454 research outputs found
The Hubble Deep Field and the Disappearing Dwarf Galaxies
Several independent lines of reasoning suggest that many of the very faint (B
> 24) blue galaxies are low-mass objects that experienced a short epoch of star
formation at redshifts 0.5 < z < 1 and have since faded into low luminosity,
low surface brightness objects. Such a scenario, which arises naturally if star
formation in dwarf galaxies is delayed by photoionisation due to the
metagalactic UV radiation field, provides an attractive way to reconcile the
Einstein-de Sitter cosmological model to the steeply rising galaxy counts
observed at blue wavelengths. The Hubble Deep Field (HDF) images provide a
stringent test of this model. We compare the Babul & Ferguson (1996) model to
the data by constructing using simulated images and carrying out source
detection and photometry for the simulations in the same way they were carried
out for the real data. We compare the model predictions for the counts, sizes,
and colours of galaxies observed in the HDF, and to the predictions from a low
q_0 pure-luminosity-evolution (PLE) model. Both models fail to reproduce the
observations. The low q_0 model predicts far more Lyman-break ``dropouts'' than
are seen in the data. The fading dwarf model predicts too many remnants: faded
dwarf galaxies in the redshift range 0.2 < z < 0.5 that should be detectable in
the HDF as low-surface brightness red objects but are not seen. If fading dwarf
galaxies are to reconcile the Einstein-de Sitter geometry to the counts, then
the dwarf population must (a) form earlier than z ~ 1, with a higher initial
luminosity; (b) have an initial-mass function more heavily weighted toward
massive stars than the Salpeter IMF; or (c) expand much more than assumed
during the supernova wind phase.Comment: 34 pages, 15 postscript figures (3 of which are images), uses
aaspp4.sty and astrobib.sty. (Astrobib is available from
http://www.stsci.edu/software/TeX.html.) To appear in MNRA
Joint Analysis of Cluster Observations: II. Chandra/XMM-Newton X-ray and Weak Lensing Scaling Relations for a Sample of 50 Rich Clusters of Galaxies
We present a study of multiwavelength X-ray and weak lensing scaling
relations for a sample of 50 clusters of galaxies. Our analysis combines
Chandra and XMM-Newton data using an energy-dependent cross-calibration. After
considering a number of scaling relations, we find that gas mass is the most
robust estimator of weak lensing mass, yielding 15 +/- 6% intrinsic scatter at
r500 (the pseudo-pressure YX has a consistent scatter of 22%+/-5%). The scatter
does not change when measured within a fixed physical radius of 1 Mpc. Clusters
with small BCG to X-ray peak offsets constitute a very regular population whose
members have the same gas mass fractions and whose even smaller <10% deviations
from regularity can be ascribed to line of sight geometrical effects alone.
Cool-core clusters, while a somewhat different population, also show the same
(<10%) scatter in the gas mass-lensing mass relation. There is a good
correlation and a hint of bimodality in the plane defined by BCG offset and
central entropy (or central cooling time). The pseudo-pressure YX does not
discriminate between the more relaxed and less relaxed populations, making it
perhaps the more even-handed mass proxy for surveys. Overall, hydrostatic
masses underestimate weak lensing masses by 10% on the average at r500; but
cool-core clusters are consistent with no bias, while non-cool-core clusters
have a large and constant 15-20% bias between r2500 and r500, in agreement with
N-body simulations incorporating unthermalized gas. For non-cool-core clusters,
the bias correlates well with BCG ellipticity. We also examine centroid shift
variance and and power ratios to quantify substructure; these quantities do not
correlate with residuals in the scaling relations. Individual clusters have for
the most part forgotten the source of their departures from self-similarity.Comment: Corrects an error in the X-ray luminosities (erratum
submitted)---none of the other results are affected. Go to
http://sfstar.sfsu.edu/jaco for an electronic fitter and updated quick data
download link
On the Nature of the Strong Emission-Line Galaxies in Cluster Cl 0024+1654: Are Some the Progenitors of Low Mass Spheroidals?
We present new size, line ratio, and velocity width measurements for six
strong emission-line galaxies in the galaxy cluster, Cl 0024+1654, at redshift
z~0.4. The velocity widths from Keck spectra are all narrow (30<sigma<120
km/s), with three profiles showing double peaks. Four galaxies have low masses
(M<10^{10} Mo). Whereas three galaxies were previously reported to be possible
AGNs, none exhibit AGN-like emission line ratios or velocity widths. Two or
three appear as very blue spirals with the remainder more akin to luminous H-II
galaxies undergoing a strong burst of star formation. We propose that after the
burst subsides, these galaxies will transform into quiescent dwarfs, and are
thus progenitors of some cluster spheroidals (We adopt the nomenclature
suggested by Kormendy & Bender (1994), i.e., low-density, dwarf ellipsoidal
galaxies like NGC 205 are called `spheroidals' instead of `dwarf ellipticals')
seen today.Comment: 14 pages + 2 figures + 1 table, LaTeX, Acc. for publ. in ApJL also
available at http://www.ucolick.org/~deep/papers/papers.htm
Combined Effects of Fertilizer, Irrigation, and Paclobutrazol on Yield and Fruit Quality of Mango
Combinations of fertilizer rates, foliar N sprays, irrigation practices, and paclobutrazol were studied to determine how much they could alter and/or improve mango (Mangifera indica L.) growth, flowering, and yield. Two treatment combinations derived from several years of prior studies of individual practices were compared: one combination was comprised of the best (BT) individual practices from the prior studies and included three applications of fertilizer, a 4% KNO3 spray application before flowering, paclobutrazol at 7.5 g/L, and weekly irrigation, and the other combination was comprised of the next best (NB) individual practices including two applications of the same amount of fertilizer, a 4% urea spray before flowering, paclobutrazol at 10.0 g/L, and biweekly irrigation. Both combinations significantly reduced terminal shoot growth and leaves per terminal shoot, advanced the date of flowering and harvest, increased panicle number, length and secondary branching, increased fruit set, fruit number at harvest, fruit size, and yield, with BT producing larger fruit and a greater yield than NB. Although both combinations produced fruit with higher quality than the control, the BT combination produced fruit with the higher total soluble solids, reducing, non-reducing, and total sugar content, and vitamin C content than the NB combination. Both BT and NB combinations of the optimums identified in the prior studies were successful at advancing bloom and harvest and increasing yield more than any of the optimum individual components alone, by 14-fold more than untreated trees for the BT combination, suggesting there were additive, if not synergistic, effects on mango. Further studies are warranted to assess the sustainability of these effects over longer periods of time, and to ascertain if the effects occur across mango cultivars and production environments
Constraining the Collisional Nature of the Dark Matter Through Observations of Gravitational Wakes
We propose to use gravitational wakes as a direct observational probe of the
collisional nature of the dark matter. We calculate analytically the structure
of a wake generated by the motion of a galaxy in the core of an X-ray cluster
for dark matter in the highly-collisional and collisionless limits. We show
that the difference between these limits can be recovered from detailed X-ray
or weak lensing observations. We also discuss the sizes of sub-halos in these
limits. Preliminary X-ray data on the motion of NGC 1404 through the Fornax
group disfavors fluid-like dark matter but does not exclude scenarios in which
the dark matter is weakly collisional.Comment: 29 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Ap
The Star-Forming Dwarf Galaxy Populations of two z ~ 0.4 Clusters: MS1512.4+3647 and Abell 851
We present the results of a deep narrow-band [OII] 3727 \AA emission-line
search for faint ( 27), star-forming galaxies in the field of the
MS1512.4+3647 cluster. We find no evidence for an over-density of emission-line
sources relative to the field at 0.4 (Hogg et al. 1998), and therefore
conclude that the MS1512.4+3647 sample is dominated by field [OII]
emission-line galaxies which lie along the 180 Mpc line of sight
immediately in front and behind the cluster. This is surprising, given that the
previously surveyed cluster Abell 851 has 3-4 times the field
emission-line galaxy density (Martin et al. 2000). We find that the
MS1512.4+3647 sample is deficient in galaxies with intermediate colors (1.0 2.0) and implied star-formation exponential decay timescales
100 Myr - 1 Gyr that dominate the Abell 851 emission-line galaxy population.
Instead, the majority of [OII] emission-line galaxies surrounding the
MS1512.4+3647 cluster are blue () and forming stars in bursts
with 100 Myr. In both samples, galaxies with the shortest
star-formation timescales are preferentially among the faintest star-forming
objects. Their i luminosities are consistent with young stellar populations
\sim 10^8 - 10^9 \Msun, although an additional factor of ten in stellar mass
could be hiding in underlying old stellar populations. We discuss the
implications for the star-formation histories of dwarf galaxies in the field
and rich clusters.Comment: 26 pages, including 5 tables and 13 figures; accepted for publication
in the Astrophysical Journa
Roche Lobe Overflow from Dwarf Stellar Systems
We use both analytical analyses and numerical simulations to examine the
evolution of residual gas within tidally-limited dwarf galaxies and globular
clusters. If the gas sound speed exceeds about 10% of the central velocity
dispersion, as is the case for ionized gas within small stellar systems, the
gas shall have significant density at the tidal radius, and the gas may be lost
on timescales as short as a few times the sound crossing time of the system. In
colder systems, the density at the tidal radius is much lower, greatly reducing
the mass loss rate, and the system may retain its gas for a Hubble time. The
tidally removed gas shall follow an orbit close to that of the original host
system, forming an extended stream of ionized, gaseous debris. Tidal mass loss
severely limits the ability of dwarf systems to continuously form stars. The
ordinary gas content in many dwarf galaxies is fully ionized during high
red-shift epochs, possibly preventing star formation in some systems, leading
to the formation of starless, dark-matter concentrations. In either the field
or in the center of galaxy clusters, ionized gas may be retained by dwarf
galaxies, even though its sound speed may be comparable to or even exceed the
velocity dispersion. These processes may help to explain some observed
differences among dwarf galaxy types, as well as observations of the haloes of
massive galaxies.Comment: 28 pages, LaTeX, AASTex macro
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