109 research outputs found
Dark influences II. Gas and star formation in minor mergers of dwarf galaxies with dark satellites
Context. It has been proposed that mergers induce starbursts and lead to important morphological changes in galaxies. Most studies so far have focused on large galaxies, but dwarfs might also experience such events, since the halo mass function is scale-free in the concordance cosmological model. Notably, because of their low mass, most of their interactions will be with dark satellites.
Aims. In this paper we follow the evolution of gas-rich disky dwarf galaxies as they experience a minor merger with a dark satellite. We aim to characterize the effects of such an interaction on the dwarfâs star formation, morphology, and kinematical properties.
Methods. We performed a suite of carefully set-up hydrodynamical simulations of dwarf galaxies that include dark matter, gas, and stars merging with a satellite consisting solely of dark matter. For the host system we vary the gas fraction, disk size and thickness, halo mass, and concentration, while we explore different masses, concentrations, and orbits for the satellite.
Results. We find that the interactions cause strong starbursts of both short and long duration in the dwarfs. Their star formation rates increase by factors of a few to 10 or more. They are strongest for systems with extended gas disks and high gas fractions merging with a high-concentration satellite on a planar, radial orbit. In contrast to analogous simulations of Milky Way-mass galaxies, many of the systems experience strong morphological changes and become spheroidal even in the presence of significant amounts of gas.
Conclusions. The simulated systems compare remarkably well with the observational properties of a large selection of irregular dwarf galaxies and blue compact dwarfs. This implies that mergers with dark satellites might well be happening but not be fully evident, and may thus play a role in the diversity of the dwarf galaxy population
Vampirovibrio chlorellavorus draft genome sequence, annotation, and preliminary characterization of pathogenicity determinants
Vampirovibrio chlorellavorus is recognized as a pathogen of commercially-relevant Chlorella species. Algal infection and total loss of productivity (biomass) often occurs when susceptible algal hosts are cultivated in outdoor open pond systems. The pathogenic life cycle of this bacterium has been inferred from laboratory and field observations, and corroborated in part by the genomic analyses for two Arizona isolates recovered from an open algal reactor. V. chlorellavorus predation has been reported to occur in geographically- and environmentally-diverse conditions. Genomic analyses of these and additional field isolates is expected to reveal new information about the extent of ecological diversity and genes involved in host-pathogen interactions. The draft genome sequences for two isolates of the predatory V. chlorellavorus (Cyanobacteria; Ca. Melainabacteria) from an outdoor cultivation system located in the Arizona Sonoran Desert were assembled and annotated. The genomes were sequenced and analyzed to identify genes (proteins) with predicted involvement in predation, infection, and cell death of Chlorella host species prioritized for biofuel production at sites identified as highly suitable for algal production in the southwestern USA. Genomic analyses identified several predicted genes encoding secreted proteins that are potentially involved in pathogenicity, and at least three apparently complete sets of virulence (Vir) genes, characteristic of the VirB-VirD type system encoding the canonical VirB1-11 and VirD4 proteins, respectively. Additional protein functions were predicted suggesting their involvement in quorum sensing and motility. The genomes of two previously uncharacterized V. chlorellavorus isolates reveal nucleotide and protein level divergence between each other, and a previously sequenced V. chlorellavorus genome. This new knowledge will enhance the fundamental understanding of trans-kingdom interactions between a unique cosmopolitan cyanobacterial pathogen and its green microalgal host, of broad interest as a source of harvestable biomass for biofuels or bioproducts.Bioenergy Technology Office within the US Department of Energy Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy [NL0029949 (WBS 1.3.1.600)]; US Department of Energy [DE-EE0006269]Open access articleThis item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at [email protected]
An artificial neural network to discover hypervelocity stars: candidates in Gaia DR1/TGAS
The paucity of hypervelocity stars (HVSs) known to date has severely hampered
their potential to investigate the stellar population of the Galactic Centre
and the Galactic Potential. The first Gaia data release gives an opportunity to
increase the current sample. The challenge is the disparity between the
expected number of hypervelocity stars and that of bound background stars. We
have applied a novel data mining algorithm based on machine learning
techniques, an artificial neural network, to the Tycho-Gaia astrometric
solution (TGAS) catalogue. With no pre-selection of data, we could exclude
immediately of the stars in the catalogue and find 80 candidates
with more than predicted probability to be HVSs, based only on their
position, proper motions, and parallax. We have cross-checked our findings with
other spectroscopic surveys, determining radial velocities for 30 and
spectroscopic distances for 5 candidates. In addition, follow-up observations
have been carried out at the Isaac Newton Telescope for 22 stars, for which we
obtained radial velocities and distance estimates. We discover 14 stars with a
total velocity in the Galactic rest frame > 400 km/s, and 5 of these have a
probability of being unbound from the Milky Way. Tracing back their
orbits in different Galactic potential models we find one possible unbound HVS
with velocity 520 km/s, 5 bound HVSs, and, notably, 5 runaway stars with
median velocity between 400 and 780 km/s. At the moment, uncertainties in the
distance estimates and ages are too large to confirm the nature of our
candidates by narrowing down their ejection location, and we wait for future
Gaia releases to validate the quality of our sample. This test successfully
demonstrates the feasibility of our new data mining routine.Comment: Published in MNRAS, 17 pages, 10 figure
VLT/FLAMES spectroscopy of red giant branch stars in the Fornax dwarf spheroidal galaxy
Fornax is one of the most massive dwarf spheroidal galaxies in the Local
Group. The Fornax field star population is dominated by intermediate age stars
but star formation was going on over almost its entire history. It has been
proposed that Fornax experienced a minor merger event. Despite recent progress,
only the high metallicity end of Fornax field stars ([Fe/H]>-1.2 dex) has been
sampled in larger number via high resolution spectroscopy. We want to better
understand the full chemical evolution of this galaxy by better sampling the
whole metallicity range, including more metal poor stars. We use the VLT-FLAMES
multi-fibre spectrograph in high-resolution mode to determine the abundances of
several alpha, iron-peak and neutron-capture elements in a sample of 47
individual Red Giant Branch stars in the Fornax dwarf spheroidal galaxy. We
combine these abundances with accurate age estimates derived from the age
probability distribution from the colour-magnitude diagram of Fornax. Similar
to other dwarf spheroidal galaxies, the old, metal-poor stars of Fornax are
typically alpha-rich while the young metal-rich stars are alpha-poor. In the
classical scenario of the time delay between SNe II and SNe Ia, we confirm that
SNe Ia started to contribute to the chemical enrichment at [Fe/H] between -2.0
and -1.8 dex. We find that the onset of SNe Ia took place between 12-10 Gyrs
ago. The high values of [Ba/Fe], [La/Fe] reflect the influence of SNe Ia and
AGB stars in the abundance pattern of the younger stellar population of Fornax.
Our findings of low [alpha/Fe] and enhanced [Eu/Mg] are compatible with an
initial mass function that lacks the most massive stars and with star formation
that kept going on throughout the whole history of Fornax. We find that massive
stars kept enriching the interstellar medium in alpha-elements, although they
were not the main contributor to the iron enrichment.Comment: Resubmitted to A&A (18/09/2014) after Referee's comment
The star formation and chemical evolution history of the sculptor dwarf spheroidal galaxy
We have combined deep photometry in the B,V and I bands from CTIO/MOSAIC of
the Sculptor dwarf spheroidal galaxy, going down to the oldest Main Sequence
Turn-Offs, with spectroscopic metallicity distributions of Red Giant Branch
stars. This allows us to obtain the most detailed and complete Star Formation
History to date, as well as an accurate timescale for chemical enrichment. The
Star Formation History shows that Sculptor is dominated by old (10 Gyr),
metal-poor stars, but that younger, more metal-rich populations are also
present. Using Star Formation Histories determined at different radii from the
centre we show that Sculptor formed stars with an increasing central
concentration with time. The old, metal-poor populations are present at all
radii, while more metal-rich, younger stars are more centrally concentrated. We
find that within an elliptical radius of 1 degree, or 1.5 kpc from the centre,
a total mass in stars of 7.8 M was formed, between 14
and 7 Gyr ago, with a peak at 1314 Gyr ago. We use the detailed Star
Formation History to determine age estimates for individual Red Giant Branch
stars with high resolution spectroscopic abundances. Thus, for the first time,
we can directly determine detailed timescales for the evolution of individual
chemical elements. We find that the trends in alpha-elements match what is
expected from an extended, relatively uninterrupted period of star formation
continuing for 67 Gyr. The knee in the alpha-element distribution occurs at
an age of 10.91Gyr, suggesting that SNe Ia enrichment began
1Gyr after the start of star formation in Sculptor.Comment: 23 pages, 23 figure
The NIR Ca II triplet at low metallicity:Searching for extremely low-metallicity stars in classical dwarf galaxies
The NIR Ca II triplet absorption lines have proven to be an important tool for quantitative spectroscopy of individual red giant branch stars in the Local Group, providing a better understanding of metallicities of stars in the Milky Way and dwarf galaxies and thereby an opportunity to constrain their chemical evolution processes. An interesting puzzle in this field is the significant lack of extremely metal-poor stars, below [Fe/H] = -3, found in classical dwarf galaxies around the Milky Way using this technique. The question arises whether these stars are really absent, or if the empirical Ca II triplet method used to study these systems is biased in the low-metallicity regime. Here we present results of synthetic spectral analysis of the Ca II triplet, that is focused on a better understanding of spectroscopic measurements of low-metallicity giant stars. Our results start to deviate strongly from the widely-used and linear empirical calibrations at [Fe/H] <-2. We provide a new calibration for Ca II triplet studies which is valid for -0.5 >= [Fe/H] >= -4. We subsequently apply this new calibration to current data sets and suggest that the classical dwarf galaxies are not so devoid of extremely low-metallicity stars as was previously thought.</p
Extremely metal-poor stars in classical dwarf spheroidal galaxies: Fornax, Sculptor and Sextans
We present the results of a dedicated search for extremely metal-poor stars
in the Fornax, Sculptor and Sextans dSphs. Five stars were selected from two
earlier VLT/Giraffe and HET/HRS surveys and subsequently followed up at high
spectroscopic resolution with VLT/UVES. All of them turned out to have [Fe/H]
<= -3 and three stars are below [Fe/H] -3.5. This constitutes the first
evidence that the classical dSphs Fornax and Sextans join Sculptor in
containing extremely metal-poor stars and suggests that all of the classical
dSphs contain extremely metal-poor stars. One giant in Sculptor at [Fe/H]=-3.96
+- 0.10 is the most metal-poor star ever observed in an external galaxy. We
carried out a detailed analysis of the chemical abundances of the alpha, iron
peak, and the heavy elements, and we performed a comparison with the Milky Way
halo and the ultra faint dwarf stellar populations. Carbon, barium and
strontium show distinct features characterized by the early stages of galaxy
formation and can constrain the origin of their nucleosynthesis.Comment: In A&A. This version corrects a few typographical errors in the
coordinates of some of our stars (Table 1
Hot-mode accretion and the physics of thin-disc galaxy formation
We use FIRE simulations to study disc formation in z ⌠0, Milky Way-mass galaxies, and conclude that a key ingredient for the formation of thin stellar discs is the ability for accreting gas to develop an aligned angular momentum distribution via internal cancellation prior to joining the galaxy. Among galaxies with a high fraction (â >70 per centâ ) of their young stars in a thin disc (h/R ⌠0.1), we find that: (i) hot, virial-temperature gas dominates the inflowing gas mass on halo scales (âł20 kpc), with radiative losses offset by compression heating; (ii) this hot accretion proceeds until angular momentum support slows inward motion, at which point the gas cools to âČ104Kâ ; (iii) prior to cooling, the accreting gas develops an angular momentum distribution that is aligned with the galaxy disc, and while cooling transitions from a quasi-spherical spatial configuration to a more-flattened, disc-like configuration. We show that the existence of this ârotating cooling flowâ accretion mode is strongly correlated with the fraction of stars forming in a thin disc, using a sample of 17 z ⌠0 galaxies spanning a halo mass range of 1010.5 Mâ âČ Mh âČ 1012 Mâ and stellar mass range of 108 Mâ âČ Mâ âČ 1011 Mâ. Notably, galaxies with a thick disc or irregular morphology do not undergo significant angular momentum alignment of gas prior to accretion and show no correspondence between halo gas cooling and flattening. Our results suggest that rotating cooling flows (or, more generally, rotating subsonic flows) that become coherent and angular momentum-supported prior to accretion on to the galaxy are likely a necessary condition for the formation of thin, star-forming disc galaxies in a ÎCDM universe
VLT/FLAMES spectroscopy of Red Giant Branch stars in the Carina dwarf spheroidal galaxy
The ages of individual Red Giant Branch stars (RGB) can range from 1 Gyr old
to the age of the Universe, and it is believed that the abundances of most
chemical elements in their photospheres remain unchanged with time (those that
are not affected by the 1st dredge-up). This means that they trace the ISM in
the galaxy at the time the star formed, and hence the chemical enrichment
history of the galaxy. CMD analysis has shown the Carina dwarf spheroidal
(dSph) to have had an unusually episodic star formation history (SFH) which is
expected to be reflected in the abundances of different chemical elements. We
use the VLT-FLAMES spectrograph in HR mode (R~20000) to measure the abundances
of several chemical elements in a sample of 35 RGB stars in Carina. We also
combine these abundances with photometry to derive age estimates for these
stars. This allows us to determine which of two distinct star formation (SF)
episodes the stars in our sample belong to, and thus to define the relationship
between SF and chemical enrichment during these two episodes. As is expected
from the SFH, Carina contains two distinct populations of RGB stars: one old
(>10 Gyr), which we have found to be metal-poor ([Fe/H]<-1.5), and alpha-rich
([Mg/Fe]>0.0); the other intermediate age (~2-6 Gyr), which we have found to
have a metallicity range (-1.8<[Fe/H]<-1.2) with a large spread in [alpha/Fe]
abundance, going from extremely low values ([Mg/Fe]<-0.3) to the same mean
values as the older population (~0.3). We show that the chemical
enrichment history of the Carina dSph was different for each SF episode. The
earliest was short (~2-3 Gyr) and resulted in the rapid chemical enrichment of
the whole galaxy to [Fe/H] ~ -1.5 with both SNe II and SNe Ia contributions.
The subsequent episode occured after a gap of ~3-4 Gyr and appears to have
resulted in relatively little evolution in either [Fe/H] or [alpha/Fe].Comment: Accepted in A&
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