66 research outputs found
Tracing Star Formation in Cool Core Clusters with GALEX
We present recent results from a GALEX investigation of star formation in 16
cooling core clusters of galaxies, selected to span a broad range in both
redshift and central cooling time. Initial results demonstrate clear UV
excesses in most, but not all, brightest cluster galaxies in our sample. This
UV excess is a direct indication of the presence of young massive stars and,
therefore, recent star formation. We report on the physical extent of UV
emission in these objects as well as their FUV-NUV colors, and compare GALEX
inferred star formation rates to central cooling times, H-alpha and IR
luminosities for our sample.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; to appear in proceedings of The Monster's Fiery
Breath: Feedback in Galaxies, Groups, and Clusters (AIP conference series
Chandra Observation of the Interaction of the Radio Source and Cooling Core in Abell 2063
We present the results of a Chandra observation of the cooling core cluster
Abell 2063. Spectral analysis shows that there is cool gas (2 keV) associated
with the cluster core, which is more than a factor of 2 cooler than the outer
cluster gas (4.1 keV). There also is spectral evidence for a weak cooling flow,
Mdot ~ 20 Msun/yr. The cluster exhibits a complex structure in the center that
consists of several bright knots of emission, a depression in the emission to
the north of the center of the cluster, and a shell of emission surrounding it.
The depression in the X-ray emission is coincident with the position of the
north-eastern radio lobe of the radio source associated with the
cluster-central galaxy. The shell surrounding this region appears to be hotter,
which may be the result of a shock that has been driven into the gas by the
radio source. The power output of the radio source appears to be sufficient to
offset the cooling flow, and heating of the gas through shocks is a possible
explanation of how the energy transfer is established.Comment: Astrophysical Jounal, in press, 26 page with 9 figures, some in
color. Uses AASTEX late
The X-ray Properties of Optically Selected Clusters of Galaxies
We present the results of Chandra and Suzaku X-ray observations of nine
moderate-redshift (0.16 < z < 0.42) clusters discovered via the Red-sequence
Cluster Survey (RCS). Surface brightness profiles are fitted to beta models,
gas masses are determined, integrated spectra are extracted within R2500, and
X-ray temperatures and luminosities are inferred. The Lx-Tx relationship
expected from self-similar evolution is tested by comparing this sample to our
previous X-ray investigation of nine high-redshift (0.6 < z < 1.0) optically
selected clusters. We find that optically selected clusters are systematically
less luminous than X-ray selected clusters of similar X-ray temperature at both
moderate and high-z. We are unable to constrain evolution in the Lx-Tx relation
with these data, but find it consistent with no evolution, within relatively
large uncertainties. To investigate selection effects, we compare the X-ray
properties of our sample to those of clusters in the representative X-ray
selected REXCESS sample, also determined within R2500. We find that while RCS
cluster X-ray properties span the entire range of those of massive clusters
selected by other methods, their average X-ray properties are most similar to
those of dynamically disturbed X-ray selected clusters. This similarity
suggests that the true cluster distribution might contain a higher fraction of
disturbed objects than are typically detected in X-ray selected surveys.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures; accepted for publication in MNRAS. Figure
quality reduced to comply with arXiv file size requirement
Star formation and UV colors of the brightest Cluster Galaxies in the representative XMM-Newton Cluster Structure Survey
We present UV broadband photometry and optical emission-line measurements for
a sample of 32 Brightest Cluster Galaxies (BCGs) in clusters of the
Representative XMM-Newton Cluster Structure Survey (REXCESS) with z =
0.06-0.18. The REXCESS clusters, chosen to study scaling relations in clusters
of galaxies, have X-ray measurements of high quality. The trends of star
formation and BCG colors with BCG and host properties can be investigated with
this sample. The UV photometry comes from the XMM Optical Monitor, supplemented
by existing archival GALEX photometry. We detected H\alpha and forbidden line
emission in 7 (22%) of these BCGs, in optical spectra. All of the emission-line
BCGs occupy clusters classified as cool cores, for an emission-line incidence
rate of 70% for BCGs in cool core clusters. Significant correlations between
the H\alpha equivalent widths, excess UV production in the BCG, and the
presence of dense, X-ray bright intracluster gas with a short cooling time are
seen, including the fact that all of the H\alpha emitters inhabit systems with
short central cooling times and high central ICM densities. Estimates of the
star formation rates based on H\alpha and UV excesses are consistent with each
other in these 7 systems, ranging from 0.1-8 solar masses per year. The
incidence of emission-line BCGs in the REXCESS sample is intermediate, somewhat
lower than in other X-ray selected samples (-35%), and somewhat higher than but
statistically consistent with optically selected, slightly lower redshift BCG
samples (-10-15%). The UV-optical colors (UVW1-R-4.7\pm0.3) of REXCESS BCGs
without strong optical emission lines are consistent with those predicted from
templates and observations of ellipticals dominated by old stellar populations.
We see no trend in UV-optical colors with optical luminosity, R-K color, X-ray
temperature, redshift, or offset between X-ray centroid and X-ray peak ().Comment: 19 pages, 18 figures, 6 tables. Submitted, with minor revisions, to
ApJ
Infrared and Ultraviolet Star Formation in Brightest Cluster Galaxies in the ACCEPT Sample
We present IR and UV photometry for a sample of brightest cluster galaxies
(BCGs). The BCGs are from a heterogeneous but uniformly characterized sample,
the Archive of Chandra Cluster Entropy Profile Tables (ACCEPT), of X-ray galaxy
clusters from the Chandra X-ray telescope archive with published gas
temperature, density, and entropy profiles. We use archival GALEX, Spitzer, and
2MASS observations to assemble spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and colors
for BCGs. We find that while the SEDs of some BCGs follow the expectation of
red, dust-free old stellar populations, many exhibit signatures of recent star
formation in the form of excess UV or mid-IR emission, or both. We establish a
mean near-UV to 2MASS K color of 6.59 \pm 0.34 for quiescent BCGs. We use this
mean color to quantify the UV excess associated with star formation in the
active BCGs. We use fits to a template of an evolved stellar population and
library of starburst models and mid-IR star formation relations to estimate the
obscured star formation rates. Many of the BCGs in X-ray clusters with low
central gas entropy exhibit enhanced UV (38%) and mid-IR emission (43%), above
that expected from an old stellar population. These excesses are consistent
with on-going star formation activity in the BCG, star formation that appears
to be enabled by the presence of high density, X-ray emitting gas in the the
core of the cluster of galaxies. This hot, X-ray emitting gas may provide the
enhanced ambient pressure and some of the fuel to trigger the star formation.
This result is consistent with previous works that showed that BCGs in clusters
with low central gas entropy host H{\alpha} emission-line nebulae and radio
sources, while clusters with high central gas entropy exhibit none of these
features. UV and mid-IR measurements combined provide a complete picture of
unobscured and obscured star formation occurring in these systems.Comment: 81 pages, 14 figures, Accepted for ApJ
The Gemini Cluster Astrophysics Spectroscopic Survey (GCLASS): The Role of Environment and Self-Regulation in Galaxy Evolution at z ~ 1
We evaluate the effects of environment and stellar mass on galaxy properties
at 0.85 < z < 1.20 using a 3.6um-selected spectroscopic sample of 797 cluster
and field galaxies drawn from the GCLASS survey. We confirm that for galaxies
with LogM* > 9.3 the well-known correlations between environment and properties
such as star-forming fraction (f_SF), SFR, SSFR, D(4000), and color are already
in place at z ~ 1. We separate the effects of environment and stellar mass on
galaxies by comparing the properties of star-forming and quiescent galaxies at
fixed environment, and fixed stellar mass. The SSFR of star-forming galaxies at
fixed environment is correlated with stellar mass; however, at fixed stellar
mass it is independent of environment. The same trend exists for the D(4000)
measures of both the star-forming and quiescent galaxies and shows that their
properties are determined primarily by their stellar mass, not by their
environment. Instead, it appears that environment's primary role is to control
the fraction of star-forming galaxies. Using the spectra we identify candidate
poststarburst galaxies and find that those with 9.3 < LogM* < 10.7 are 3.1 +/-
1.1 times more common in high-density regions compared to low-density regions.
The clear association of poststarbursts with high-density regions as well as
the lack of a correlation between the SSFRs and D(4000)s of star-forming
galaxies with their environment suggests that at z ~ 1 the
environmental-quenching timescale must be rapid. Lastly, we construct a simple
quenching model which demonstrates that the lack of a correlation between the
D(4000) of quiescent galaxies and their environment results naturally if self
quenching dominates over environmental quenching at z > 1, or if the evolution
of the self-quenching rate mirrors the evolution of the environmental-quenching
rate at z > 1, regardless of which dominates.Comment: 26 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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