2,469 research outputs found
CO-dark gas and molecular filaments in Milky Way type galaxies
We use the moving mesh code AREPO coupled to a time-dependent chemical
network to investigate the formation and destruction of molecular gas in
simulated spiral galaxies. This allows us to determine the characteristics of
the gas that is not traced by CO emission. Our extremely high resolution AREPO
simulations allow us to capture the chemical evolution of the disc, without
recourse to a parameterised `clumping factor'. We calculate H2 and CO column
densities through our simulated disc galaxies, and estimate the CO emission and
CO-H2 conversion factor. We find that in conditions akin to those in the local
interstellar medium, around 42% of the total molecular mass should be in
CO-dark regions, in reasonable agreement with observational estimates. This
fraction is almost insensitive to the CO integrated intensity threshold used to
discriminate between CO-bright and CO-dark gas, as long as this threshold is
less than 10 K km/s. The CO-dark molecular gas primarily resides in extremely
long (>100 pc) filaments that are stretched between spiral arms by galactic
shear. Only the centres of these filaments are bright in CO, suggesting that
filamentary molecular clouds observed in the Milky Way may only be small parts
of much larger structures. The CO-dark molecular gas mainly exists in a
partially molecular phase which accounts for a significant fraction of the
total disc mass budget. The dark gas fraction is higher in simulations with
higher ambient UV fields or lower surface densities, implying that external
galaxies with these conditions might have a greater proportion of dark gas.Comment: Accepted by MNRA
The Dipole Anisotropy of the First All-Sky X-ray Cluster Sample
We combine the recently published CIZA galaxy cluster catalogue with the
XBACs cluster sample to produce the first all-sky catalogue of X-ray clusters
in order to examine the origins of the Local Group's peculiar velocity without
the use of reconstruction methods to fill the traditional Zone of Avoidance.
The advantages of this approach are (i) X-ray emitting clusters tend to trace
the deepest potential wells and therefore have the greatest effect on the
dynamics of the Local Group and (ii) our all-sky sample provides data for
nearly a quarter of the sky that is largely incomplete in optical cluster
catalogues. We find that the direction of the Local Group's peculiar velocity
is well aligned with the CMB as early as the Great Attractor region 40 h^-1 Mpc
away, but that the amplitude of its dipole motion is largely set between 140
and 160 h^-1 Mpc. Unlike previous studies using galaxy samples, we find that
without Virgo included, roughly ~70% of our dipole signal comes from mass
concentrations at large distances (>60 h^-1 Mpc) and does not flatten,
indicating isotropy in the cluster distribution, until at least 160 h^-1 Mpc.
We also present a detailed discussion of our dipole profile, linking observed
features to the structures and superclusters that produce them. We find that
most of the dipole signal can be attributed to the Shapley supercluster
centered at about 150 h^-1 Mpc and a handful of very massive individual
clusters, some of which are newly discovered and lie well in the Zone of
Avoidance.Comment: 15 Pages, 9 Figures. Accepted by Ap
Mid-infrared sources in the ELAIS Deep X-ray Survey
We present a cross‐correlation of the European Large Area Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) survey (ELAIS) with the ELAIS Deep X‐ray Survey of the N1 and N2 fields. There are seven Chandra point sources with matches in the ELAIS Final Analysis 15‐μm catalogue, out of a total of 28 extragalactic ISO sources present in the Chandra fields. Five of these are consistent with active galactic nuclei (AGN) giving an AGN fraction of ∼19 per cent in the 15‐μm flux range 0.8–6 mJy. We have co‐added the hard X‐ray fluxes of the individually undetected ISO sources and find a low significance detection consistent with star formation in the remaining population. We combine our point source cross‐correlation fraction with the XMM–Newton observations of the Lockman Hole and Chandra observations of the Hubble Deep Field North to constrain source count models of the mid‐infrared galaxy population. The low dust‐enshrouded AGN fraction in ELAIS implied by the number of cross‐identifications between the ELAIS mid‐infrared sample and the Chandra point sources is encouraging for the use of mid‐infrared surveys to constrain the cosmic star formation history, provided there are not further large undetected populations of Compton‐thick AGN
The ELAIS Deep X-ray Survey
We present initial follow-up results of the ELAIS Deep X-ray Survey which is
being undertaken with the Chandra and XMM-Newton Observatories. 235 X-ray
sources are detected in our two 75 ks ACIS-I observations in the well-studied
ELAIS N1 and N2 areas. 90% of the X-ray sources are identified optically to
R=26 with a median magnitude of R=24. We show that objects which are unresolved
optically (i.e. quasars) follow a correlation between their optical and X-ray
fluxes, whereas galaxies do not. We also find that the quasars with fainter
optical counterparts have harder X-ray spectra, consistent with absorption at
both wavebands. Initial spectroscopic follow-up has revealed a large fraction
of high-luminosity Type 2 quasars. The prospects for studying the evolution of
the host galaxies of X-ray selected Type 2 AGN are considered.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, To appear in Proceedings of XXI Moriond
Conference: "Galaxy Clusters and the High Redshift Universe Observed in
X-rays", edited by D. Neumann, F.Durret, & J. Tran Thanh Va
The ELAIS deep X-ray survey - I. Chandra source catalogue and first results
We present an analysis of two deep (75 ks) Chandra observations of the European Large Area Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) Survey (ELAIS) fields N1 and N2 as the first results from the ELAIS deep X-ray survey. This survey is being conducted in well-studied regions with extensive multiwavelength coverage. Here we present the Chandra source catalogues along with an analysis of source counts, hardness ratios and optical classifications. A total of 233 X-ray point sources are detected in addition to two soft extended sources, which are found to be associated with galaxy clusters. An overdensity of sources is found in N1 with 30 per cent more sources than N2, which we attribute to large-scale structure. A similar variance is seen between other deep Chandra surveys. The source count statistics reveal an increasing fraction of hard sources at fainter fluxes. The number of galaxy-like counterparts also increases dramatically towards fainter fluxes, consistent with the emergence of a large population of obscured sources
The role of cosmic ray pressure in accelerating galactic outflows
We study the formation of galactic outflows from supernova explosions (SNe)
with the moving-mesh code AREPO in a stratified column of gas with a surface
density similar to the Milky Way disk at the solar circle. We compare different
simulation models for SNe placement and energy feedback, including cosmic rays
(CR), and find that models that place SNe in dense gas and account for CR
diffusion are able to drive outflows with similar mass loading as obtained from
a random placement of SNe with no CRs. Despite this similarity, CR-driven
outflows differ in several other key properties including their overall
clumpiness and velocity. Moreover, the forces driving these outflows originate
in different sources of pressure, with the CR diffusion model relying on
non-thermal pressure gradients to create an outflow driven by internal pressure
and the random-placement model depending on kinetic pressure gradients to
propel a ballistic outflow. CRs therefore appear to be non-negligible physics
in the formation of outflows from the interstellar medium.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in ApJL; movie of
simulated gas densities can be found here:
http://www.h-its.org/tap-images/galactic-outflows
Formation and evolution of primordial protostellar systems
We investigate the formation of the first stars at the end of the cosmic dark
ages with a suite of three-dimensional, moving mesh simulations that directly
resolve the collapse of the gas beyond the formation of the first protostar at
the centre of a dark matter minihalo. The simulations cover more than 25 orders
of magnitude in density and have a maximum spatial resolution of 0.05 R_sun,
which extends well below the radius of individual protostars and captures their
interaction with the surrounding gas. In analogy to previous studies that
employed sink particles, we find that the Keplerian disc around the primary
protostar fragments into a number of secondary protostars, which is facilitated
by H2 collisional dissociation cooling and collision-induced emission. The
further evolution of the protostellar system is characterized by strong
gravitational torques that transfer angular momentum between the secondary
protostars formed in the disc and the surrounding gas. This leads to the
migration of about half of the secondary protostars to the centre of the cloud
in a free-fall time, where they merge with the primary protostar and enhance
its growth to about five times the mass of the second most massive protostar.
By the same token, a fraction of the protostars obtain angular momentum from
other protostars via N-body interactions and migrate to higher orbits. On
average, only every third protostar survives until the end of the simulation.
However, the number of protostars present at any given time increases
monotonically, suggesting that the system will continue to grow beyond the
limited period of time simulated here.Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS, movies of
the simulations may be downloaded at http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~tgrei
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