196 research outputs found
SPIDER X - Environmental effects in central and satellite early-type galaxies through the stellar fossil record
A detailed analysis of how environment affects the star formation history of
early-type galaxies (ETGs) is undertaken via high signal to noise ratio stacked
spectra obtained from a sample of 20,977 ETGs (morphologically selected) from
the SDSS-based SPIDER survey. Two major parameters are considered for the
study: the central velocity dispersion (sigma), which relates to local drivers
of star formation, and the mass of the host halo, which relates to
environment-related effects. In addition, we separate the sample between
centrals (the most massive galaxy in a halo) and satellites. We derive trends
of age, metallicity, and [alpha/Fe] enhancement, with sigma. We confirm that
the major driver of stellar population properties in ETGs is velocity
dispersion, with a second-order effect associated to the central/satellite
nature of the galaxy. No environmental dependence is detected for satellite
ETGs, except at low sigma - where satellites in groups or in the outskirts of
clusters tend to be younger than those in the central regions of clusters. In
contrast, the trends for centrals show a significant dependence on halo mass.
Central ETGs in groups (i.e. with a halo mass >10^12.5 M_Sun) have younger
ages, lower [alpha/Fe], and higher internal reddening, than "isolated" systems
(i.e. centrals residing in low-mass, <10^12.5 M_Sun, halos). Our findings imply
that central ETGs in groups formed their stellar component over longer time
scales than "isolated" centrals, mainly because of gas-rich interactions with
their companion galaxies.Comment: 22 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
egg quality and productive performance of laying hens fed different levels of skimmed milk powder added to a diet containing lactobacillus acidophilus
Abstract The current trial was carried out on a commercial poultry farm to study the effect of skim milk powder (SMP) added to a diet containing Lactobacillus acidophilus on performance and egg quality of laying hens from 20 to 49 wk of age. A total of 2,400 Hy-Line W-36 laying hens were housed in 600 unenriched cages (4 hens each) located over 4 tier levels. Animals were assigned to 1 of 3 experimental treatments (0, 3, and 4). The laying hens assigned to treatments 3 and 4 received a diet enriched respectively with 3 and 4% SMP, whereas the animals in treatment 0 were fed a diet without SMP. All diets, moreover, were supplemented with L. acidophilus D2/CSL. Hen performance was determined throughout the experimental period and egg quality was measured on 30 eggs per treatment every week. Results showed that productive performance in terms of egg production, egg weight, and feed conversion ratio was not influenced by SMP at 3 or 4% of the diet. Egg quality was significantly affected by SMP included at 3 or 4% of the diet. Eggs from treatments 3 and 4, in fact, displayed higher shell thickness than those from treatment 0 (
Resolving the age bimodality of galaxy stellar populations on kpc scales
Galaxies in the local Universe are known to follow bimodal distributions in
the global stellar populations properties. We analyze the distribution of the
local average stellar-population ages of 654,053 sub-galactic regions resolved
on ~1-kpc scales in a volume-corrected sample of 394 galaxies, drawn from the
CALIFA-DR3 integral-field-spectroscopy survey and complemented by SDSS imaging.
We find a bimodal local-age distribution, with an old and a young peak
primarily due to regions in early-type galaxies and star-forming regions of
spirals, respectively. Within spiral galaxies, the older ages of bulges and
inter-arm regions relative to spiral arms support an internal age bimodality.
Although regions of higher stellar-mass surface-density, mu*, are typically
older, mu* alone does not determine the stellar population age and a bimodal
distribution is found at any fixed mu*. We identify an "old ridge" of regions
of age ~9 Gyr, independent of mu*, and a "young sequence" of regions with age
increasing with mu* from 1-1.5 Gyr to 4-5 Gyr. We interpret the former as
regions containing only old stars, and the latter as regions where the relative
contamination of old stellar populations by young stars decreases as mu*
increases. The reason why this bimodal age distribution is not inconsistent
with the unimodal shape of the cosmic-averaged star-formation history is that
i) the dominating contribution by young stars biases the age low with respect
to the average epoch of star formation, and ii) the use of a single average age
per region is unable to represent the full time-extent of the star-formation
history of "young-sequence" regions.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, MNRAS accepte
Self-similarity in the chemical evolution of galaxies and the delay-time distribution of SNe Ia
Recent improvements in the age dating of stellar populations and single stars allow us to study the ages and abundance of stars and galaxies with unprecedented accuracy. We here compare the relation between age and α-element abundances for stars in the solar neighborhood to that of local, early-type galaxies. We find these two relations to be very similar. Both fall into two regimes with a shallow slope for ages younger than ~9 Gyr and a steeper slope for ages older than that value. This quantitative similarity seems surprising because of the different types of galaxies and scales involved. For the sample of early-type galaxies we also show that the data are inconsistent with literature delay-time distributions of either single- or double-Gaussian shape. The data are consistent with a power-law delay-time distribution. We thus confirm that the delay-time distribution inferred for the Milky Way from chemical evolution arguments must also apply to massive early-type galaxies. We also offer a tentative explanation for the seeming universality of the age-[α/Fe] relation: it is the manifestation of averaging different stellar populations with varying chemical evolution histories
On the galaxy stellar mass function, the mass-metallicity relation, and the implied baryonic mass function
A comparison between published field galaxy stellar mass functions (GSMFs)
shows that the cosmic stellar mass density is in the range 4--8 per cent of the
baryon density (assuming Omega_b = 0.045). There remain significant sources of
uncertainty for the dust correction and underlying stellar mass-to-light ratio
even assuming a reasonable universal stellar initial mass function. We
determine the z < 0.05 GSMF using the New York University - Value-Added Galaxy
Catalog sample of 49968 galaxies derived from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and
various estimates of stellar mass. The GSMF shows clear evidence for a low-mass
upturn and is fitted with a double Schechter function that has alpha_2 =~ -1.6.
At masses below ~ 10^8.5 Msun, the GSMF may be significantly incomplete because
of missing low surface-brightness galaxies. One interpretation of the stellar
mass-metallicity relation is that it is primarily caused by a lower fraction of
available baryons converted to stars in low-mass galaxies. Using this
principal, we determine a simple relationship between baryonic mass and stellar
mass and present an `implied baryonic mass function'. This function has a
faint-end slope, alpha_2 =~ -1.9. Thus, we find evidence that the slope of the
low-mass end of the galaxy mass function could plausibly be as steep as the
halo mass function. We illustrate the relationship between halo baryonic mass
function --> galaxy baryonic mass function --> GSMF. This demonstrates the
requirement for peak galaxy formation efficiency at baryonic masses ~ 10^11
Msun corresponding to a minimum in feedback effects. The baryonic-infall
efficiency may have levelled off at lower masses.Comment: Changes to section 4.3 and figs 12, 13; 15 pages (10 pages excluding
Appendix and refs), accepted by MNRAS; binned GSMF data file is available at
http://www.astro.ljmu.ac.uk/~ikb/research/gsmf-paper.htm
"Combined Diagnostic Tool" APPlication to a Retrospective Series of Patients Undergoing Total Joint Revision Surgery
Background: Differentiating between septic and aseptic joint prosthesis may be challenging, since no single test is able to confirm or rule out infection. The choice and interpretation of the panel of tests performed in any case often relies on empirical evaluation and poorly validated scores. The "Combined Diagnostic Tool (CDT)" App, a smartphone application for iOS, was developed to allow to automatically calculate the probability of having a of periprosthetic joint infection, on the basis of the relative sensitivity and specificity of the positive and negative diagnostic tests performed in any given patient. Objective: The aim of the present study was to apply the CDT software to investigate the ability of the tests routinely performed in three high-volume European centers to diagnose a periprosthetic infection. Methods: This three-center retrospective study included 120 consecutive patients undergoing total hip or knee revision, and included 65 infected patients (Group A) and 55 patients without infection (Group B). The following parameters were evaluated: number and type of positive and negative diagnostic tests performed pre-, intra- and post-operatively and resultant probability calculated by the CDT App of having a peri-prosthetic joint infection, based on pre-, intra- and post-operative combined tests. Results: Serological tests were the most common performed, with an average 2.7 tests per patient for Group A and 2.2 for Group B, followed by joint aspiration (0.9 and 0.8 tests per patient, respectively) and imaging techniques (0.5 and 0.2 test per patient). Mean CDT App calculated probability of having an infection based on pre-operative tests was 79.4% for patients in Group A and 35.7 in Group B. Twenty-nine patients in Group A had > 10% chance of not having an infection, and 29 of Group B had > 10% chance of having an infection. Conclusion: This is the first retrospective study focused on investigating the number and type of tests commonly performed prior to joint revision surgery and aimed at evaluating their combined ability to diagnose a peri-prosthetic infection. CDT App allowed us to demonstrate that, on average, the routine combination of commonly used tests is unable to diagnose pre-operatively a peri-prosthetic infection with a probability higher than 90%
The early-type dwarf galaxy population of the Centaurus cluster
We present a photometric study of the early-type dwarf galaxy population of
the Centaurus cluster, aiming at investigating the galaxy luminosity function
(LF) and galaxy scaling relations down to the regime of galaxies with M_V~-10
mag. On deep VLT/FORS1 V- and I-band images of the central part of the cluster,
we identify cluster dwarf-galaxy candidates using both morphological and
surface brightness selection criteria. Photometric and structural parameters of
the candidates are derived from analysis of their surface brightness profiles.
Fundamental scaling relations, such as the colour-magnitude and the
magnitude-surface brightness relation, are used to distinguish the cluster from
the background. We find a flat LF with a slope of \alpha = -1.14 \pm 0.12 for
M_V>-14 mag, when fitting a power law to the completeness-corrected galaxy
number counts. When plotting the central surface brightness of a Sersic model
vs. the galaxy magnitude, we find a continuous relation for magnitudes
-20<M_V<-10 mag, with only the brightest core galaxies deviating from this
relation, in agreement with previous studies of other clusters. In a
size-luminosity diagram of early-type galaxies from a range of environments, we
observe that R_eff slowly decreases with decreasing luminosity for -21<M_V<-13
mag and decreases more rapidly at fainter magnitudes. This trend continues to
the ultra-faint Local Group dwarf galaxies (M_V~-4 mag). The continuous central
surface brightness vs. absolute magnitude relation and the smooth relation in
the size-luminosity diagram over a wide range of magnitudes are consistent with
the interpretation of dwarf galaxies and more massive elliptical galaxies being
one family of objects with gradually changing structural properties. The most
massive core galaxies and the rare cE galaxies are the only exceptions.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in A&
Physical properties of galaxies and their evolution in the VIMOS VLT Deep Survey. II. Extending the mass-metallicity relation to the range z=0.89-1.24
Aims. We present a continuation of our study about the relation between
stellar mass and gas-phase metallicity in the VIMOS VLT Deep Survey (VVDS). In
this work we extend the determination of metallicities up to redshift = 1.24
for a sample of 42 star-forming galaxies with a mean redshift value of 0.99.
Methods. For a selected sample of emission-line galaxies, we use both
diagnostic diagrams and empirical calibrations based on [OII] emission lines
along with the empirical relation between the intensities of the [OIII] and
[NeIII] emission lines and the theoretical ratios between Balmer recombination
emission lines to identify star-forming galaxies and to derive their
metallicities. We derive stellar masses by fitting the whole spectral energy
distribution with a set of stellar population synthesis models. Results. These
new methods allow us to extend the mass-metallicity relation to higher
redshift. We show that the metallicity determinations are consistent with more
established strong-line methods. Taken together this allows us to study the
evolution of the mass-metallicity relation up to z = 1.24 with good control of
systematic uncertainties. We find an evolution with redshift of the average
metallicity of galaxies very similar to those reported in the literature: for a
given stellar mass, galaxies at z = 1 have, on average, a metallicity = 0.3 dex
lower than galaxies in the local universe. However we do not see any
significant metallicity evolution between redshifts z = 0.7 (Paper I) and z =
1.0 (this paper). We find also the same flattening of the mass-metallicity
relation for the most massive galaxies as reported in Paper I at lower
redshifts, but again no apparent evolution of the slope is seen between z = 0.7
and z = 1.0.Comment: 9 pages and 8 figures. In press in Astronomy & Astrophysic
The early-type dwarf galaxy population of the Hydra I cluster
We analyse the properties of the early-type dwarf galaxy population in the
Hydra I cluster. We investigate the galaxy luminosity function (LF), the
colour-magnitude relation (CMR), and the magnitude-surface brightness relation
down to M_V~-10 mag. Another goal of this study is to find candidates for
ultra-compact dwarf galaxies (UCDs). Two spectroscopic surveys performed with
Magellan I/LDSS2 and VLT/VIMOS, as well as deep VLT/FORS1 images in V and I
bands were examined. We identify cluster members by radial velocity
measurements and select other cluster galaxy candidates by their morphology.
One possible UCD candidate with M_V=-13.26 mag is found. Our sample of 100
morphologically selected dwarf galaxies defines a CMR that extends the CMR of
the giant cluster galaxies to the magnitude limit of our survey (M_V~-10 mag).
It matches the relations found for the Local Group and the Fornax cluster
dwarfs almost perfectly. The Hydra I dwarfs also follow a magnitude-surface
brightness relation similar to that of the LG dwarfs. Moreover, we observe a
continuous relation for dwarf galaxies and giant early-type galaxies when
plotting the central surface brightness \mu_0 of a S\'ersic model vs. the
galaxy magnitude. The effective radius is found to be largely independent of
the luminosity for M_V>-18 mag, being R_e~0.8 kpc. We derive a very flat
faint-end slope of the LF (\alpha = -1.13 \pm 0.04) from fitting a Schechter
function, whereas fitting a power law for M_V>-14 mag gives \alpha = -1.40 \pm
0.18. Our findings suggest that early-type dwarf and giant galaxies are the
same class of objects. The similarity of the dwarf galaxy scaling relations to
other environments implies that internal processes could be more important for
their global photometric properties than external influences. (abridged)Comment: 17 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in A&A, 4 references
added to the replaced versio
The Role of Environment in the Mass-Metallicity Relation
Using a sample of 57,377 star-forming galaxies drawn from the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey, we study the relationship between gas-phase oxygen abundance and
environment in the local Universe. We find that there is a strong relationship
between metallicity and environment such that more metal-rich galaxies favor
regions of higher overdensity. Furthermore, this metallicity-density relation
is comparable in strength to the color-density relation along the blue cloud.
After removing the mean dependence of environment on color and luminosity, we
find a significant residual trend between metallicity and environment that is
largely driven by galaxies in high-density regions, such as groups and
clusters. We discuss the potential source of this relationship between
metallicity and local galaxy density in the context of feedback models, with
special attention paid to quantifying the impact of environment on the scatter
in the mass-metallicity relation. We find that environment is a non-negligible
source of scatter in this fundamental relation, with > 15% of the measured
scatter correlated with environment.Comment: Submitted to MNRA
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