995 research outputs found
The Role of Stellar Feedback and Dark Matter in the Evolution of Dwarf Galaxies
Supernova and multiple supernova events regulate several structural
properties of dwarf galaxies. In particular, they govern the metal enrichment
and the energy budget of the ISM; they might induce partial (blowout) or total
(blowaway) gas removal from the galaxy; the morphology of the galactic gaseous
body. Significant amounts of dark matter may play an equally important role:
the dark matter gravitational potential tends to concentrate baryons towards
the center, thus enhancing both the star formation rate and metal production.
Also, the dynamical properties of the ISM, and the occurrence of a blowout or
blowaway are shown to be determined by the dark matter content. We present
detailed analytical/numerical models describing the evolution of dwarf
Irregular galaxies including the above and other effects. The main results are:
(i) dwarfs with total masses M\simlt 5\times 10^6 M_\odot are blown away;
those with gas masses up to lose mass in an outflow; (ii)
metallicities are found to correlate tightly with dark matter content and are
consistent with a range of dark-to-visible mass ratios with
about 65% of the dwarfs in the sample having ; (iii) we
predict a lower limit to the oxygen abundance in dIs of ; (iv) outflows are not particularly important for the metallicity
evolution of dwarf galaxies and certainly less than star formation for gas
consumption; however, dwarfs with gas masses few are
shown to be the major pollutants of the IGM; (v) the ISM HI velocity dispersion
correlates with metallicity and, indepentently of dark matter, scales as
. (Abridged)Comment: 56 pages, aasms4.sty, LaTeX, 12 figures. MNRAS, submitte
Correlation between low level fluctuations in the x ray background and faint galaxies
A correlation between low-level x-ray fluctuations in the cosmic x-ray background flux and the large numbers of galaxies found in deep optical imaging, to m(sub v) is less than or equal to 24 - 26, is desired. These (faint) galaxies by their morphology and color in deep multi-color CCD images and plate material were optically identified. Statistically significant correlations between these galaxies and low-level x-ray fluctuations at the same positions in multiple deep Einstein HRI observations in PAVO and in a ROSAT PSPC field were searched for. Our aim is to test the hypothesis that faint 'star burst' galaxies might contribute significantly to the cosmic x-ray background (at approximately 1 keV)
Neutral hydrogen in the starburst galaxy NGC3690/IC694
Researchers made observations of the neutral hydrogen (HI) emission structure surrounding the very deep absorption peak (observed earlier by Dickey (1986)) in the galaxy pair NGC3690/IC694. This galaxy pair is highly luminous in the far infrared, and known to exhibit extensive star formation as well as nuclear activity. Knowledge of the spatial distribution and velocity structure of the HI emission is of great importance to the understanding of the dynamics of the interaction and the resulting environmental effects on the galaxies
The mass content of the Sculptor dwarf spheroidal galaxy
We present a new determination of the mass content of the Sculptor dwarf
spheroidal galaxy, based on a novel approach which takes into account the two
distinct stellar populations present in this galaxy. This method helps to
partially break the well-known mass-anisotropy degeneracy present in the
modelling of pressure-supported stellar systems.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. To appear in the proceedings of IAU Symposium 254
"The Galaxy disk in a cosmological context", Copenhagen, June 200
Stellar Populations in the Phoenix Dwarf (dIrr/dSph) Galaxy as Observed by HST/WFPC2
We present HST/WFPC2 photometry of the central regions of the Phoenix dwarf.
Accurate photometry allows us to: 1) confirm the existence of the horizontal
branch previously detected by ground-based observations, and use it to
determine a distance to Phoenix, 2) clearly detect the existence of multiple
ages in the stellar population of Phoenix, 3) determine a mean metallicity of
the old red giant branch stars in Phoenix, and suggest that Phoenix has evolved
chemically over its lifetime, 4) extract a rough star formation history for the
central regions which suggests that Phoenix has been forming stars roughly
continuously over its entire lifetime.Comment: Accepted by AJ, 22 pages including 6 figures + 1 figure in JPEG
forma
The Effects of Age on Red Giant Metallicities Derived from the Near-Infrared Ca II Triplet
We have obtained spectra with resolution 2.5 Angstroms in the region
7500-9500 Angstroms for 116 red giants in 5 Galactic globular clusters and 6
old open clusters (5 with published metallicities, and one previously
unmeasured). The signal-to-noise ranges from 20 to 85. We measure the
equivalent widths of the infrared Ca II triplet absorption lines in each stars
and compare to cluster metallicities taken from the literature. With globular
cluster abundances on the Carretta & Gratton scale, and open cluster abundances
taken from the compilation of Friel and collaborators, we find a linear
relation between [Fe/H] and Ca II line strength spanning the range -2 < [Fe/H]
< -0.2 and ages from 2.5 - 13 Gyr. No evidence for an age effect on the
metallicity calibration is observed. Using this calibration, we find the
metallicity of the old open cluster Trumpler 5 to be [Fe/H] = -0.56 +/-0.11.
Considering the 10 clusters of known metallicity shifted to a common distance
and reddening, we find that the additional metallicity error introduced by the
variation of horizontal branch/red clump magnitude with metallicity and age is
of order +/-0.05 dex, which can be neglected in comparison to the intrinsic
scatter in our method. The results are discussed in the context of abundance
determinations for red giants in Local Group galaxies.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS; 21 pages in LaTeX MNRAS style, 6 tables, 6 figure
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