3,351 research outputs found
Dark Matter and IMF normalization in Virgo dwarf early-type galaxies
In this work we analyze the dark matter (DM) fraction, , and
mass-to-light ratio mismatch parameter, (computed with respect
to a Milky-Way-like IMF), for a sample of 39 dwarf early-type galaxies (dEs) in
the Virgo cluster. Both and are estimated within the
central (one effective radius) galaxy regions, with a Jeans dynamical analysis
that relies on galaxy velocity dispersions, structural parameters, and stellar
M/L ratios from the SMAKCED survey. In this first attempt to constrain,
simultaneously, the IMF normalization and the DM content, we explore the impact
of different assumptions on the DM model profile. On average, for a NFW
profile, the is consistent with a Chabrier-like normalization
(), with . One of the main results of
the present work is that for at least a few systems the is
heavier than the MW-like value (i.e. either top- or bottom-heavy). When
introducing tangential anisotropy, larger and smaller
are derived. Adopting a steeper concentration-mass relation than that from
simulations, we find lower () and larger . A
constant M/L profile with null gives the heaviest
(). In the MONDian framework, we find consistent results to those for
our reference NFW model. If confirmed, the large scatter of for
dEs would provide (further) evidence for a non-universal IMF in early-type
systems. On average, our reference estimates are consistent with those
found for low- () early-type
galaxies (ETGs). Furthermore, we find consistent with values from the
SMAKCED survey, and find a double-value behavior of with stellar mass,
which mirrors the trend of dynamical M/L and global star formation efficiency
with mass.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, published on MNRAS. Figure 1 has been
updated with respect to version 1, including the range of values found if the
S\'ersic index, n, is varied from 0.5 to 2 (dark-green curves
Hierarchical bounding structures for efficient virial computations: Towards a realistic molecular description of cholesterics
We detail the application of bounding volume hierarchies to accelerate
second-virial evaluations for arbitrary complex particles interacting through
hard and soft finite-range potentials. This procedure, based on the
construction of neighbour lists through the combined use of recursive
atom-decomposition techniques and binary overlap search schemes, is shown to
scale sub-logarithmically with particle resolution in the case of molecular
systems with high aspect ratios. Its implementation within an efficient
numerical and theoretical framework based on classical density functional
theory enables us to investigate the cholesteric self-assembly of a wide range
of experimentally-relevant particle models. We illustrate the method through
the determination of the cholesteric behaviour of hard, structurally-resolved
twisted cuboids, and report quantitative evidence of the long-predicted phase
handedness inversion with increasing particle thread angles near the
phenomenological threshold value of . Our results further highlight
the complex relationship between microscopic structure and helical twisting
power in such model systems, which may be attributed to subtle geometric
variations of their chiral excluded-volume manifold
Galaxy evolution within the Kilo-Degree Survey
The ESO Public Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS) is an optical wide-field imaging
survey carried out with the VLT Survey Telescope and the OmegaCAM camera. KiDS
will scan 1500 square degrees in four optical filters (u, g, r, i). Designed to
be a weak lensing survey, it is ideal for galaxy evolution studies, thanks to
the high spatial resolution of VST, the good seeing and the photometric depth.
The surface photometry have provided with structural parameters (e.g. size and
S\'ersic index), aperture and total magnitudes have been used to derive
photometric redshifts from Machine learning methods and stellar
masses/luminositites from stellar population synthesis. Our project aimed at
investigating the evolution of the colour and structural properties of galaxies
with mass and environment up to redshift and more, to put
constraints on galaxy evolution processes, as galaxy mergers.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear on the refereed Proceeding of the "The
Universe of Digital Sky Surveys" conference held at the INAF--OAC, Naples, on
25th-28th november 2014, to be published on Astrophysics and Space Science
Proceedings, edited by Longo, Napolitano, Marconi, Paolillo, Iodic
Colour gradients of high-redshift Early-Type Galaxies from hydrodynamical monolithic models
We analyze the evolution of colour gradients predicted by the hydrodynamical
models of early type galaxies (ETGs) in Pipino et al. (2008), which reproduce
fairly well the chemical abundance pattern and the metallicity gradients of
local ETGs. We convert the star formation (SF) and metal content into colours
by means of stellar population synthetic model and investigate the role of
different physical ingredients, as the initial gas distribution and content,
and eps_SF, i.e. the normalization of SF rate. From the comparison with high
redshift data, a full agreement with optical rest-frame observations at z < 1
is found, for models with low eps_SF, whereas some discrepancies emerge at 1 <
z < 2, despite our models reproduce quite well the data scatter at these
redshifts. To reconcile the prediction of these high eps_SF systems with the
shallower colour gradients observed at lower z we suggest intervention of 1-2
dry mergers. We suggest that future studies should explore the impact of wet
galaxy mergings, interactions with environment, dust content and a variation of
the Initial Mass Function from the galactic centers to the peripheries.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication on MNRA
Systematic variation of central mass density slope in early-type galaxies
We study the total density distribution in the central regions (
effective radius, ) of early-type galaxies (ETGs), using data from
the SPIDER survey. We model each galaxy with two components (dark matter halo +
stars), exploring different assumptions for the dark matter (DM) halo profile,
and leaving stellar mass-to-light () ratios as free fitting
parameters to the data. For a Navarro et al. (1996) profile, the slope of the
total mass profile is non-universal. For the most massive and largest ETGs, the
profile is isothermal in the central regions (), while for
the low-mass and smallest systems, the profile is steeper than isothermal, with
slopes similar to those for a constant-M/L profile. For a concentration-mass
relation steeper than that expected from simulations, the correlation of
density slope with mass tends to flatten. Our results clearly point to a
"non-homology" in the total mass distribution of ETGs, which simulations of
galaxy formation suggest may be related to a varying role of dissipation with
galaxy mass.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, to appear on the refereed Proceeding of the "The
Universe of Digital Sky Surveys" conference held at the INAF--OAC, Naples, on
25th-28th november 2014, to be published on Astrophysics and Space Science
Proceedings, edited by Longo, Napolitano, Marconi, Paolillo, Iodic
Unsupervised Learning via Mixtures of Skewed Distributions with Hypercube Contours
Mixture models whose components have skewed hypercube contours are developed
via a generalization of the multivariate shifted asymmetric Laplace density.
Specifically, we develop mixtures of multiple scaled shifted asymmetric Laplace
distributions. The component densities have two unique features: they include a
multivariate weight function, and the marginal distributions are also
asymmetric Laplace. We use these mixtures of multiple scaled shifted asymmetric
Laplace distributions for clustering applications, but they could equally well
be used in the supervised or semi-supervised paradigms. The
expectation-maximization algorithm is used for parameter estimation and the
Bayesian information criterion is used for model selection. Simulated and real
data sets are used to illustrate the approach and, in some cases, to visualize
the skewed hypercube structure of the components
Testing Verlinde's emergent gravity in early-type galaxies
Verlinde derived gravity as an emergent force from the information flow,
through two-dimensional surfaces and recently, by a priori postulating the
entanglement of information in 3D space, he derived the effect of the
gravitational potential from dark matter (DM) as the entropy displacement of
dark energy by baryonic matter. In Emergent Gravity (EG) this apparent DM
depends only on the baryonic mass distribution and the present-day value of the
Hubble parameter. In this paper we test the EG proposition, formalized by
Verlinde for a spherical and isolated mass distribution, using the central
velocity dispersion, and the light distribution in a sample of 4260
massive and local early-type galaxies (ETGs) from the SPIDER sample. Our
results remain unaltered if we consider the sample of 807 roundest field
galaxies. We derive the predictions by EG for the stellar mass-to-light ratio
(M/L) and the Initial Mass Function (IMF), and compare them with the same
inferences derived from a) DM-based models, b) MOND and c) stellar population
models. We demonstrate that, consistently with a classical Newtonian framework
with a DM halo component, or alternative theories of gravity as MOND, the
central dynamics can be fitted if the IMF is assumed non-universal. The results
can be interpreted with a IMF lighter than a standard Chabrier at low-,
and bottom-heavier IMFs at larger . We find lower, but still
acceptable, stellar M/L in EG theory, if compared with the DM-based NFW model
and with MOND. The results from EG are comparable to what is found if the DM
haloes are adiabatically contracted and with expectations from spectral
gravity-sensitive features. If the strain caused by the entropy displacement
would be not maximal, as adopted in the current formulation, then the dynamics
of ETGs could be reproduced with larger M/L. (abridged)Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, submitted to MNRAS. The updated manuscript
presents significantly altered conclusions, after discovering an internal bug
in an older version of the Mathematica package, leading to incorrect
numerical results when calculating the derivatives of Gamma function
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