278 research outputs found
Constraint on the Assembly and Dynamics of Galaxies. II. Properties of Kiloparsec-Scale Clumps in Rest-Frame Optical Emission of z ~ 2 Star-Forming Galaxies
We study the properties of luminous stellar "clumps" identified in deep, high-resolution Hubble Space Telescope NIC2/F160W imaging at 1.6 μm of six z ~ 2 star-forming galaxies with existing near-infrared integral field spectroscopy from SINFONI at the Very Large Telescope. Individual clumps contribute ~0.5%-15% of the galaxy-integrated rest-frame ≈5000 Å emission, with median of ≈2%; the total contribution of clump light ranges from 10% to 25%. The median intrinsic clump size and stellar mass are ~1 kpc and ~10^9 M_☉, in the ranges for clumps identified in rest-UV or line emission in other studies. The clump sizes and masses in the subset of disks are broadly consistent with expectations for clump formation through gravitational instabilities in gas-rich, turbulent disks given the host galaxies' global properties. By combining the NIC2 data with Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS)/F814W imaging available for one source, and adaptive-optics-assisted SINFONI Hα data for another, we infer modest color, M/L, and stellar age variations within each galaxy. In these two objects, sets of clumps identified at different wavelengths do not fully overlap; NIC2-identified clumps tend to be redder/older than ACS- or Hα-identified clumps without rest-frame optical counterparts. There is evidence for a systematic trend of older ages at smaller galactocentric radii among the clumps, consistent with scenarios where inward migration of clumps transports material toward the central regions. From constraints on a bulge-like component at radii ≾1-3 kpc, none of the five disks in our sample appears to contain a compact massive stellar core, and we do not discern a trend of bulge stellar mass fraction with stellar age of the galaxy. Further observations are necessary to probe the buildup of stellar bulges and the role of clumps in this process
A Comparison of Circumgalactic Mg ii Absorption between the TNG50 Simulation and the MEGAFLOW Survey
The circumgalactic medium (CGM) contains information on gas flows around galaxies, such as accretion and supernova-driven winds, which are difficult to constrain from observations alone. Here, we use the high-resolution TNG50 cosmological magnetohydrodynamical simulation to study the properties and kinematics of the CGM around star-forming galaxies in 1011.5-1012 M o˙ halos at z ≃ 1 using mock Mg ii absorption lines, which we generate by postprocessing halos to account for photoionization in the presence of a UV background. We find that the Mg ii gas is a very good tracer of the cold CGM, which is accreting inward at inflow velocities of up to 50 km s-1. For sight lines aligned with the galaxy's major axis, we find that Mg ii absorption lines are kinematically shifted due to the cold CGM's significant corotation at speeds up to 50% of the virial velocity for impact parameters up to 60 kpc. We compare mock Mg ii spectra to observations from the MusE GAs FLow and Wind (MEGAFLOW) survey of strong Mg ii absorbers (EW2796 Å0 > 0.5 Å). After matching the equivalent-width (EW) selection, we find that the mock Mg ii spectra reflect the diversity of observed kinematics and EWs from MEGAFLOW, even though the sight lines probe a very small fraction of the CGM. Mg ii absorption in higher-mass halos is stronger and broader than in lower-mass halos but has qualitatively similar kinematics. The median-specific angular momentum of the Mg ii CGM gas in TNG50 is very similar to that of the entire CGM and only differs from non-CGM components of the halo by normalization factors of ≲1 dex
The Impact of cold gas accretion above a mass floor on galaxy scaling relations
Using the cosmological baryonic accretion rate and normal star formation
efficiencies, we present a very simple model for star-forming galaxies (SFGs)
that accounts for the mass and redshift dependencies of the SFR-Mass and
Tully-Fisher relations from z=2 to the present. The time evolution follows from
the fact that each modelled galaxy approaches a steady state where the SFR
follows the (net) cold gas accretion rate. The key feature of the model is a
halo mass floor M_{min}~10^{11} below which accretion is quenched in order to
simultaneously account for the observed slopes of the SFR-Mass and
Tully-Fischer relations. The same successes cannot be achieved via a
star-formation threshold (or delay) nor by varying the SF efficiency or the
feedback efficiency. Combined with the mass ceiling for cold accretion due to
virial shock heating, the mass floor M_{min} explains galaxy "downsizing",
where more massive galaxies formed earlier and over a shorter period of time.
It turns out that the model also accounts for the observed galactic baryon and
gas fractions as a function of mass and time, and the cosmic SFR density from
z~6 to z=0, which are all resulting from the mass floor M_{min}. The model
helps to understand that it is the cosmological decline of accretion rate that
drives the decrease of cosmic SFR density between z~2 and z=0 and the rise of
the cosmic SFR density allows us to put a constraint on our main parameter
M_{min}~10^{11} solar masses. Among the physical mechanisms that could be
responsible for the mass floor, we view that photo-ionization feedback (from
first in-situ hot stars) lowering the cooling efficiency is likely to play a
large role.Comment: 19pages, 14 figures, accepted to ApJ, updated reference
Constraints on the assembly and dynamics of galaxies. II. Properties of kiloparsec-scale clumps in rest-frame optical emission of z ~ 2 star-forming galaxies
We study the properties of luminous stellar clumps identified in deep, high
resolution HST/NIC2 F160W imaging at 1.6um of six z~2 star-forming galaxies
with existing near-IR integral field spectroscopy from SINFONI at the VLT.
Individual clumps contribute ~0.5%-15% of the galaxy-integrated rest-frame
~5000A emission, with median of about 2%; the total contribution of clump light
ranges from 10%-25%. The median intrinsic clump size and stellar mass are ~1kpc
and log(Mstar[Msun])~9, in the ranges for clumps identified in rest-UV or line
emission in other studies. The clump sizes and masses in the subset of disks
are broadly consistent with expectations for clump formation via gravitational
instabilities in gas-rich, turbulent disks given the host galaxies' global
properties. By combining the NIC2 data with ACS/F814W imaging available for one
source, and AO-assisted SINFONI Halpha data for another, we infer modest color,
M/L, and stellar age variations within each galaxy. In these two objects, sets
of clumps identified at different wavelengths do not fully overlap;
NIC2-identified clumps tend to be redder/older than ACS- or Halpha-identified
clumps without rest-frame optical counterparts. There is evidence for a
systematic trend of older ages at smaller galactocentric radii among the
clumps, consistent with scenarios where inward migration of clumps transports
material towards the central regions. From constraints on a bulge-like
component at radii <1-3kpc, none of the five disks in our sample appears to
contain a compact massive stellar core, and we do not discern a trend of bulge
stellar mass fraction with stellar age of the galaxy. Further observations are
necessary to probe the build-up of stellar bulges and the role of clumps in
this process.Comment: 29 pages, 11 figures. Revised version accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
From rings to bulges: evidence for rapid secular galaxy evolution at z~2 from integral field spectroscopy in the SINS survey
We present Ha integral field spectroscopy of well resolved, UV/optically
selected z~2 star-forming galaxies as part of the SINS survey with SINFONI on
the ESO VLT. Our laser guide star adaptive optics and good seeing data show the
presence of turbulent rotating star forming rings/disks, plus central
bulge/inner disk components, whose mass fractions relative to total dynamical
mass appears to scale with [NII]/Ha flux ratio and star formation age. We
propose that the buildup of the central disks and bulges of massive galaxies at
z~2 can be driven by the early secular evolution of gas-rich proto-disks. High
redshift disks exhibit large random motions. This turbulence may in part be
stirred up by the release of gravitational energy in the rapid cold accretion
flows along the filaments of the cosmic web. As a result dynamical friction and
viscous processes proceed on a time scale of <1 Gyr, at least an order of
magnitude faster than in z~0 disk galaxies. Early secular evolution thus drives
gas and stars into the central regions and can build up exponential disks and
massive bulges, even without major mergers. Secular evolution along with
increased efficiency of star formation at high surface densities may also help
to account for the short time scales of the stellar buildup observed in massive
galaxies at z~2.Comment: accepted Astrophysical Journal, main July 8 200
High-Redshift Star-Forming Galaxies: Angular Momentum and Baryon Fraction, Turbulent Pressure Effects and the Origin of Turbulence
The structure of a sample of high-redshift (z=2), rotating galaxies with high
star formation rates and turbulent gas velocities of sigma=40-80 km/s is
investigated. Fitting the observed disk rotational velocities and radii with a
Mo, Mao, White (1998) (MMW) model requires unusually large disk spin parameters
lambda_d>0.1 and disk-to-dark halo mass fraction m_d=0.2, close to the cosmic
baryon fraction. The galaxies segregate into dispersion-dominated systems with
1<vmax/sigma<3, maximum rotational velocities vmax<200 km/s and disk half-light
radii rd=1-3 kpc and rotation-dominated systems with vmax>200 km/s,
vmax/sigma>3 and rd=4-8 kpc. For the dispersion-dominated sample, radial
pressure gradients partly compensate the gravitational force, reducing the
rotational velocities. Including this pressure effect in the MMW model,
dispersion-dominated galaxies can be fitted well with spin parameters lf
lambda_d=0.03-0.05 for high disk mass fractions of m_d=0.2 and with
lambda_d=0.01-0.03 for m_d=0.05. These values are in good agreement with
cosmological expectations. For the rotation-dominated sample however pressure
effects are small and better agreement with theoretically expected disk spin
parameters can only be achieved if the dark halo mass contribution in the
visible disk regime (2-3*rd) is smaller than predicted by the MMW model. We
argue that these galaxies can still be embedded in standard cold dark matter
halos if the halos did not contract adiabatically in response to disk
formation. It is shown that the observed high turbulent gas motions of the
galaxies are consistent with a Toomre instability parameter Q=1 which is equal
to the critical value, expected for gravitational disk instability to be the
major driver of turbulence. The dominant energy source of turbulence is then
the potential energy of the gas in the disk.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, ApJ, in pres
Inferring halo masses with Graph Neural Networks
Understanding the halo-galaxy connection is fundamental in order to improve
our knowledge on the nature and properties of dark matter. In this work we
build a model that infers the mass of a halo given the positions, velocities,
stellar masses, and radii of the galaxies it hosts. In order to capture
information from correlations among galaxy properties and their phase-space, we
use Graph Neural Networks (GNNs), that are designed to work with irregular and
sparse data. We train our models on galaxies from more than 2,000
state-of-the-art simulations from the Cosmology and Astrophysics with MachinE
Learning Simulations (CAMELS) project. Our model, that accounts for
cosmological and astrophysical uncertainties, is able to constrain the masses
of the halos with a 0.2 dex accuracy. Furthermore, a GNN trained on a
suite of simulations is able to preserve part of its accuracy when tested on
simulations run with a different code that utilizes a distinct subgrid physics
model, showing the robustness of our method. The PyTorch Geometric
implementation of the GNN is publicly available on Github at
https://github.com/PabloVD/HaloGraphNetComment: 20 pages, 8 figures, code publicly available at
https://github.com/PabloVD/HaloGraphNe
The SINS survey of z~2 galaxy kinematics: properties of the giant star forming clumps
We have studied the properties of giant star forming clumps in five z~2
star-forming disks with deep SINFONI AO spectroscopy at the ESO VLT. The clumps
reside in disk regions where the Toomre Q-parameter is below unity, consistent
with their being bound and having formed from gravitational instability. Broad
H{\alpha}/[NII] line wings demonstrate that the clumps are launching sites of
powerful outflows. The inferred outflow rates are comparable to or exceed the
star formation rates, in one case by a factor of eight. Typical clumps may lose
a fraction of their original gas by feedback in a few hundred million years,
allowing them to migrate into the center. The most active clumps may lose much
of their mass and disrupt in the disk. The clumps leave a modest imprint on the
gas kinematics. Velocity gradients across the clumps are 10-40 km/s/kpc,
similar to the galactic rotation gradients. Given beam smearing and clump
sizes, these gradients may be consistent with significant rotational support in
typical clumps. Extreme clumps may not be rotationally supported; either they
are not virialized, or they are predominantly pressure supported. The velocity
dispersion is spatially rather constant and increases only weakly with star
formation surface density. The large velocity dispersions may be driven by the
release of gravitational energy, either at the outer disk/accreting streams
interface, and/or by the clump migration within the disk. Spatial variations in
the inferred gas phase oxygen abundance are broadly consistent with inside-out
growing disks, and/or with inward migration of the clumps.Comment: accepted Astrophys. Journal, February 9, 201
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