114 research outputs found
Whiteness Studies II
Whiteness Studies. Over the past two decades, scholars in the social sciences and humanities have increasingly focused on « whiteness » as a new way of exploring race and racism in America. These two articles evaluate the way historians have approached the subject. The first article, originally published in the Journal of American History in 2002, examines the development of whiteness studies in the 1990s, and the second, which appears here for the first time, provides an update on more recent trends. The articles find considerable potential in whiteness studies, but also point to serious conceptual and methodological problems that deserve attention.Études sur les Blancs. Au cours des deux dernières décennies, les études sur les Blancs se sont multipliées en sciences sociales et humaines et apparaissent comme une nouvelle voie d’accès à la question des races et du racisme aux États-Unis. Les deux textes présentés ici font un bilan de la façon dont les historiens ont traité le sujet. Le premier d’entre eux, publié initialement dans le Journal of American History en 2002, concerne le développement des études sur les Blancs dans les années 1990 ; le second, inédit, est une mise à jour sur les tendances les plus récentes. Tous deux montrent que les études sur les Blancs ont un potentiel analytique important, mais ils attirent également l’attention sur les difficultés conceptuelles et méthodologiques du domaine.Estudios sobre los blancos. Durante los últimos dos decenios, especialistas de ciencias sociales y humanas han concentrado cada vez más su atención sobre los estudios dedicados a los blancos como una nueva vÃa para explorar los temas de las razas y del racismo en los Estados Unidos. Los trabajos aquà presentados hacen un balance de la manera en que los historiadores han tratado ese problema. El primero de ellos, publicado inicialmente en el Journal of American History en 2002, concierne el desarrollo de los estudios sobre los blancos durante los años 1990, mientras que el segundo, inédito, da cuenta de las evoluciones más recientes. Si esos trabajos enseñan el gran potencial de este tipo de estudios, llaman al mismo tiempo la atención sobre algunas dificultades conceptuales y metodológicas que merecen ser tomadas en consideración
Whiteness Studies I
Whiteness Studies. Over the past two decades, scholars in the social sciences and humanities have increasingly focused on « whiteness » as a new way of exploring race and racism in America. These two articles evaluate the way historians have approached the subject. The first article, originally published in the Journal of American History in 2002, examines the development of whiteness studies in the 1990s, and the second, which appears here for the first time, provides an update on more recent trends. The articles find considerable potential in whiteness studies, but also point to serious conceptual and methodological problems that deserve attention.Études sur les Blancs. Au cours des deux dernières décennies, les études sur les Blancs se sont multipliées en sciences sociales et humaines et apparaissent comme une nouvelle voie d’accès à la question des races et du racisme aux États-Unis. Les deux textes présentés ici font un bilan de la façon dont les historiens ont traité le sujet. Le premier d’entre eux, publié initialement dans le Journal of American History en 2002, concerne le développement des études sur les Blancs dans les années 1990 ; le second, inédit, est une mise à jour sur les tendances les plus récentes. Tous deux montrent que les études sur les Blancs ont un potentiel analytique important, mais ils attirent également l’attention sur les difficultés conceptuelles et méthodologiques du domaine.Estudios sobre los blancos. Durante los últimos dos decenios, especialistas de ciencias sociales y humanas han concentrado cada vez más su atención sobre los estudios dedicados a los blancos como una nueva vÃa para explorar los temas de las razas y del racismo en los Estados Unidos. Los trabajos aquà presentados hacen un balance de la manera en que los historiadores han tratado ese problema. El primero de ellos, publicado inicialmente en el Journal of American History en 2002, concierne el desarrollo de los estudios sobre los blancos durante los años 1990, mientras que el segundo, inédito, da cuenta de las evoluciones más recientes. Si esos trabajos enseñan el gran potencial de este tipo de estudios, llaman al mismo tiempo la atención sobre algunas dificultades conceptuales y metodológicas que merecen ser tomadas en consideración
The importance of preventive feedback: inference from observations of the stellar masses and metallicities of Milky Way dwarf galaxies
Dwarf galaxies are known to have remarkably low star formation efficiency due
to strong feedback. Adopting the dwarf galaxies of the Milky Way as a
laboratory, we explore a flexible semi-analytic galaxy formation model to
understand how the feedback processes shape the satellite galaxies of the Milky
Way. Using Markov-Chain Monte-Carlo, we exhaustively search a large parameter
space of the model and rigorously show that the general wisdom of strong
outflows as the primary feedback mechanism cannot simultaneously explain the
stellar mass function and the mass--metallicity relation of the Milky Way
satellites. An extended model that assumes that a fraction of baryons is
prevented from collapsing into low-mass halos in the first place can be
accurately constrained to simultaneously reproduce those observations. The
inference suggests that two different physical mechanisms are needed to explain
the two different data sets. In particular, moderate outflows with weak halo
mass dependence are needed to explain the mass--metallicity relation, and
prevention of baryons falling into shallow gravitational potentials of low-mass
halos (e.g. "pre-heating") is needed to explain the low stellar mass fraction
for a given subhalo mass.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
The connection between the host halo and the satellite galaxies of the Milky Way
Many properties of the Milky Way's dark matter halo, including its mass
assembly history, concentration, and subhalo population, remain poorly
constrained. We explore the connection between these properties of the Milky
Way and its satellite galaxy population, especially the implication of the
presence of the Magellanic Clouds for the properties of the Milky Way halo.
Using a suite of high-resolution -body simulations of Milky Way-mass halos
with a fixed final Mvir ~ 10^{12.1}Msun, we find that the presence of
Magellanic Cloud-like satellites strongly correlates with the assembly history,
concentration, and subhalo population of the host halo, such that Milky
Way-mass systems with Magellanic Clouds have lower concentration, more rapid
recent accretion, and more massive subhalos than typical halos of the same
mass. Using a flexible semi-analytic galaxy formation model that is tuned to
reproduce the stellar mass function of the classical dwarf galaxies of the
Milky Way with Markov-Chain Monte-Carlo, we show that adopting host halos with
different mass-assembly histories and concentrations can lead to different
best-fit models for galaxy-formation physics, especially for the strength of
feedback. These biases arise because the presence of the Magellanic Clouds
boosts the overall population of high-mass subhalos, thus requiring a different
stellar-mass-to-halo-mass ratio to match the data. These biases also lead to
significant differences in the mass--metallicity relation, the kinematics of
low-mass satellites, the number counts of small satellites associated with the
Magellanic Clouds, and the stellar mass of Milky Way itself. Observations of
these galaxy properties can thus provide useful constraints on the properties
of the Milky Way halo.Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ. A new section
on the effect of host halo mass-assembly history on the central galaxy
stellar mass is adde
Mergers and Mass Accretion Rates in Galaxy Assembly: The Millennium Simulation Compared to Observations of z~2 Galaxies
Recent observations of UV-/optically selected, massive star forming galaxies
at z~2 indicate that the baryonic mass assembly and star formation history is
dominated by continuous rapid accretion of gas and internal secular evolution,
rather than by major mergers. We use the Millennium Simulation to build new
halo merger trees, and extract halo merger fractions and mass accretion rates.
We find that even for halos not undergoing major mergers the mass accretion
rates are plausibly sufficient to account for the high star formation rates
observed in z~2 disks. On the other hand, the fraction of major mergers in the
Millennium Simulation is sufficient to account for the number counts of
submillimeter galaxies (SMGs), in support of observational evidence that these
are major mergers. When following the fate of these two populations in the
Millennium Simulation to z=0, we find that subsequent mergers are not frequent
enough to convert all z~2 turbulent disks into elliptical galaxies at z=0.
Similarly, mergers cannot transform the compact SMGs/red sequence galaxies at
z~2 into observed massive cluster ellipticals at z=0. We argue therefore, that
secular and internal evolution must play an important role in the evolution of
a significant fraction of z~2 UV-/optically and submillimeter selected galaxy
populations.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
SubHaloes going Notts: The SubHalo-Finder Comparison Project
We present a detailed comparison of the substructure properties of a single
Milky Way sized dark matter halo from the Aquarius suite at five different
resolutions, as identified by a variety of different (sub-)halo finders for
simulations of cosmic structure formation. These finders span a wide range of
techniques and methodologies to extract and quantify substructures within a
larger non-homogeneous background density (e.g. a host halo). This includes
real-space, phase-space, velocity-space and time- space based finders, as well
as finders employing a Voronoi tessellation, friends-of-friends techniques, or
refined meshes as the starting point for locating substructure.A common
post-processing pipeline was used to uniformly analyse the particle lists
provided by each finder. We extract quantitative and comparable measures for
the subhaloes, primarily focusing on mass and the peak of the rotation curve
for this particular study. We find that all of the finders agree extremely well
on the presence and location of substructure and even for properties relating
to the inner part part of the subhalo (e.g. the maximum value of the rotation
curve). For properties that rely on particles near the outer edge of the
subhalo the agreement is at around the 20 per cent level. We find that basic
properties (mass, maximum circular velocity) of a subhalo can be reliably
recovered if the subhalo contains more than 100 particles although its presence
can be reliably inferred for a lower particle number limit of 20. We finally
note that the logarithmic slope of the subhalo cumulative number count is
remarkably consistent and <1 for all the finders that reached high resolution.
If correct, this would indicate that the larger and more massive, respectively,
substructures are the most dynamically interesting and that higher levels of
the (sub-)subhalo hierarchy become progressively less important.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables, Accepted for MNRA
The ACS LCID project. X. The Star Formation History of IC 1613: Revisiting the Over-Cooling Problem
We present an analysis of the star formation history (SFH) of a field near
the half light radius in the Local Group dwarf irregular galaxy IC 1613 based
on deep Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys imaging. Our
observations reach the oldest main sequence turn-off, allowing a time
resolution at the oldest ages of ~1 Gyr. Our analysis shows that the SFH of the
observed field in IC 1613 is consistent with being constant over the entire
lifetime of the galaxy. These observations rule out an early dominant episode
of star formation in IC 1613. We compare the SFH of IC 1613 with expectations
from cosmological models. Since most of the mass is in place at early times for
low mass halos, a naive expectation is that most of the star formation should
have taken place at early times. Models in which star formation follows mass
accretion result in too many stars formed early and gas mass fractions which
are too low today (the "over-cooling problem"). The depth of the present
photometry of IC 1613 shows that, at a resolution of ~1 Gyr, the star formation
rate is consistent with being constant, at even the earliest times, which is
difficult to achieve in models where star formation follows mass assembly.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in the Ap
M31 satellite masses compared to CDM subhaloes
We have selected the positions of 54 6.7 GHz methanol masers from the Methanol Multibeam Survey catalogue, covering a range of longitudes between 20◦ and 34◦ of the Galactic plane. These positions were mapped in the J = 3−2 transition of both the 13CO and C18O lines. A total of 58 13CO emission peaks are found in the vicinity of these maser positions. We search for outflows around all 13CO peaks, and find evidence for high-velocity gas in all cases, spatially resolving the red and blue outflow lobes in 55 cases. Of these sources, 44 have resolved kinematic distances, and are closely associated with the 6.7 GHz masers, a subset referred to as Methanol Maser Associated Outflows (MMAOs). We calculate the masses of the clumps associated with each peak using 870 µm continuum emission from the ATLASGAL survey. A strong correlation is seen between the clump mass and both outflow mass and mechanical force, lending support to models in which accretion is strongly linked to outflow. We find that the scaling law between outflow activity and clump masses observed for low-mass objects, is also followed by the MMAOs in this study, indicating a commonality in the formation processes of low-mass and high-mass stars
The ISLAndS project II: The Lifetime Star Formation Histories of Six Andromeda dSphs
The Initial Star formation and Lifetimes of Andromeda Satellites (ISLAndS)
project uses Hubble Space Telescope imaging to study a representative sample of
six Andromeda dSph satellite companion galaxies. The main goal of the program
is to determine whether the star formation histories (SFHs) of the Andromeda
dSph satellites demonstrate significant statistical differences from those of
the Milky Way, which may be attributable to the different properties of their
local environments. Our observations reach the oldest main sequence turn-offs,
allowing a time resolution at the oldest ages of ~ 1 Gyr, which is comparable
to the best achievable resolution in the MW satellites. We find that the six
dSphs present a variety of SFHs that are not strictly correlated with
luminosity or present distance from M31. Specifically, we find a significant
range in quenching times (lookback times from 9 to 6 Gyr), but with all
quenching times more than ~ 6 Gyr ago. In agreement with observations of Milky
Way companions of similar mass, there is no evidence of complete quenching of
star formation by the cosmic UV background responsible for reionization, but
the possibility of a degree of quenching at reionization cannot be ruled out.
We do not find significant differences between the SFHs of the three members of
the vast, thin plane of satellites and the three off-plane dSphs. The primary
difference between the SFHs of the ISLAndS dSphs and Milky Way dSph companions
of similar luminosities and host distances is the absence of very late
quenching (< 5 Gyr ago) dSphs in the ISLAndS sample. Thus, models that can
reproduce satellite populations with and without late quenching satellites will
be of extreme interest.Comment: 24 pages, 11 figures, 3 tables, submitted to the Ap
Interaction of Recoiling Supermassive Black Holes with Stars in Galactic Nuclei
Supermassive black hole binaries (SMBHBs) are the products of frequent galaxy
mergers. The coalescence of the SMBHBs is a distinct source of gravitational
wave (GW) radiation. The detections of the strong GW radiation and their
possible electromagnetic counterparts are essential. Numerical relativity
suggests that the post-merger supermassive black hole (SMBH) gets a kick
velocity up to 4000 km/s due to the anisotropic GW radiations. Here we
investigate the dynamical co-evolution and interaction of the recoiling SMBHs
and their galactic stellar environments with one million direct N-body
simulations including the stellar tidal disruption by the recoiling SMBHs. Our
results show that the accretion of disrupted stars does not significantly
affect the SMBH dynamical evolution. We investigate the stellar tidal
disruption rates as a function of the dynamical evolution of oscillating SMBHs
in the galactic nuclei. Our simulations show that most of stellar tidal
disruptions are contributed by the unbound stars and occur when the oscillating
SMBHs pass through the galactic center. The averaged disruption rate is
~10^{-6} M_\odot yr^{-1}, which is about an order of magnitude lower than that
by a stationary SMBH at similar galactic nuclei. Our results also show that a
bound star cluster is around the oscillating SMBH of about ~ 0.7% the black
hole mass. In addition, we discover a massive cloud of unbound stars following
the oscillating SMBH. We also investigate the dependence of the results on the
SMBH masses and density slopes of the galactic nuclei.Comment: 38 pages, 10 figues; accepted for publication in Ap
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