11,299 research outputs found
Dark matter-rich early-type galaxies in the CASSOWARY 5 strong lensing system
We study the strong gravitational lensing system number 5 identified by the
CASSOWARY survey. In this system, a source at redshift 1.069 is lensed into
four detected images by two early-type galaxies at redshift 0.388. The observed
positions of the multiple images are well reproduced by a model in which the
total mass distribution of the deflector is described in terms of two singular
isothermal sphere profiles. By modelling the lens galaxy spectral energy
distributions, we measure the lens luminous masses and stellar mass-to-light
ratios. These values are used to disentangle the luminous and dark matter
components in the vicinity of the multiple images. We estimate that the dark
over total mass ratio projected within a cylinder centred on the primary lens
and with a radius of 12.6 kpc is 0.8 +/- 0.1. We contrast these measurements
with the typical values found at similar distances (in units of the effective
radius) in isolated lens galaxies and show that the amount of dark matter
present in these lens galaxies is almost a factor four larger than in field
lens galaxies with comparable luminous masses. Data and models are therefore
consistent with interpreting the lens of this system as a galaxy group. We
infer that the overdense environment and dark matter concentration in these
galaxies must have affected the assembly of the lens luminous mass components.
We conclude that further multi-diagnostics analyses on the internal properties
of galaxy groups have the potential of providing us a unique insight into the
complex baryonic and dark-matter physics interplay that rules the formation of
cosmological structures.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures; accepted for publication in MNRA
Probing The Structure of Space-Time with Cosmic Rays
The study of the interactions of Cosmic Rays (CR's) with universal diffuse
background radiation can provide very stringent tests of the validity of
Special Relativity. The interactions we consider are the ones characterized by
well defined energy thresholds whose energy position can be predicted on the
basis of Special Relativity. We argue that the experimental confirmation of the
existence of these thresholds can in principle put very stringent limits on the
scale where Special Relativity and/or continuity of space-time may possibly
break down.Comment: 20 pages, 3 tables, no figures. Version to appear in Phys. Rev. D. A
few changes in the presentation. Conclusions unchanged. Some references adde
CLASH-VLT: Strangulation of cluster galaxies in MACSJ0416.1-2403 as seen from their chemical enrichment
(abridged) We explore the Frontier Fields cluster MACS J0416.1-2403 at
z=0.3972 with VIMOS/VLT spectroscopy from the CLASH-VLT survey covering a
region which corresponds to almost three virial radii. We measure fluxes of 5
emission lines of 76 cluster members enabling us to unambiguously derive O/H
gas metallicities, and also SFRs from Halpha. For intermediate massses we find
a similar distribution of cluster and field galaxies in the MZR and mass vs.
sSFR diagrams. Bulge-dominated cluster galaxies have on average lower sSFRs and
higher O/Hs compared to their disk-dominated counterparts. We use the location
of galaxies in the projected velocity vs. position phase-space to separate our
cluster sample into a region of objects accreted longer time ago and a region
of recently accreted and infalling galaxies. We find a higher fraction of
accreted metal-rich galaxies (63%) compared to the fraction of 28% of
metal-rich galaxies in the infalling regions. Intermediate mass galaxies
falling into the cluster for the first time are found to be in agreement with
predictions of the fundamental metallicity relation. In contrast, for already
accreted star-forming galaxies of similar masses, we find on average
metallicities higher than predicted by the models. This trend is intensified
for accreted cluster galaxies of the lowest mass bin, that display
metallicities 2-3 times higher than predicted by models with primordial gas
inflow. Environmental effects therefore strongly influence gas regulations and
control gas metallicities of log(M/Msun)<10.2 (Salpeter IMF) cluster galaxies.
We also investigate chemical evolutionary paths of model galaxies with and
without inflow of gas showing that strangulation is needed to explain the
higher metallicities of accreted cluster galaxies. Our results favor a
strangulation scenario in which gas inflow stops for log(M/Msun)<10.2 galaxies
when accreted by the cluster.Comment: Version better matched to the published version, including table with
observed and derived quantities for the 76 cluster galaxie
The influence of the Lande -factor in the classical general relativistic description of atomic and subatomic systems
We study the electromagnetic and gravitational fields of the proton and
electron in terms of the Einstenian gravity via the introduction of an
arbitrary Lande -factor in the Kerr-Newman solution. We show that at length
scales of the order of the reduced Compton wavelength, corrections from
different values of the -factor are not negligible and discuss the presence
of general relativistic effects in highly ionized heavy atoms. On the other
hand, since at the Compton-wavelength scale the gravitational field becomes
spin dominated rather than mass dominated, we also point out the necessity of
including angular momentum as a source of corrections to Newtonian gravity in
the quantum description of gravity at this scale.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
CLASH-VLT: Testing the Nature of Gravity with Galaxy Cluster Mass Profiles
We use high-precision kinematic and lensing measurements of the total mass
profile of the dynamically relaxed galaxy cluster MACS J1206.2-0847 at
to estimate the value of the ratio between the two scalar
potentials in the linear perturbed Friedmann-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker
metric.[...] Complementary kinematic and lensing mass profiles were derived
from exhaustive analyses using the data from the Cluster Lensing And Supernova
survey with Hubble (CLASH) and the spectroscopic follow-up with the Very Large
Telescope (CLASH-VLT). Whereas the kinematic mass profile tracks only the
time-time part of the perturbed metric (i.e. only ), the lensing mass
profile reflects the contribution of both time-time and space-space components
(i.e. the sum ). We thus express as a function of the mass
profiles and perform our analysis over the radial range . Using a spherical Navarro-Frenk-White mass profile, which
well fits the data, we obtain at the
68\% C.L. We discuss the effect of assuming different functional forms for mass
profiles and of the orbit anisotropy in the kinematic reconstruction.
Interpreting this result within the well-studied modified gravity model,
the constraint on translates into an upper bound to the interaction
length (inverse of the scalaron mass) smaller than 2 Mpc. This tight constraint
on the interaction range is however substantially relaxed when
systematic uncertainties in the analysis are considered. Our analysis
highlights the potential of this method to detect deviations from general
relativity, while calling for the need of further high-quality data on the
total mass distribution of clusters and improved control on systematic effects.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, submitted to JCA
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