2,916 research outputs found
Gravitational lensing and dynamics in SL2S\,J02140-0535: Probing the mass out to large radius
We aim to probe the mass of SL2S\,J02140-0535, a galaxy group at = 0.44
from the Strong Lensing Legacy Survey (SL2S). We combine strong lensing
modeling and dynamical constraints. The strong lensing analysis is based on
multi-band HST/ACS observations exhibiting strong lensing features that we have
followed-up spectroscopically with VLT/FORS2. To constrain the scale radius of
an NFW mass profile that cannot be constrained by strong lensing, we propose a
new method by taking advantage of the large-scale dynamical information
provided by VLT/FORS2 and KECK/LRIS spectroscopy of group members. In constrast
to other authors, we show that the observed lensing features in
SL2S\,J02140-0535 belong to different background sources: one at = 1.7
0.1 produces three images, while the other at = 1.023 0.001 has
only a single image. Our unimodal NFW mass model reproduces these images very
well. It is characterized by a concentration parameter = 6.0
0.6, which is slightly greater than the value expected from CDM
simulations for a mass of M 1 10 M_{\sun}.
The spectroscopic analysis of group members also reveals a unimodal structure
that exhibits no evidence of merging. We compare our dynamic mass estimate with
an independent weak-lensing based mass estimate finding that both are
consistent. Our combined lensing and dynamical analysis of SL2S\,J02140-0535
demonstrates the importance of spectroscopic information in reliably
identifying the lensing features. Our findings argue that the system is a
relaxed, massive galaxy group where mass is traced by light. This work shows a
potentially useful method for constraining large-scale properties inaccessible
to strong lensing, such as the scale radius of the NFW profile.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
CO map and steep Kennicutt-Schmidt relation in the extended UV disk of M63
Results from the UV satellite GALEX revealed large extensions of disks in
some nearby spiral galaxies, extending out to 3 to 4 times the isophotal
radius, r25. M63 is a remarkable example of a spiral galaxy with one of the
most extended UV disks, so it offers the opportunity to search for the
molecular gas and characterize the star formation in outer disk regions as
revealed by the UV emission. We obtained deep CO(1-0) and CO(2-1) observations
on the IRAM 30 m telescope along the major axis of the M63 disk from the center
out to the galactocentric radius rgal = 1.6 r25 and over a bright UV region at
rgal = 1.36 r25. CO(1-0) is detected all along the M63 major axis out to r25,
and CO(2-1) is confined to rgal = 0.68 r25, which may betray lower excitation
temperatures in the outer disk. CO(1-0) is also detected in the external bright
UV region of M63. The radial profiles of the CO emission and of the Halpha, 24
micron, NUV and FUV star formation tracers and HI taken from the literature
show a severe drop with the galactocentric radius, such that beyond r25 they
are all absent with the exception of a faint UV emission and HI. The CO
emission detection in the external UV region, where the UV flux is higher than
the UV flux observed beyond r25, highlights a tight correlation between the CO
and UV fluxes, namely the amount of molecular gas and the intensity of star
formation. This external UV region is dominated by the atomic gas, suggesting
that HI is more likely the precursor of H2 rather than the product of UV
photodissociation. A broken power law needs to be invoked to describe the
Kennicutt-Schmidt (K-S) relation of M63 from the center of the galaxy out to
rgal = 1.36 r25. While all along the major axis out to r25 the K-S relation is
almost linear, in the external UV region the SFR regime is highly nonlinear and
characterized by a steep K-S relation and very low star formation efficiency.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, A&A accepte
Kinematics of disk galaxies in (proto-)clusters at z=1.5
We observed star-forming galaxies at z~1.5 selected from the HyperSuprimeCam
Subaru Strategic Program. The galaxies are part of two significant
overdensities of [OII] emitters identified via narrow-band imaging and
photometric redshifts from grizy photometry. We used VLT/KMOS to carry out
Halpha integral field spectroscopy of 46 galaxies in total. Ionized gas maps,
star formation rates and velocity fields were derived from the Halpha emission
line. We quantified morphological and kinematical asymmetries to test for
potential gravitational (e.g. galaxy-galaxy) or hydrodynamical (e.g.
ram-pressure) interactions. Halpha emission was detected in 36 targets. 34 of
the galaxies are members of two (proto-)clusters at z=1.47, confirming our
selection strategy to be highly efficient. By fitting model velocity fields to
the observed ones, we determined the intrinsic maximum rotation velocity Vmax
of 14 galaxies. Utilizing the luminosity-velocity (Tully-Fisher) relation, we
find that these galaxies are more luminous than their local counterparts of
similar mass by up to ~4 mag in the rest-frame B-band. In contrast to field
galaxies at z<1, the offsets of the z~1.5 (proto-)cluster galaxies from the
local Tully-Fisher relation are not correlated with their star formation rates
but with the ratio between Vmax and gas velocity dispersion sigma_g. This
probably reflects that, as is observed in the field at similar redshifts, fewer
disks have settled to purely rotational kinematics and high Vmax/sigma_g
ratios. Due to relatively low galaxy velocity dispersions (sigma_v < 400 km/s)
of the (proto-)clusters, gravitational interactions likely are more efficient,
resulting in higher kinematical asymmetries, than in present-day clusters.
(abbr.)Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 11 pages, 8 figures, 1 tabl
High dispersion spectroscopy of two A supergiant systems in the Small Magellanic Cloud with novel properties
We present the results of a spectroscopic investigation of two novel variable
bright blue stars in the SMC, OGLE004336.91-732637.7 (SMC-SC3) and the
periodically occulted star OGLE004633.76-731204.3 (SMC-SC4), whose photometric
properties were reported by Mennickent et al. (2010). High-resolution spectra
in the optical and far-UV show that both objects are actually A + B type
binaries. Three spectra of SMC-SC4 show radial velocity variations, consistent
with the photometric period of 184.26 days found in Mennickent et al. 2010. The
optical spectra of the metallic lines in both systems show combined absorption
and emission components that imply that they are formed in a flattened
envelope. A comparison of the radial velocity variations in SMC-SC4 and the
separation of the V and R emission components in the Halpha emission profile
indicate that this envelope, and probably also the envelope around SMC-SC3, is
a circumbinary disk with a characteristic orbital radius some three times the
radius of the binary system. The optical spectra of SMC-SC3 and SMC-SC4 show,
respectively, HeI emission lines and discrete Blue Absorption Components (BACs)
in metallic lines. The high excitations of the HeI lines in the SMC-SC3
spectrum and the complicated variations of FeII emission and absorption
components with orbital phase in the spectrum of SMC-SC4 suggests that shocks
occur between the winds and various static regions of the stars' co-rotating
binary-disk complexes. We suggest that BACs arise from wind shocks from the A
star impacting the circumbinary disk and a stream of former wind-efflux from
the B star accreting onto the A star. We dub these objects prototype of a small
group of Magellanic Cloud wind-interacting A + B binaries.Comment: To be published in MNRA
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
SARCS strong lensing galaxy groups: I - optical, weak lensing, and scaling laws
We present the weak lensing and optical analysis of the SL2S-ARCS (SARCS)
sample of strong lens candidates. The sample is based on the Strong Lensing
Legacy Survey (SL2S), a systematic search of strong lensing systems in the
photometric Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey (CFHTLS). The SARCS
sample focuses on arc-like features and is designed to contain mostly galaxy
groups. We briefly present the weak lensing methodology that we use to estimate
the mass of the SARCS objects. Among 126 candidates, we obtain a weak lensing
detection for 89 objects with velocity dispersions of the Singular Isothermal
Sphere mass model ranging from 350 to 1000 km/s with an average value of
600km/s, corresponding to a rich galaxy group (or poor cluster). From the
galaxies belonging to the bright end of the group's red sequence (M_i<-21), we
derive the optical properties of the SARCS candidates. We obtain typical
richnesses of N=5-15 galaxies and optical luminosities of L=0.5-1.5e+12 Lsol
(within a radius of 0.5 Mpc). We use these galaxies to compute luminosity
density maps, from which a morphological classification reveals that a large
fraction of the sample are groups with a complex light distribution, either
elliptical or multimodal, suggesting that these objects are dynamically young
structures. We finally combine the lensing and optical analyses to draw a
sample of 80 most secure group candidates, i.e. weak lensing detection and
over-density at the lens position in the luminosity map, to remove false
detections and galaxy-scale systems from the initial sample. We use this
reduced sample to probe the optical scaling relations in combination with a
sample of massive galaxy clusters. We detect the expected correlations over the
probed range in mass with a typical scatter of 25% in the SIS velocity
dispersion at a given richness or luminosity, making these scaling laws
interesting mass proxie
School quality, safe schools: an emperical analysis
While the vast majority of US public schools are safe, problems exist that not only threaten the teaching and learning environment, but cause substantive problems for educators. Sensing that certain troubling student behaviors can lead to greater problems, schools have implemented many safe school programs and strategies. Unfortunately, these approaches are viewed as "add-ons" by the education community; that is, additional activities and work for them. What is needed is a framework where safe school programs and strategies are fully integrated into the schooling process. Such a framework exists, and the purpose of our paper has been to integrate the safe schools literature with the quality schools literature in developing such a framework.
After reviewing the school quality and school safety literature we extracted main concepts from both bodies of research, and led to an overriding proposition. The proposition suggests that safe school activities can be successful if they are part of the larger task of developing and sustaining quality schools.
An analysis of school quality and safety data collected by the NEA tentatively confirms our main proposition. We found that school quality is significantly related to school safety. Additional findings suggest that safety varies across schools, middle schools have more problems than either elementary or high schools, and that the effect of school quality on safety does not depend on grade level. Taken as a whole, the effect of school quality on school safety appears to be very robus
Dark matter-baryons separation at the lowest mass scale: the Bullet Group
We report on the X-ray observation of a strong lensing selected group, SL2S
J08544-0121, with a total mass of
which revealed a separation of kpc between the X-ray emitting
collisional gas and the collisionless galaxies and dark matter (DM), traced by
strong lensing. This source allows to put an order of magnitude estimate to the
upper limit to the interaction cross section of DM of 10 cm g. It is
the lowest mass object found to date showing a DM-baryons separation and it
reveals that the detection of bullet-like objects is not rare and confined to
mergers of massive objects opening the possibility of a statistical detection
of DM-baryons separation with future surveys.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters. Typos
correcte
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