89 research outputs found
Gas expulsion in highly substructured embedded star clusters
We investigate the response of initially substructured, young, embedded star
clusters to instantaneous gas expulsion of their natal gas. We introduce
primordial substructure to the stars and the gas by simplistically modelling
the star formation process so as to obtain a variety of substructure
distributed within our modelled star forming regions. We show that, by
measuring the virial ratio of the stars alone (disregarding the gas
completely), we can estimate how much mass a star cluster will retain after gas
expulsion to within 10% accuracy, no matter how complex the background
structure of the gas is, and we present a simple analytical recipe describing
this behaviour. We show that the evolution of the star cluster while still
embedded in the natal gas, and the behavior of the gas before being expelled,
are crucial processes that affect the timescale on which the cluster can evolve
into a virialized spherical system. Embedded star clusters that have high
levels of substructure are subvirial for longer times, enabling them to survive
gas expulsion better than a virialized and spherical system. By using a more
realistic treatment for the background gas than our previous studies, we find
it very difficult to destroy the young clusters with instantaneous gas
expulsion. We conclude that gas removal may not be the main culprit for the
dissolution of young star clusters.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Differences between the globular cluster systems of the Virgo and Fornax Galaxy Clusters
It is well known that Globular cluster systems are different among galaxies.
Here we test to which degree these differences remain on the scale of galaxy
clusters by comparing the globular clusters (GCs) in optical surveys of the
Virgo galaxy cluster (ACSVCS) and the Fornax galaxy cluster (ACSFCS) in
Kolmogorov-Smirnoff Tests. Both surveys were obtained with the Advanced Camera
for Surveys (ACS) on board the Hubble Space Telescope, and contain thousands of
GCs in dozens of galaxies each. Also well over 100 point sources in the Chandra
X-ray Observatory source catalogue were attributed to the GCs in both optical
catalogues, and interpreted as low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs). Thus, the
optical and X-ray data are as uniform as possible. Our main findings are as
follows: (1) The spread in luminosities and half-light radii is larger in the
ACSVCS than in the ACSFCS. (2) The ratio between the half-light radii for the
F475W-passband and the F850LP-passband is on average smaller in the ACSVCS. (3)
The distribution of the LMXBs with the luminosity of the GCs is different
between both surveys. These findings are significant. The first finding could
be a consequence of a wider spread in the distances of the GCs in the ACSVCS,
but the others must have internal reasons in the GCs. Thus, the GC systems are
also different on a galaxy cluster scale.Comment: 24 pages, 13 figures, accepted to MNRA
Galaxies lacking dark matter in the Illustris simulation
IB is supported by an Alexander von Humboldt research fellowship. We thank the DAAD-Ostpartnerschaftsprogramm für 2018 at the University of Bonn for funding exchange visits between Charles University in Prague and Bonn University.Context. Any viable cosmological model in which galaxies interact predicts the existence of primordial and tidal dwarf galaxies (TDGs). In particular, in the standard model of cosmology (ΛCDM), according to the dual dwarf galaxy theorem, there must exist both primordial dark matter-dominated and dark matter-free TDGs with different radii. Aims. We study the frequency, evolution, and properties of TDGs in a ΛCDM cosmology. Methods. We use the hydrodynamical cosmological Illustris-1 simulation to identify TDG candidates (TDGCs) and study their present-day physical properties. The positions of galaxies in the radius-mass plane, depending on their nonbaryonic content, are compared with observational data and other simulations. We also present movies on the formation of a few galaxies lacking dark matter, confirming their tidal dwarf nature. Tidal dwarf galaxy candidates can however also be formed via other mechanisms, such as from ram-pressure-stripped material or, speculatively, from cold-accreted gas. Results. We find 97 TDGCs with Mstellar > 5 × 107M⊙ at redshift z = 0, corresponding to a co-moving number density of 2.3 × 10-4 h3 cMpc-3. The most massive TDGC has Mtotal = 3.1 × 109 M⊙, comparable to that of the Large Magellanic Cloud. Tidal dwarf galaxy candidates are phase-space-correlated, reach high metallicities, and are typically younger than dark matter-rich dwarf galaxies. Conclusions. We report for the first time the verification of the dual dwarf theorem in a self-consistent ΛCDM cosmological simulation. Simulated TDGCs and dark matter-dominated galaxies populate different regions in the radius-mass diagram in disagreement with observations of early-type galaxies. The dark matter-poor galaxies formed in Illustris-1 have comparable radii to observed dwarf galaxies and to TDGs formed in other galaxy-encounter simulations. In Illustris-1, only 0.17 percent of all selected galaxies with Mstellar = 5 × 107-109 M⊙ are TDGCs or dark matter-poor dwarf galaxies. The occurrence of NGC 1052-DF2-type objects is discussed.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Spatially Resolved Kinematics of an Ultra-Compact Dwarf Galaxy
We present the internal kinematics of UCD3, the brightest known ultra-compact
dwarf galaxy (UCD) in the Fornax cluster, making this the first UCD with
spatially resolved spectroscopy. Our study is based on seeing-limited
observations obtained with the ARGUS Integral Field Unit of the VLT/FLAMES
spectrograph under excellent seeing conditions (0.5 - 0.67 arcsec FWHM). The
velocity field of UCD3 shows the signature of weak rotation, comparable to that
found in massive globular clusters. Its velocity dispersion profile is fully
consistent with an isotropic velocity distribution and the assumption that mass
follows the light distribution obtained from Hubble Space Telescope imaging. In
particular, there is no evidence for the presence of an extended dark matter
halo contributing a significant (>~33 per cent within R < 200 pc) mass
fraction, nor for a central black hole more massive than ~5 per cent of the
UCD's mass. While this result does not exclude a galaxian origin for UCD3, we
conclude that its internal kinematics are fully consistent with it being a
massive star cluster.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
Recent advances on IMF research
Here I discuss recent work on brown dwarfs, massive stars and the IMF in
general. The stellar IMF can be well described by an invariant two-part power
law in present-day star-formation events within the Local Group of galaxies. It
is nearly identical in shape to the pre-stellar core mass function. The
majority of brown dwarfs follow a separate IMF. Evidence from globular clusters
and ultra-compact dwarf galaxies has emerged that IMFs may have been top heavy
depending on the star-formation rate density. The IGIMF then ranges from bottom
heavy at low galaxy-wide star formation rates to being top-heavy in
galaxy-scale star bursts.Comment: 6 pages, LaTeX, to appear in The Labyrinth of Star Formation, 18-22
June 2012, Crete, (eds.) D. Stamatellos, S. Goodwin, and D. Ward-Thompson,
Springer, in press; replaced version: very minor corrections plus the
addition of reference Smith & Lucey (2013) on the bottom-heavy IMF in
elliptical galaxie
Mass-loss and expansion of ultra compact dwarf galaxies through gas expulsion and stellar evolution for top-heavy stellar initial mass functions
(abridged) The dynamical V-band mass-to-light ratios of ultra compact dwarf
galaxies (UCDs) are higher than predicted by simple stellar population models
with the canonical stellar initial mass function (IMF). One way to explain this
finding is a top-heavy IMF, so that the unseen mass is provided by additional
remnants of high-mass stars. A possible explanation for why the IMF in UCDs
could be top-heavy while this is not the case in less massive stellar systems
is that encounters between proto-stars and stars become probable in forming
massive systems. However, the required number of additional stellar remnants
proves to be rather high, which raises the question of how their progenitors
would affect the early evolution of a UCD. We have therefore calculated the
first 200 Myr of the evolution of the UCDs, using the particle-mesh code
Superbox. It is assumed that the stellar populations of UCDs were created in an
initial starburst, which implies heavy mass loss during the following
approximately 40 Myr due to primordial gas expulsion and supernova explosions.
We find at the end of the simulations for various initial conditions and
(tabulated) mass-loss histories objects that roughly resemble UCDs. Thus, the
existence of UCDs does not contradict the notion that their stellar populations
formed rapidly and with a top-heavy IMF. We find tentative evidence that the
UCDs may have had densities as high as 10^8 M_sun/pc^3 at birth.Comment: 19 pages, 16 figures. Figure 4 has been modified in this version; it
now shows the quantities that were actually used in the paper. This
modification therefore does not imply any further changes to the paper, but
there are a few other, very minor changes (typos corrected, formulations
changed)
Local-Group tests of dark-matter concordance cosmology: Towards a new paradigm for structure formation
Predictions of the concordance cosmological model (CCM) of the structures in the environment of large spiral galaxies are compared with observed properties of Local Group galaxies. Five new, most probably irreconcilable problems are uncovered: 1) A wide variety of published CCM models consistently predict some form of relation between dark-matter-mass and luminosity for the Milky Way (MW) satellite galaxies, but none is observed. 2) The mass function of luminous sub-haloes predicted by the CCM contains too few satellites with dark matter (DM) mass 107M⊙ within their innermost 300 pc than in the case of the MW satellites. 3) The Local Group galaxies and data from extragalactic surveys indicate there is a correlation between bulge-mass and the number of luminous satellites that is not predicted by the CCM. 4) The 13 new ultra-faint MW satellites define a disc-of-satellites (DoS) that is virtually identical to the DoS previously found for the 11 classical MW satellites, implying that most of the 24 MW satellites are correlated in phase-space. 5) The occurrence of two MW-type DM halo masses hosting MW-like galaxies is unlikely in the CCM. However, the properties of the Local Group galaxies provide information leading to a solution of the above problems. The DoS and bulge-satellite correlation suggest that dissipational events forming bulges are related to the processes forming phase-space correlated satellite populations. These events are well known to occur since in galaxy encounters energy and angular momentum are expelled in the form of tidal tails, which can fragment to form populations of tidal-dwarf galaxies (TDGs) and associated star clusters. If Local Group satellite galaxies are to be interpreted as TDGs then the substructure predictions of the CCM are internally in conflict. All findings thus suggest that the CCM does not account for the Local Group observations and that therefore existing as well as new viable alternatives have to be further explored. These are discussed and natural solutions for the above problems emerge
Compact stellar systems in the Fornax cluster: a UV perspective
In recent years, increasing evidence for chemical complexity and multiple
stellar populations in massive globular clusters (GCs) has emerged, including
extreme horizontal branches (EHBs) and UV excess. Our goal is to improve our
understanding of UV excess in the regime of both massive GCs and ultra-compact
dwarf galaxies (UCDs). To this end, we use deep archival GALEX data of the
central Fornax cluster to measure NUV and FUV magnitudes of UCDs and massive
GCs. We obtain NUV photometry for a sample of 35 compact objects with
-13.5<M_V<-10 mag. Of those, 21 objects also have FUV photometry. Roughly half
of the sources fall into the UCD luminosity regime (M_V <=-11 mag). We find
that seven out of 17 massive Fornax GCs exhibit a NUV excess with respect to
expectations from stellar population models, even for models with enhanced
Helium abundance. This suggests that not only He-enrichment has contributed to
forming the EHB population of these GCs. The GCs extend to stronger UV excess
than GCs in M31 and massive GCs in M87, at the 97% confidence level. Most of
the UCDs with FUV photometry also show evidence for UV excess, but their UV
colours can be matched by isochrones with enhanced Helium abundances and old
ages 12-14 Gyrs. We find that Fornax compact objects with X-ray emission
detected from Chandra images are almost disjunct in colour from compact objects
with GALEX UV detection, with only one X-ray source among the 35 compact
objects. However, since this source is one of the three most UV bright GCs, we
cannot exclude that the physical processes causing X-ray emission also
contribute to some of the observed UV excess.Comment: Research Note, 7 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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