142 research outputs found
Spectral Energy Distribution Mapping of Two Elliptical Galaxies on sub-kpc scales
We use high-resolution Herschel-PACS data of 2 nearby elliptical galaxies,
IC1459 & NGC2768 to characterize their dust and stellar content. IC1459 &
NGC2768 have an unusually large amount of dust for elliptical galaxies (1-3 x
10^5 Msun), this dust is also not distributed along the stellar content. Using
data from GALEX (ultraviolet) to PACS (far-infrared), we analyze the spectral
energy distribution (SED) of these galaxies with CIGALEMC as a function of the
projected position, binning images in 7.2" pixels. From this analysis, we
derive maps of SED parameters, such as the metallicity, the stellar mass, the
fraction of young star and the dust mass. The larger amount of dust in FIR maps
seems related in our model to a larger fraction of young stars which can reach
up to 4% in the dustier area. The young stellar population is fitted as a
recent (~ 0.5 Gyr) short burst of star formation for both galaxies. The
metallicities, which are fairly large at the center of both galaxies, decrease
with the radial distance with fairly steep gradient for elliptical galaxies.Comment: 14 pages, 26 figures, to be published in Ap
Unraveling Baroclinicity in Black Hole Weather Storms
In the intracluster, intragroup, and circumgalactic medium (ICM, IGrM, CGM),
turbulence plays a vital role in the self-regulated feedback and feeding cycle
of central supermassive black holes (SMBHs). Here we continue our systematic
dissection of the turbulent "weather" in high-resolution hydrodynamical
simulations of feedback driven by active galactic nuclei (AGN). In
non-barotropic and stratified atmospheres, baroclinicity is expected to
generate fresh turbulence via misaligned gradients of density and pressure -
such as in cyclonic storms on Earth. In this work, we dissect for the first
time baroclinicity and its components in the astrophysical halo weather. Over
the macro-scale galaxy cluster, baroclinicity tends to be dynamically
subdominant for the enstrophy amplification. However, at and below the meso
scale near the SMBH (r<10 kpc; t<20 Myr), baroclinicity is important to seed
the initial enstrophy during active periods of AGN jet feedback. We find that
baroclinicity shows stronger correlation with the density rather than pressure
gradients. Despite the density-pressure gradient misalignment being often below
45{\deg}, their amplitudes boosted by mechanical AGN feedback are sufficient to
enable key enstrophy/turbulence generation. Our study provides a novel step
forward in understanding astrophysical atmospheres toward a unified
BlackHoleWeather framework, akin to the complexity of Earth's weather.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
Unifying the Micro and Macro Properties of AGN Feeding and Feedback
United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (PF4-150126
ALMA observations of molecular clouds in three group centered elliptical galaxies: NGC 5846, NGC 4636, and NGC 5044
We present new ALMA CO(2--1) observations of two well studied group-centered
elliptical galaxies: NGC~4636 and NGC~5846. In addition, we include a revised
analysis of Cycle 0 ALMA observations of the central galaxy in the NGC~5044
group that has been previously published. We find evidence that molecular gas,
in the form of off-center orbiting clouds, is a common presence in bright
group-centered galaxies (BGG). CO line widths are times broader
than Galactic molecular clouds, and using the reference Milky Way , the
total molecular mass ranges from as low as in NGC~4636
to in NGC~5044. With these parameters the virial
parameters of the molecular structures is . Complementary observations
of NGC~5846 and NGC~4636 using the ALMA Compact Array (ACA) do not exhibit any
detection of a CO diffuse component at the sensitivity level achieved by
current exposures. The origin of the detected molecular features is still
uncertain, but these ALMA observations suggest that they are the end product of
the hot gas cooling process and not the result of merger events. Some of the
molecular clouds are associated with dust features as revealed by HST dust
extinction maps suggesting that these clouds formed from dust-enhanced cooling.
The global nonlinear condensation may be triggered via the chaotic turbulent
field or buoyant uplift. The large virial parameter of the molecular structures
and correlation with the warm ()/hot () phase velocity
dispersion provide evidence that they are unbound giant molecular associations
drifting in the turbulent field, consistently with numerical predictions of the
chaotic cold accretion process. Alternatively, the observed large CO line
widths may be generated by molecular gas flowing out from cloud surfaces due to
heating by the local hot gas atmosphere.Comment: Revised version to be published in ApJ, 16 pages, 10 figures, 4
table
On the Assembly Bias of Cool Core Clusters Traced by H Nebulae
Do cool-core (CC) and noncool-core (NCC) clusters live in different
environments? We make novel use of H emission lines in the central
galaxies of redMaPPer clusters as proxies to construct large (1,000's) samples
of CC and NCC clusters, and measure their relative assembly bias using both
clustering and weak lensing. We increase the statistical significance of the
bias measurements from clustering by cross-correlating the clusters with an
external galaxy redshift catalog from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey III, the
LOWZ sample. Our cross-correlations can constrain assembly bias up to a
statistical uncertainty of 6%. Given our H criteria for CC and NCC, we
find no significant differences in their clustering amplitude. Interpreting
this difference as the absence of halo assembly bias, our results rule out the
possibility of having different large-scale (tens of Mpc) environments as the
source of diversity observed in cluster cores. Combined with recent
observations of the overall mild evolution of CC and NCC properties, such as
central density and CC fraction, this would suggest that either the cooling
properties of the cluster core are determined early on solely by the local
(<200 kpc) gas properties at formation or that local merging leads to
stochastic CC relaxation and disruption in a periodic way, preserving the
average population properties over time. Studying the small-scale clustering in
clusters at high redshift would help shed light on the exact scenario.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables, to be submitted to ApJ; comments
welcom
Erratum: Dissecting the turbulent weather driven by mechanical AGN feedback
This is an Erratum to the paper entitled ‘Dissecting the turbulent weather driven by mechanical AGN feedback’, which is published in MNRAS, 498(4), 4983–5002 (2020)
Kinetic AGN Feedback Effects on Cluster Cool Cores Simulated using SPH
We implement novel numerical models of AGN feedback in the SPH code GADGET-3,
where the energy from a supermassive black hole (BH) is coupled to the
surrounding gas in the kinetic form. Gas particles lying inside a bi-conical
volume around the BH are imparted a one-time velocity (10,000 km/s) increment.
We perform hydrodynamical simulations of isolated cluster (total mass 10^14 /h
M_sun), which is initially evolved to form a dense cool core, having central
T<10^6 K. A BH resides at the cluster center, and ejects energy. The
feedback-driven fast wind undergoes shock with the slower-moving gas, which
causes the imparted kinetic energy to be thermalized. Bipolar bubble-like
outflows form propagating radially outward to a distance of a few 100 kpc. The
radial profiles of median gas properties are influenced by BH feedback in the
inner regions (r<20-50 kpc). BH kinetic feedback, with a large value of the
feedback efficiency, depletes the inner cool gas and reduces the hot gas
content, such that the initial cool core of the cluster is heated up within a
time 1.9 Gyr, whereby the core median temperature rises to above 10^7 K, and
the central entropy flattens. Our implementation of BH thermal feedback (using
the same efficiency as kinetic), within the star-formation model, cannot do
this heating, where the cool core remains. The inclusion of cold gas accretion
in the simulations produces naturally a duty cycle of the AGN with a
periodicity of 100 Myr.Comment: 22 pages, 11 figures, version accepted for publication in MNRAS,
references and minor revisions adde
Thermal SZ fluctuations in the ICM: probing turbulence and thermodynamics in Coma cluster with Planck
We report the detection of thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich (SZ) effect fluctuations in the intracluster medium (ICM) of Coma cluster observed with Planck. The SZ data links the maximum observable X-ray scale to the large Mpc scale, extending our knowledge of the power spectrum of ICM fluctuations. Deprojecting the 2D SZ perturbations into 3D pressure fluctuations, we find an amplitude spectrum which peaks at δP/P = 33 ± 12 and 74 ± 19 per cent in the 15 and 40 arcmin radius region, respectively. We perform tests to ensure fluctuations are intrinsic to the cluster and not due to noise contamination. By using high-resolution hydrodynamical models, we improve the ICM turbulence constraints in Coma, finding 3D Mach number Ma_3d = 0.8 ± 0.3 (15 arcmin region), increasing to supersonic values at larger radii (40 arcmin) and an injection scale L_inj ≈ 500 kpc. Such properties are consistent with driving due to mergers, in particular tied to internal galaxy groups. The large pressure fluctuations show that Coma is in adiabatic mode (mediated by sound waves), rather than isobaric mode (mediated by buoyancy waves). As predicted by turbulence models, the distribution of SZ fluctuations is lognormal with mild non-Gaussianities (heavy tails). The substantial non-thermal pressure support implies hydrostatic mass bias b_M = -15 to -45 per cent from the core to the outskirt region, respectively. While total SZ power probes the thermal energy content, the SZ fluctuations constrain the non-thermal deviations important for precision cosmology. The proposed, novel approach can be exploited by multifrequency observations using ground-based interferometers and future space cosmic microwave background missions
Scaling Properties of Galaxy Groups
Galaxy groups and poor clusters are more common than rich clusters, and host
the largest fraction of matter content in the Universe. Hence, their studies
are key to understand the gravitational and thermal evolution of the bulk of
the cosmic matter. Moreover, because of their shallower gravitational
potential, galaxy groups are systems where non-gravitational processes (e.g.,
cooling, AGN feedback, star formation) are expected to have a higher impact on
the distribution of baryons, and on the general physical properties, than in
more massive objects, inducing systematic departures from the expected scaling
relations. Despite their paramount importance from the astrophysical and
cosmological point of view, the challenges in their detection have limited the
studies of galaxy groups. Upcoming large surveys will change this picture,
reassigning to galaxy groups their central role in studying the structure
formation and evolution in the Universe, and in measuring the cosmic baryonic
content. Here, we review the recent literature on various scaling relations
between X-ray and optical properties of these systems, focusing on the
observational measurements, and the progress in our understanding of the
deviations from the self-similar expectations on groups' scales. We discuss
some of the sources of these deviations, and how feedback from supernovae
and/or AGNs impacts the general properties and the reconstructed scaling laws.
Finally, we discuss future prospects in the study of galaxy groups.Comment: 36 pages, 8 figures, and 2 tables. This review article is part of the
special issue "The Physical Properties of the Groups of Galaxies", edited by
L. Lovisari and S. Ettori. Published in MDPI - Universe:
https://www.mdpi.com/journal/universe/special_issues/PPGG
Kinetic and radiative power from optically thin accretion flows
We perform a set of general relativistic, radiative, magneto-hydrodynamical simulations (GR-RMHD) to study the transition from radiatively inefficient to efficient state of accretion on a non-rotating black hole. We study ion to electron temperature ratios ranging from T_i/T_e = 10 to 100, and simulate flows corresponding to accretion rates as low as 10^{-6}\dot{M}_Edd, and as high as 10^{-2}\dot{M}_Edd. We have found that the radiative output of accretion flows increases with accretion rate, and that the transition occurs earlier for hotter electrons (lower TI/Te ratio). At the same time, the mechanical efficiency hardly changes and accounts to ≈3 per cent of the accreted rest mass energy flux, even at the highest simulated accretion rates. This is particularly important for the mechanical active galactic nuclei (AGN) feedback regulating massive galaxies, groups and clusters. Comparison with recent observations of radiative and mechanical AGN luminosities suggests that the ion to electron temperature ratio in the inner, collisionless accretion flow should fall within 10 < T_i/T_e < 30, I.e. the electron temperature should be several percent of the ion temperature
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