734 research outputs found
The Brightest of Reionizing Galaxies (BoRG) survey
Until now, investigating the early stages of galaxy formation has been
primarily the realm of theoretical modeling and computer simulations, which
require many physical ingredients and are challenging to test observationally.
However, the latest Hubble Space Telescope observations in the near infrared
are shedding new light on the properties of galaxies within the first billion
years after the Big Bang, including our recent discovery of the most distant
proto-cluster of galaxies at redshift z~8. Here, I compare predictions from
models of primordial and metal-enriched star formation during the dark ages
with the latest Hubble observations of galaxies during the epoch of
reionization. I focus in particular on the luminosity function and on galaxy
clustering as measured from our Hubble Space Telescope Brightest of Reionizing
Galaxies (BoRG) survey. BoRG has the largest area coverage to find luminous and
rare z~8 sources that are among the first galaxies to have formed in the
Universe.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to appear in proceedings of First Stars IV
meeting (Kyoto, Japan; 2012
The very first Pop III stars and their relation to bright z~6 quasars
We discuss the link between dark matter halos hosting the first PopIII stars
formed at redshift z > 40 and the rare, massive, halos that are generally
considered to host bright z~6 quasars. We show that within the typical volume
occupied by one bright high-z QSO the remnants of the first several thousands
PopIII stars formed do not end up in the most massive halos at z~6, but rather
live in a large variety of environments. The black hole seeds planted by these
very first PopIII stars can easily grow to M > 10^{9.5} Msun by z=6 assuming
Eddington accretion with radiative efficiency epsilon~0.1. Therefore quenching
of the accretion is crucial to avoid an overabundance of supermassive black
holes. We implement a simple feedback model for the growth of the seeds planted
by PopIII stars and obtain a z~6 BH mass function consistent with the observed
QSO luminosity function.Comment: 5 pages, to appear in the proceedings of "First Stars III", AIP
Conference Series, T. Abel, A. Heger and B. O'Shea ed
Dynamical models and numerical simulations of incomplete violent relaxation
N-body simulations of collisionless collapse have offered important clues to
the construction of realistic stellar dynamical models of elliptical galaxies.
Such simulations confirm and quantify the qualitative expectation that rapid
collapse of a self-gravitating collisionless system, initially cool and
significantly far from equilibrium, leads to incomplete relaxation. In this
paper we revisit the problem, by comparing the detailed properties of a family
of distribution functions derived from statistical mechanics arguments to those
of the products of collisionless collapse found in N-body simulations.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the 39th
Rencontres de Moriond, "Exploring the Universe," La Thuile, Italy, March 28 -
April 4, 200
Dynamical properties of a family of collisionless models of elliptical galaxies
N-body simulations of collisionless collapse have offered important clues to
the construction of realistic stellar dynamical models of elliptical galaxies.
Such simulations confirm and quantify the qualitative expectation that rapid
collapse of a self-gravitating collisionless system, initially cool and
significantly far from equilibrium, leads to incomplete relaxation, that is to
a quasi-equilibrium configuration characterized by isotropic, quasi-Maxwellian
distribution of stellar orbits in the inner regions and by radially biased
anisotropic pressure in the outer parts. In earlier studies, as illustrated in
a number of papers several years ago (see Bertin et al. 1993 and references
therein), the attention was largely focused on the successful comparison
between the models (constructed under the qualitative clues offered by the
N-body simulations mentioned above) and the observations. In this paper we
revisit the problem of incomplete violent relaxation, by making a direct
comparison between the detailed properties of a family of distribution
functions and those of the products of collisionless collapse found in N-body
simulations.Comment: to appear in "Plasmas in the Laboratory and in the Universe: new
insights and new challenges", G. Bertin, D. Farina, R. Pozzoli eds., AIP
Conference Proceedings, Vol. XXX, pp. YY
Star Clusters with Primordial Binaries: II. Dynamical Evolution of Models in a Tidal Field
[abridged] We extend our analysis of the dynamical evolution of simple star
cluster models, in order to provide comparison standards that will aid in
interpreting the results of more complex realistic simulations. We augment our
previous primordial-binary simulations by introducing a tidal field, and
starting with King models of different central concentrations. We present the
results of N-body calculations of the evolution of equal-mass models, starting
with primordial binary fractions of 0 - 100 %, and N values from 512 to 16384.
We also attempt to extrapolate some of our results to the larger number of
particles that are necessary to model globular clusters. We characterize the
steady-state `deuterium main sequence' phase in which primordial binaries are
depleted in the core in the process of `gravitationally burning'. In this phase
we find that the ratio of the core to half-mass radius, r_c/r_h, is similar to
that measured for isolated systems. In addition to the generation of energy due
to hardening and depletion of the primordial binary population, the overall
evolution of the star clusters is driven by a competing process: the tidal
disruption of the system. We find that the depletion of primordial binaries
before tidal dissolution of the system is possible only if the initial number
is below 0.05 N, in the case of a King model with W_0=7 and N=4096 (which is
one of our longest living models). We compare our findings, obtained by means
of direct N-body simulations but scaled, where possible, to larger N, with
similar studies carried out by means of Monte Carlo methods.Comment: 15 pages, 18 figures, matches MNRAS accepted version, some sections
reorganized but no major change
Star Clusters with Primordial Binaries: I. Dynamical Evolution of Isolated Models
In order to interpret the results of complex realistic star cluster
simulations, which rely on many simplifying approximations and assumptions, it
is essential to study the behavior of even more idealized models, which can
highlight the essential physical effects and are amenable to more exact
methods. With this aim, we present the results of N-body calculations of the
evolution of equal-mass models, starting with primordial binary fractions of 0
- 100 %, with values of N ranging from 256 to 16384. This allows us to
extrapolate the main features of the evolution to systems comparable in
particle number with globular clusters. In this range, we find that the
steady-state `deuterium main sequence' is characterized by a ratio of the core
radius to half-mass radius that follows qualitatively the analytical estimate
by Vesperini & Chernoff (1994), although the N dependence is steeper than
expected. Interestingly, for an initial binary fraction f greater than 10%, the
binary heating in the core during the post collapse phase almost saturates
(becoming nearly independent of f), and so little variation in the structural
properties is observed. Thus, although we observe a significantly lower binary
abundance in the core with respect to the Fokker-Planck simulations by Gao et
al. (1991), this is of little dynamical consequence. At variance with the study
of Gao et al. (1991), we see no sign of gravothermal oscillations before 150
halfmass relaxation times. At later times, however, oscillations become
prominent. We demonstrate the gravothermal nature of these oscillations.Comment: 14 pages, 22 figures, MNRAS accepte
Star Clusters with Primordial Binaries: III. Dynamical Interaction between Binaries and an Intermediate Mass Black Hole
We present the first study of the dynamical evolution of an isolated star
cluster that combines a significant population of primordial binaries with the
presence of a central black hole. We use equal-mass direct N-body simulations,
with N ranging from 4096 to 16384 and a primordial binary ratio of 0-10%; the
black hole mass is about one percent of the total mass of the cluster. The
evolution of the binary population is strongly influenced by the presence of
the black hole, which gives the cluster a large core with a central density
cusp. Starting from a variety of initial conditions (Plummer and King models),
we first encounter a phase, that last approximately 10 half-mass relaxation
times, in which binaries are disrupted faster compared to analogous simulations
without a black hole. Subsequently, however, binary disruption slows down
significantly, due to the large core size. The dynamical interplay between the
primordial binaries and the black hole thus introduces new features with
respect to the scenarios investigated so far, where the influence of the black
hole and of the binaries have been considered separately. A large core to half
mass radius ratio appears to be a promising indirect evidence for the presence
of a intermediate-mass black hole in old globular clusters.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
All NIRspec needs is HST/WFC3 pre-imaging? The use of Milky Way Stars in WFC3 Imaging to Register NIRspec MSA Observations
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) will be an exquisite new near-infrared
observatory with imaging and multi-object spectroscopy through ESA's NIRspec
instrument with its unique Micro-Shutter Array (MSA), allowing for slits to be
positioned on astronomical targets by opening specific 0.002"-wide micro
shutter doors.
To ensure proper target acquisition, the on-sky position of the MSA needs to
be verified before spectroscopic observations start. An onboard centroiding
program registers the position of pre-identified guide stars in a Target
Acquisition (TA) image, a short pre-spectroscopy exposure without dispersion
(image mode) through the MSA with all shutters open.
The outstanding issue is the availability of Galactic stars in the right
luminosity range for TA relative to typical high redshift targets. We explore
this here using the stars and candidate galaxies identified in the
source extractor catalogs of Brightest of Reionizing Galaxies survey
(BoRG[z8]), a pure-parallel program with Hubble Space Telescope Wide-Field
Camera 3.
We find that (a) a single WFC3 field contains enough Galactic stars to
satisfy the NIRspec astrometry requirement (20 milli-arcseconds), provided its
and the NIRspec TA's are AB in WFC3 F125W, (b) a single WFC3
image can therefore serve as the pre-image if need be, (c) a WFC3 mosaic and
accompanying TA image satisfy the astrometry requirement at AB mag in
WFC3 F125W, (d) no specific Galactic latitude requires deeper TA imaging due to
a lack of Galactic stars, and (e) a depth of AB mag in WFC3 F125W is
needed if a guide star in the same MSA quadrant as a target is required.
We take the example of a BoRG identified candidate galaxy and
require a Galactic star within 20" of it. In this case, a depth of 25.5 AB in
F125W is required (with 97% confidence).Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures, to appear in the Journal of Astronomical
Instrumentatio
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