1,437 research outputs found
Evidence for Widespread AGN Activity among Massive Quiescent Galaxies at z ~ 2
We quantify the presence of Active Galactic nuclei (AGN) in a mass-complete
(M_* >5e10 M_sun) sample of 123 star-forming and quiescent galaxies at 1.5 < z
< 2.5, using X-ray data from the 4 Ms Chandra Deep Field-South (CDF-S) survey.
41+/-7% of the galaxies are detected directly in X-rays, 22+/-5% with
rest-frame 0.5-8 keV luminosities consistent with hosting luminous AGN
(L_0.5-8keV > 3e42 ergs/s). The latter fraction is similar for star-forming and
quiescent galaxies, and does not depend on galaxy stellar mass, suggesting that
perhaps luminous AGN are triggered by external effects such as mergers. We
detect significant mean X-ray signals in stacked images for both the
individually non-detected star-forming and quiescent galaxies, with spectra
consistent with star formation only and/or a low luminosity AGN in both cases.
Comparing star formation rates inferred from the 2-10 keV luminosities to those
from rest-frame IR+UV emission, we find evidence for an X-ray excess indicative
of low-luminosity AGN. Among the quiescent galaxies, the excess suggests that
as many as 70-100% of these contain low- or high-luminosity AGN, while the
corresponding fraction is lower among star-forming galaxies (43-65%). The
ubiquitous presence of AGN in massive, quiescent z ~ 2 galaxies that we find
provides observational support for the importance of AGN in impeding star
formation during galaxy evolution.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, 3 tables; Accepted for publication in ApJ. Minor
editing changes and a few references added. Matches published versio
SImulator of GAlaxy Millimetre/submillimetre Emission (SIGAME): CO emission from massive z=2 main-sequence galaxies
We present SIGAME (SImulator of GAlaxy Millimetre/submillimetre Emission), a
new numerical code designed to simulate the 12CO rotational line emission
spectrum of galaxies. Using sub-grid physics recipes to post-process the
outputs of smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) simulations, a molecular gas
phase is condensed out of the hot and partly ionized SPH gas. The gas is
subjected to far-UV radiation fields and cosmic ray ionization rates which are
set to scale with the local star formation rate volume density. Level
populations and radiative transport of the CO lines are solved with the 3-D
radiative transfer code LIME. We have applied SIGAME to cosmological SPH
simulations of three disc galaxies at z=2 with stellar masses in the range
~(0.5-2)x10^11 Msun and star formation rates ~40-140 Msun/yr. Global CO
luminosities and line ratios are in agreement with observations of disc
galaxies at z~2 up to and including J=3-2 but falling short of the few existing
J=5-4 observations. The central 5 kpc regions of our galaxies have CO 3-2/1-0
and 7-6/1-0 brightness temperature ratios of ~0.55-0.65 and ~0.02-0.08,
respectively, while further out in the disc the ratios drop to more quiescent
values of ~0.5 and <0.01. Global CO-to-H2 conversion (alpha_CO) factors are
~=1.5 Msun*pc^2/(K km s/1), i.e. ~2-3 times below typically adopted values for
disc galaxies, and alpha_CO increases with radius, in agreement with
observations of nearby galaxies. Adopting a top-heavy Giant Molecular Cloud
(GMC) mass spectrum does not significantly change the results. Steepening the
GMC density profile leads to higher global line ratios for J_up>=3 and CO-to-H2
conversion factors [~=3.6 Msun*pc^2/(K km/s)].Comment: 28 pages, 20 figures. Accepted for Publication in MNRAS. Substantial
revisions from the previous version, including tests with model galaxies
similar to the Milky Way. Improved figures and added table
From a port for traders to a town of merchants: exploring the topography, activities and dynamics of early medieval Copenhagen
Copenhagen’s earliest history has long been shrouded in uncertainties. This is mainly due to insufficient source material. Basic questions – how old is the town, how did it originate, and where was the oldest settlement situated? – are still under discussion, as are questions regarding specific features of the early medieval town. Was Absalon’s twelfth-century castle preceded by an earlier one? What does a centrally placed, early medieval horseshoe-shaped enclosure surrounded by a massive ditch represent? Using archaeological results from recent major excavations, combined with Bayesian modelling of new 14C dates from the two early cemeteries of Sankt Clemens and Rådhuspladsen, older archaeological information and the medieval written sources on Copenhagen are revisited to form a new interpretation of the early development of the town. Three phases of topographical development from the eleventh to the early thirteenth century are recognised. The changes tell of a dynamic first two hundred years of the town’s history and of its changing role in Danish society. The article explores the people, activities and networks that lie behind the outstanding development from the small early settlement of the eleventh century to the flourishing merchant town of the thirteenth century
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