507 research outputs found

    The SAMI Galaxy Survey: Satellite galaxies undergo little structural change during their quenching phase

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    At fixed stellar mass, satellite galaxies show higher passive fractions than centrals, suggesting that environment is directly quenching their star formation. Here, we investigate whether satellite quenching is accompanied by changes in stellar spin (quantified by the ratio of the rotational to dispersion velocity V/σ\sigma) for a sample of massive (M>M_{*}>1010^{10} M_{\odot}) satellite galaxies extracted from the SAMI Galaxy Survey. These systems are carefully matched to a control sample of main sequence, high V/σV/\sigma central galaxies. As expected, at fixed stellar mass and ellipticity, satellites have lower star formation rate (SFR) and spin than the control centrals. However, most of the difference is in SFR, whereas the spin decreases significantly only for satellites that have already reached the red sequence. We perform a similar analysis for galaxies in the EAGLE hydro-dynamical simulation and recover differences in both SFR and spin similar to those observed in SAMI. However, when EAGLE satellites are matched to their `true' central progenitors, the change in spin is further reduced and galaxies mainly show a decrease in SFR during their satellite phase. The difference in spin observed between satellites and centrals at zz\sim0 is primarily due to the fact that satellites do not grow their angular momentum as fast as centrals after accreting into bigger halos, not to a reduction of V/σV/\sigma due to environmental effects. Our findings highlight the effect of progenitor bias in our understanding of galaxy transformation and they suggest that satellites undergo little structural change before and during their quenching phase.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA

    The SAMI Galaxy Survey: mass-kinematics scaling relations

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    We use data from the Sydney-AAO Multi-object Integral-field spectroscopy (SAMI) Galaxy Survey to study the dynamical scaling relation between galaxy stellar mass MM_* and the general kinematic parameter SK=KVrot2+σ2S_K = \sqrt{K V_{rot}^2 + \sigma^2} that combines rotation velocity VrotV_{rot} and velocity dispersion σ\sigma. We show that the logMlogSK\log M_* - \log S_K relation: (1)~is linear above limits set by properties of the samples and observations; (2)~has slightly different slope when derived from stellar or gas kinematic measurements; (3)~applies to both early-type and late-type galaxies and has smaller scatter than either the Tully-Fisher relation (logMlogVrot\log M_* - \log V_{rot}) for late types or the Faber-Jackson relation (logMlogσ\log M_* - \log\sigma) for early types; and (4)~has scatter that is only weakly sensitive to the value of KK, with minimum scatter for KK in the range 0.4 and 0.7. We compare SKS_K to the aperture second moment (the `aperture velocity dispersion') measured from the integrated spectrum within a 3-arcsecond radius aperture (σ3\sigma_{3^{\prime\prime}}). We find that while SKS_{K} and σ3\sigma_{3^{\prime\prime}} are in general tightly correlated, the logMlogSK\log M_* - \log S_K relation has less scatter than the logMlogσ3\log M_* - \log \sigma_{3^{\prime\prime}} relation.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, Accepted 2019 May 22. Received 2019 May 18; in original form 2019 January

    The SAMI Galaxy Survey: gas streaming and dynamical M/L in rotationally supported systems

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    Line-of-sight velocities of gas and stars can constrain dark matter (DM) within rotationally supported galaxies if they trace circular orbits extensively. Photometric asymmetries may signify non-circular motions, requiring spectra with dense spatial coverage. Our integral-field spectroscopy of 178 galaxies spanned the mass range of the SAMI Galaxy Survey. We derived circular speed curves (CSCs) of gas and stars from non-parametric Diskfit fits out to r2rer\sim2r_e. For 12/14 with measured H I profiles, ionized gas and H I maximum velocities agreed. We fitted mass-follows-light models to 163 galaxies by approximating the radial starlight profile as nested, very flattened mass homeoids viewed as a S\'ersic form. Fitting broad-band SEDs to SDSS images gave median stellar mass/light 1.7 assuming a Kroupa IMF vs. 2.6 dynamically. Two-thirds of the dynamical mass/light measures were consistent with star+remnant IMFs. One-fifth required upscaled starlight to fit, hence comparable mass of unobserved baryons and/or DM distributed similarly across the SAMI aperture that came to dominate motions as the starlight CSC declined rapidly. The rest had mass distributed differently from starlight. Subtracting fits of S\'ersic profiles to 13 VIKING Z-band images revealed residual weak bars. Near the bar PA, we assessed m = 2 streaming velocities, and found deviations usually <30 km/s from the CSC; three showed no deviation. Thus, asymmetries rarely influenced our CSCs despite co-located shock-indicating, emission-line flux ratios in more than 2/3

    Cardiovascular fitness associated with cognitive performance in heart failure patients enrolled in cardiac rehabilitation

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    Abstract Background Reduced cognitive function is common in persons with heart failure (HF). Cardiovascular fitness is a known contributor to cognitive function in many patient populations, but has only been linked to cognition based on estimates of fitness in HF. The current study examined the relationship between fitness as measured by metabolic equivalents (METs) from a standardized stress test and cognition in persons with HF, as well as the validity of office-based predictors of fitness in this population. Methods Forty-one HF patients enrolled in cardiac rehabilitation completed a standardized exercise stress test protocol, a brief neuropsychological battery, the 2-minute step test (2MST), and a series of medical history and self-report questionnaires. Results Maximum METs from stress testing demonstrated incremental predictive validity for attention (β = .41,p = .03), executive function (β = .37,p = .04), and memory domains (β = .46,p = .04). Partial correlations accounting for key medical and demographic characteristics revealed greater METs was associated with the 2MST (r(32) = .41,p = .02) but not with the Duke Activity Status Index (DASI) (r(32) = .24,p = .17). Conclusion The current findings indicate that better fitness levels measured by METs is independently associated with better cognitive function in older adults with HF. Results also showed that METs was closely associated with one office-based measure of fitness (2MST), but not another (DASI). Prospective studies are needed to clarify the mechanisms linking fitness and cognitive function in HF

    The SAMI Galaxy Survey: can we trust aperture corrections to predict star formation?

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    In the low redshift Universe (z<0.3), our view of galaxy evolution is primarily based on fibre optic spectroscopy surveys. Elaborate methods have been developed to address aperture effects when fixed aperture sizes only probe the inner regions for galaxies of ever decreasing redshift or increasing physical size. These aperture corrections rely on assumptions about the physical properties of galaxies. The adequacy of these aperture corrections can be tested with integral-field spectroscopic data. We use integral-field spectra drawn from 1212 galaxies observed as part of the SAMI Galaxy Survey to investigate the validity of two aperture correction methods that attempt to estimate a galaxy's total instantaneous star formation rate. We show that biases arise when assuming that instantaneous star formation is traced by broadband imaging, and when the aperture correction is built only from spectra of the nuclear region of galaxies. These biases may be significant depending on the selection criteria of a survey sample. Understanding the sensitivities of these aperture corrections is essential for correct handling of systematic errors in galaxy evolution studies

    Sleep Apnea and Cognitive Function in Heart Failure

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    Background. Prior research indicates that heart failure (HF) patients exhibit significant cognitive deficits on neuropsychological testing. Sleep apnea is associated with both HF and reduced cognitive function, but the combined impact of these conditions on cognitive function is unknown. Methods. In the current study, 172 older adults with a dual diagnosis of HF and sleep apnea or HF alone completed a battery of cognitive tests measuring attention, executive functioning, and memory. Results. Relative to patients with HF alone, persons with both HF and sleep apnea performed worse on measures of attention after adjusting for demographic and medical variables. Conclusions. The current findings suggest that HF patients with comorbid sleep apnea may be at greater risk for cognitive impairment relative to HF patient without such history. Further work is needed to clarify mechanisms for these findings and to determine whether the interactive effects on cognitive function lead to poorer patient outcomes

    The SAMI Galaxy Survey: gas content and interaction as the drivers of kinematic asymmetry

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    In order to determine the causes of kinematic asymmetry in the Hα\alpha gas in the SAMI Galaxy Survey sample, we investigate the comparative influences of environment and intrinsic properties of galaxies on perturbation. We use spatially resolved Hα\alpha velocity fields from the SAMI Galaxy Survey to quantify kinematic asymmetry (vasym\overline{v_{asym}}) in nearby galaxies and environmental and stellar mass data from the GAMA survey. {We find that local environment, measured as distance to nearest neighbour, is inversely correlated with kinematic asymmetry for galaxies with log(M/M)>10.0\mathrm{\log(M_*/M_\odot)}>10.0, but there is no significant correlation for galaxies with log(M/M)<10.0\mathrm{\log(M_*/M_\odot)}<10.0. Moreover, low mass galaxies (log(M/M)<9.0\mathrm{\log(M_*/M_\odot)}<9.0) have greater kinematic asymmetry at all separations, suggesting a different physical source of asymmetry is important in low mass galaxies.} We propose that secular effects derived from gas fraction and gas mass may be the primary causes of asymmetry in low mass galaxies. High gas fraction is linked to high σmV\frac{\sigma_{m}}{V} (where σm\sigma_m is Hα\alpha velocity dispersion and VV the rotation velocity), which is strongly correlated with vasym\overline{v_{asym}}, and galaxies with log(M/M)<9.0\log(M_*/M_\odot)<9.0 have offset σmV\overline{\frac{\sigma_{m}}{V}} from the rest of the sample. Further, asymmetry as a fraction of dispersion decreases for galaxies with log(M/M)<9.0\log(M_*/M_\odot)<9.0. Gas mass and asymmetry are also inversely correlated in our sample. We propose that low gas masses in dwarf galaxies may lead to asymmetric distribution of gas clouds, leading to increased relative turbulence.Comment: 15 pages, 20 figure
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