback) and external processes (e.g., ram pressure
stripping, harassment, strangulation, etc.) responsible for quenching. The
methods outlined in this paper can be adapted to other observables and, with
upcoming surveys, will provide a stringent test of physical models for
environmental transformation.Comment: 23 pages, 11 figures, MNRAS, in pres
Merger-induced galaxy transformations in the ARTEMIS simulations
Using the ARTEMIS set of 45 high-resolution cosmological simulations, we
investigate a range of merger-induced dynamical transformations of Milky
Way-like galaxies. We first identify populations of accreted stars on highly
radial orbits, similar to the 'Gaia Sausage' in the Milky Way. We show that
of the ARTEMIS galaxies contain a similar feature, and confirm
that they usually comprise stellar debris from the most massive accreted
satellite. Selecting these 15 galaxies, we study their changes around the times
of the GS-like mergers. Dark matter haloes of many of these exhibit global
changes in shape and orientation. Focusing on the galaxies themselves, we find
multiple examples of stellar discs whose angular momentum (AM) axes change
orientation at rapid rates of degrees Gyr. By calculating the
orbital angular momentum axes of the satellites before they are accreted, we
show that there is a tendency for the disc's AM to become more aligned with
this axis after the merger. We also investigate the origin of in situ
retrograde stars, analogous to the 'Splash' in the Milky Way. Tracing them back
to earlier snapshots, we demonstrate that they were often disrupted onto their
extreme orbits by multiple early mergers. We also find that the total mass of
these stars outside the central regions positively correlates with the total
accreted stellar mass. Finally, we conduct a brief investigation into whether
bars form soon after the mergers. In a few galaxies we find a bar-like feature
whose emergence coincides with a significant merger.Comment: 20 pages, 18 figures, submitted to MNRA
Dynamics and Stellar Content of the Giant Southern Stream in M31. II. Interpretation
We examine the nature of the progenitor of the giant stellar stream in M31
using as constraints new radial velocity measurements of stream red giant stars
(presented in the companion paper by Guhathakurta et al. 2005,
astro-ph/0406145) along with other M31 data sets available in the literature.
We find that the observations are best fit by orbits that are highly eccentric
and close to edge-on, with apo- to peri-center ratios of order 25 - 30, and
with apocenters at or only slightly beyond the southern edge of the current
data. Among these orbits, we are able to find a few that plausibly connect the
stream with the northern spur or with the low-surface-brightness feature of
similar high metallicity as the stream (originally reported by Ferguson et al.
2002) to the east of M31's center. In the latter case, if the connection is
real, then the eastern debris should lie well in front of M31 near the
apocenter of the orbit. Both the width of the debris and velocity dispersion
measurements imply a rough lower limit on the mass of the progenitor of 10^8
M_sun. We use this limit and our orbits to discuss which of M31's satellites
could be plausibly associated with the stream. In addition, we predict that the
width of the stream should increase beyond the southern edge of the current
data around the apocenter of the orbit and that the line-of-sight velocity
dispersion should exhibit significant variations along the stream.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures, 1 table; submitted to the Astronomical Journal;
includes revisions suggested by the refere
Tracing Galaxy Formation with Stellar Halos II: Relating Substructure in Phase- and Abundance-Space to Accretion Histories
This paper explores the mapping between the observable properties of a
stellar halo in phase- and abundance-space and the parent galaxy's accretion
history in terms of the characteristic epoch of accretion and mass and orbits
of progenitor objects. The study utilizes a suite of eleven stellar halo models
constructed within the context of a standard LCDM cosmology. The results
demonstrate that coordinate-space studies are sensitive to the recent (0-8
Gyears ago) merger histories of galaxies (this timescale corresponds to the
last few to tens of percent of mass accretion for a Milky-Way-type galaxy).
Specifically, the {\it frequency, sky coverage} and {\it fraction of stars} in
substructures in the stellar halo as a function of surface brightness are
indicators of the importance of recent merging and of the luminosity function
of infalling dwarfs. The {\it morphology} of features serves as a guide to the
orbital distribution of those dwarfs. Constraints on the earlier merger history
(> 8 Gyears ago) can be gleaned from the abundance patterns in halo stars:
within our models, dramatic differences in the dominant epoch of accretion or
luminosity function of progenitor objects leave clear signatures in the
[alpha/Fe] and [Fe/H] distributions of the stellar halo - halos dominated by
very early accretion have higher average [alpha/Fe], while those dominated by
high luminosity satellites have higher [Fe/H]. This intuition can be applied to
reconstruct much about the merger histories of nearby galaxies from current and
future data sets.Comment: 21 pages, 20 figures. To appear in the Astrophysical Journa