249 research outputs found
Determination of the dynamical structure of galaxies using optical spectra
Galaxy spectra are a rich source of kinematical information since the shapes
of the absorption lines reflect the movement of stars along the line-of-sight.
We present a technique to directly build a dynamical model for a galaxy by
fitting model spectra, calculated from a dynamical model, to the observed
galaxy spectra. Using synthetic spectra from a known galaxy model we
demonstrate that this technique indeed recovers the essential dynamical
characteristics of the galaxy model. Moreover, the method allows a
statistically meaningful error analysis on the resulting dynamical quantities.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures, Latexfile, MNRAS, in pres
Simulations of the formation and evolution of isolated dwarf galaxies
We present new fully self-consistent models of the formation and evolution of
isolated dwarf galaxies. We have used the publicly available N-body/SPH code
HYDRA, to which we have added a set of star formation criteria, and
prescriptions for chemical enrichment (taking into account contributions from
both SNIa and SNII), supernova feedback, and gas cooling. The models follow the
evolution of an initially homogeneous gas cloud collapsing in a pre-existing
dark-matter halo. These simplified initial conditions are supported by the
merger trees of isolated dwarf galaxies extracted from the milli-Millennium
Simulation.
The star-formation histories of the model galaxies exhibit burst-like
behaviour. These bursts are a consequence of the blow-out and subsequent
in-fall of gas. The amount of gas that leaves the galaxy for good is found to
be small, in absolute numbers, ranging between 3x10^7 Msol and 6x10^7 Msol .
For the least massive models, however, this is over 80 per cent of their
initial gas mass. The local fluctuations in gas density are strong enough to
trigger star-bursts in the massive models, or to inhibit anything more than
small residual star formation for the less massive models. Between these
star-bursts there can be time intervals of several Gyrs.
We have compared model predictions with available data for the relations
between luminosity and surface brightness profile, half-light radius, central
velocity dispersion, broad band colour (B-V) and metallicity, as well as the
location relative to the fundamental plane. The properties of the model dwarf
galaxies agree quite well with those of observed dwarf galaxies.Comment: 16 pages, 20 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
A genetic algorithm for the non-parametric inversion of strong lensing systems
We present a non-parametric technique to infer the projected-mass
distribution of a gravitational lens system with multiple strong-lensed images.
The technique involves a dynamic grid in the lens plane on which the mass
distribution of the lens is approximated by a sum of basis functions, one per
grid cell. We used the projected mass densities of Plummer spheres as basis
functions. A genetic algorithm then determines the mass distribution of the
lens by forcing images of a single source, projected back onto the source
plane, to coincide as well as possible. Averaging several tens of solutions
removes the random fluctuations that are introduced by the reproduction process
of genomes in the genetic algorithm and highlights those features common to all
solutions. Given the positions of the images and the redshifts of the sources
and the lens, we show that the mass of a gravitational lens can be retrieved
with an accuracy of a few percent and that, if the sources sufficiently cover
the caustics, the mass distribution of the gravitational lens can also be
reliably retrieved. A major advantage of the algorithm is that it makes full
use of the information contained in the radial images, unlike methods that
minimise the residuals of the lens equation, and is thus able to accurately
reconstruct also the inner parts of the lens.Comment: 11 pages, accepted for publication by MNRA
Realistic error estimates on kinematic parameters
Current error estimates on kinematic parameters are based on the assumption
that the data points in the spectra follow a Poisson distribution. For
realistic data that have undergone several steps in a reduction process, this
is generally not the case. Neither is the noise distribution independent in
adjacent pixels. Hence, the error estimates on the derived kinematic parameters
will (in most cases) be smaller than the real errors. In this paper we propose
a method that makes a diagnosis of the characteristics of the observed noise
The method also offers the possibility to calculate more realistic error
estimates on kinematic parameters. The method was tested on spectroscopic
observations of NGC3258. In this particular case, the realistic errors are
almost a factor of 2 larger than the errors based on least squares statistics.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication by MNRA
The degeneracy between star-formation parameters in dwarf galaxy simulations and the Mstar-Mhalo relation
We present results based on a set of N-Body/SPH simulations of isolated dwarf
galaxies. The simulations take into account star formation, stellar feedback,
radiative cooling and metal enrichment. The dark matter halo initially has a
cusped profile, but, at least in these simulations, starting from idealised,
spherically symmetric initial conditions, a natural conversion to a core is
observed due to gas dynamics and stellar feedback.
A degeneracy between the efficiency with which the interstellar medium
absorbs energy feedback from supernovae and stellar winds on the one hand, and
the density threshold for star formation on the other, is found. We performed a
parameter survey to determine, with the aid of the observed kinematic and
photometric scaling relations, which combinations of these two parameters
produce simulated galaxies that are in agreement with the observations.
With the implemented physics we are unable to reproduce the relation between
the stellar mass and the halo mass as determined by Guo et al. (2010), however
we do reproduce the slope of this relation.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS | 12 pages, 8 figure
Modelling galactic spectra: I - A dynamical model for NGC3258
In this paper we present a method to analyse absorption line spectra of a
galaxy designed to determine the stellar dynamics and the stellar populations
by a direct fit to the spectra. This paper is the first one to report on the
application of the method to data. The modelling results in the knowledge of
distribution functions that are sums of basis functions. The practical
implementation of the method is discussed and a new type of basis functions is
introduced.
With this method, a dynamical model for NGC 3258 is constructed. This galaxy
can be successfully modelled with a potential containing 30% dark matter within
1r_e with a mass of 1.6x10^11 M_o. The total mass within 2r_e is estimated as
5x10^11 M_o, containing 63% dark matter. The model is isotropic in the centre,
is radially anisotropic between 0.2 and 2 kpc (0.88 r_e) and becomes
tangentially anisotropic further on. The photometry reveals the presence of a
dust disk near the centre
Wetenschap, op waarde geschat
Oratie uitgesproken door Prof.dr. Sarah de Rijcke bij de aanvaarding van het ambt van hoogleraar in de Wetenschap, Technologie, en Innovatie Studies aan de Universiteit Leiden op vrijdag 17 mei 2019Merit, Expertise and Measuremen
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