120 research outputs found
Effects of dynamical evolution on the distribution of substructures
We develop a semi-analytical model that determines the evolution of the mass,
position and internal structure of dark matter substructures orbiting in dark
matter haloes. We apply this model to the case of the Milky Way. We focus in
particular on the effects of mass loss, dynamical friction and
substructure--substructure interactions, the last of which has previously been
ignored in analytic models of substructure evolution. Our semi-analytical
treatment reproduces both the spatial distribution of substructures and their
mass function as obtained from the most recent N-body cosmological calculations
of Gao et al. (2004). We find that, if mass loss is taken into account, the
present distribution of substructures is practically insensitive to dynamical
friction and scatterings from other substructures.
Implementing these phenomena leads to a slight increase (~5%) in the number
of substructures at r<0.35 r_vir, whereas their effects on the mass function
are negligible. We find that mass loss processes lead to the disruption of
substructures before dynamical friction and gravitational scattering can
significantly alter their orbits. Our results suggest that the present
substructure distribution at r>0.35 r_vir reflects the orbital properties at
infall and is, therefore, purely determined by the dark matter environment
around the host halo and has not been altered by dynamical evolution.Comment: Submitted to MNRAS. 13 pages, 9 figure
A kinematically selected, metal-poor stellar halo in the outskirts of M31
We present evidence for a metal-poor, [Fe/H] =0.2 dex,
stellar halo component detectable at radii from 10 kpc to 70 kpc, in our
nearest giant spiral neighbor, the Andromeda galaxy. This metal-poor sample
underlies the recently-discovered extended rotating component, and has no
detected metallicity gradient. This discovery uses a large sample of 9861
radial velocities of Red Giant Branch (RGB) stars obtained with the Keck-II
telescope and DEIMOS spectrograph, with 827 stars with robust radial velocity
measurements isolated kinematically to lie in the halo component primarily by
windowing out the extended rotating component which dominates the photometric
profile of Andromeda out to 50 kpc (de-projected). The stars lie in 54
spectroscopic fields spread over an 8 square degree region, and are expected to
fairly sample the halo to a radius of 70 kpc. The halo sample shows no
significant evidence for rotation. Fitting a simple model in which the velocity
dispersion of the component decreases with radius, we find a central velocity
dispersion of 152\kms decreasing by -0.90\kms/\kpc. By fitting a
cosmologically-motivated NFW halo model to the halo stars we constrain the
virial mass of M31 to be greater than 9.0 \times 10^{11} \msun with 99%
confidence. The properties of this halo component are very similar to that
found in our Milky Way, revealing that these roughly equal mass galaxies may
have led similar accretion and evolutionary paths in the early Universe.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures, accepted in ApJ. substantially revised versio
The Tidal Evolution of Local Group Dwarf Spheroidals
(Abridged) We use N-body simulations to study the evolution of dwarf
spheroidal galaxies (dSphs) driven by galactic tides. We adopt a
cosmologically-motivated model where dSphs are approximated by a King model
embedded within an NFW halo. We find that these NFW-embedded King models are
extraordinarily resilient to tides; the stellar density profile still resembles
a King model even after losing more than 99% of the stars. As tides strip the
galaxy, the stellar luminosity, velocity dispersion, central surface
brightness, and core radius decrease monotonically. Remarkably, we find that
the evolution of these parameters is solely controlled by the total amount of
mass lost from within the luminous radius. Of all parameters, the core radius
is the least affected: after losing 99% of the stars, R_c decreases by just a
factor of ~2. Interestingly, tides tend to make dSphs more dark-matter
dominated because the tightly bound central dark matter ``cusp'' is more
resilient to disruption than the ``cored'' King profile. We examine whether the
extremely large M/L ratios of the newly-discovered ultra-faint dSphs might have
been caused by tidal stripping of once brighter systems. Although dSph tidal
evolutionary tracks parallel the observed scaling relations in the
luminosity-radius plane, they predict too steep a change in velocity dispersion
compared with the observational estimates hitherto reported in the literature.
The ultra-faint dwarfs are thus unlikely to be the tidal remnants of systems
like Fornax, Draco, or Sagittarius. Despite spanning four decades in
luminosity, dSphs appear to inhabit halos of comparable peak circular velocity,
lending support to scenarios that envision dwarf spheroidals as able to form
only in halos above a certain mass threshold.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figs., accepted by Ap
The outer halo globular cluster system of M31 - II. Kinematics
We present a detailed kinematic analysis of the outer halo globular cluster
(GC) system of M31. Our basis for this is a set of new spectroscopic
observations for 78 clusters lying at projected distances between Rproj ~20-140
kpc from the M31 centre. These are largely drawn from the recent PAndAS
globular cluster catalogue; 63 of our targets have no previous velocity data.
Via a Bayesian maximum likelihood analysis we find that GCs with Rproj > 30 kpc
exhibit coherent rotation around the minor optical axis of M31, in the same
direction as more centrally- located GCs, but with a smaller amplitude of
86+/-17 km s-1. There is also evidence that the velocity dispersion of the
outer halo GC system decreases as a function of projected distance from the M31
centre, and that this relation can be well described by a power law of index ~
-0.5. The velocity dispersion profile of the outer halo GCs is quite similar to
that of the halo stars, at least out to the radius up to which there is
available information on the stellar kinematics. We detect and discuss various
velocity correlations amongst subgroups of GCs that lie on stellar debris
streams in the M31 halo. Many of these subgroups are dynamically cold,
exhibiting internal velocity dispersions consistent with zero. Simple Monte
Carlo experiments imply that such configurations are unlikely to form by
chance, adding weight to the notion that a significant fraction of the outer
halo GCs in M31 have been accreted alongside their parent dwarf galaxies. We
also estimate the M31 mass within 200 kpc via the Tracer Mass Estimator,
finding (1.2 - 1.6) +/- 0.2 10^{12}M_sun. This quantity is subject to
additional systematic effects due to various limitations of the data, and
assumptions built in into the TME. Finally, we discuss our results in the
context of formation scenarios for the M31 halo.Comment: 24 pages, 12 figures, 7 tables; Accepted for publication in MNRA
The Virgo stellar over-density: Mapping the infall of the Sagittarius tidal stream onto the Milky Way disk
The recently discovered Virgo stellar over-density, which expands over
\~1000deg^2 perpendicularly to the Galactic disk plane (7< Z <15 kpc, R~7 kpc),
is the largest clump of tidal debris ever detected in the outer halo and is
likely related with the accretion of a nearby dwarf galaxy by the Milky Way. We
carry out N-body simulations of the Sagittarius stream to show that this giant
stellar over-density is a confirmation of theoretical model predictions for the
leading tail of the Sagittarius stream to cross the Milky Way plane in the
Solar neighborhood. Radial velocity measurements are needed to confirm this
association and to further constrain the shape of the Milky Way dark matter
halo through a new generation of theoretical models. If the identification of
Virgo over-density and the Sagittarius leading arm is correct, we predict
highly negative radial velocities for the stars of Virgo over-density. The
detection of this new portion of the Sagittarius tidal stream would represent
an excellent target for the on-going and future kinematic surveys and for dark
matter direct detection experiments in the proximity of the Sun.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. Supplementary
movies to this paper are available at:
http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~mjuric/sgr-virgo
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