2,703 research outputs found
Exploring the links between star formation and minor companions around isolated galaxies
Previous studies have shown that galaxies with minor companions exhibit an
elevated star formation rate. We reverse this inquiry, constructing a
volume-limited sample of \simL\star (Mr \leq -19.5 + 5 log h) galaxies from the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey that are isolated with respect to other luminous
galaxies. Cosmological simulations suggest that 99.8% of these galaxies are
alone in their dark matter haloes with respect to other luminous galaxies. We
search the area around these galaxies for photometric companions. Matching
strongly star forming (EW(H{\alpha})\geq 35 \AA) and quiescent (EW(H{\alpha})<
35 \AA) samples for stellar mass and redshift using a Monte Carlo resampling
technique, we demonstrate that rapidly star-forming galaxies are more likely to
have photometric companions than other galaxies. The effect is relatively
small; about 11% of quiescent, isolated galaxies have minor photometric
companions at radii \leq 60 kpc h kpc while about 16% of strongly
star-forming ones do. Though small, the cumulative difference in satellite
counts between strongly star-forming and quiescent galaxies is highly
statistically significant (PKS = 1.350 \times10) out to to radii of \sim
100 h kpc. We discuss explanations for this excess, including the
possibility that \sim 5% of strongly star-forming galaxies have star formation
that is causally related to the presence of a minor companion.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, submitted to MNRA
Recommended from our members
Van der Walls interaction affects wrinkle formation in two-dimensional materials
Nonlinear mechanics of solids is an exciting field that encompasses both beautiful mathematics, such as the emergence of instabilities and the formation of complex patterns, as well as multiple applications. Two-dimensional crystals and van der Waals (vdW) heterostructures allow revisiting this field on the atomic level, allowing much finer control over the parameters and offering atomistic interpretation of experimental observations. In this work, we consider the formation of instabilities consisting of radially oriented wrinkles around mono- and few-layer âbubblesâ in two-dimensional vdW heterostructures. Interestingly, the shape and wavelength of the wrinkles depend not only on the thickness of the two-dimensional crystal forming the bubble, but also on the atomistic structure of the interface between the bubble and the substrate, which can be controlled by their relative orientation. We argue that the periodic nature of these patterns emanates from an energetic balance between the resistance of the top membrane to bending, which favors large wavelength of wrinkles, and the membrane-substrate vdW attraction, which favors small wrinkle amplitude. Employing the classical âWinkler foundationâ model of elasticity theory, we show that the number of radial wrinkles conveys a valuable relationship between the bending rigidity of the top membrane and the strength of the vdW interaction. Armed with this relationship, we use our data to demonstrate a nontrivial dependence of the bending rigidity on the number of layers in the top membrane, which shows two different regimes driven by slippage between the layers, and a high sensitivity of the vdW force to the alignment between the substrate and the membrane
Further education sector governors as ethnographers: five case studies
This paper considers how governors in the English Further Education and Skills (FE) sector examined their practice as ethnographers. The paper locates both FE governance and ethnography within the challenges of the performative and Panoptic environments facing English education. In doing so, the paper explores how the informantsâ mobilisation of ethnographic methods revealed a novel lens on both governance and the role of ethnographer. Employing Grounded Theory, the paper considers how the participants negotiated philosophical questions regarding evidence, objectivity and truth. The paper suggests that despite the deep-seated complexities inherent in conducting ethnography in performative contexts, the participants generated data which painted a unique and revealing picture upon their practice as governor and researcher
Small-Scale Structure in the SDSS and LCDM: Isolated L* Galaxies with Bright Satellites
We use a volume-limited spectroscopic sample of isolated galaxies in the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to investigate the frequency and radial
distribution of luminous (M_r <~ -18.3) satellites like the Large Magellanic
Cloud (LMC) around ~L* Milky Way analogs and compare our results
object-by-object to LCDM predictions based on abundance matching in
simulations. We show that 12% of Milky Way-like galaxies host an LMC-like
satellite within 75 kpc (projected), and 42 % within 250 kpc (projected). This
implies ~10% have a satellite within the distance of the LMC, and ~40% of L*
galaxies host a bright satellite within the virialized extent of their dark
matter halos. Remarkably, the simulation reproduces the observed frequency,
radial dependence, velocity distribution, and luminosity function of observed
secondaries exceptionally well, suggesting that LCDM provides an accurate
reproduction of the observed Universe to galaxies as faint as L~10^9 Lsun on
~50 kpc scales. When stacked, the observed projected pairwise velocity
dispersion of these satellites is sigma~160 km/s, in agreement with
abundance-matching expectations for their host halo masses. Finally, bright
satellites around L* primaries are significantly redder than typical galaxies
in their luminosity range, indicating that environmental quenching is operating
within galaxy-size dark matter halos that typically contain only a single
bright satellite. This redness trend is in stark contrast to the Milky Way's
LMC, which is unusually blue even for a field galaxy. We suggest that the LMC's
discrepant color might be further evidence that it is undergoing a triggered
star-formation event upon first infall.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures; accepted to Ap
- âŠ