545 research outputs found

    Cosmological interpretation of the color-magnitude diagrams of galaxy clusters

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    We investigate the color-magnitude diagram (CMD) of cluster galaxies in the hierarchical Λ\Lambda-CDM cosmological scenario using both single stellar populations and simple galaxy models. First, we analyze the effect of bursts and mergers and companion chemical pollution and rejuvenation of the stellar content on the integrated light emitted by galaxies. The dispersion of the galaxy magnitudes and colors on the MV−(B−V)M_V-(B-V) plane is mainly due to mixing of ages and metallicities of the stellar populations, with mergers weighting more than bursts of similar mass fractions. The analysis is made using the Monte-Carlo technique applied to ideal model galaxies reduced to single stellar populations with galaxy-size mass to evaluate mass, age and metallicity of each object. We show that separately determining the contributions by bursts and mergers leads to a better understanding of observed properties of CMD of cluster galaxies. Then we repeat the analysis using suitable chemo-photometric models of galaxies whose mass is derived from the cosmological predictions of the galaxy content of typical clusters. Using the halo mass function and the Monte-Carlo technique, we derive the formation redshift of each galaxy and its photometric history. These are used to simulate the CMD of the cluster galaxies. The main conclusion is that most massive galaxies have acquired the red color they show today in very early epochs and remained the same ever since. The simulations nicely reproduce the Red Sequence, the Green Valley and the Blue Cloud, the three main regions of the CMD in which galaxies crowd.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap

    The transformation of Spirals into S0 galaxies in the cluster environment

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    We discuss the observational evidences of the morphological transformation of Spirals into S0 galaxies in the cluster environment exploiting two big databases of galaxy clusters: WINGS (0.04 < z < 0.07) and EDisCS (0.4 < z < 0.8). The most important results are: 1) the average number of S0 galaxies in clusters is almost a factor of ∼3−4\sim 3 - 4 larger today than at redshift z∼1z \sim 1; 2) the fraction of S0's to Spirals increases on average by a factor ∼\sim 2 every Gyr; 3) the average rate of transformation for Spirals (not considering the infall of new galaxies from the cosmic web) is: ∼\sim 5 Sp into S0's per Gyr and ∼\sim 2 Sp into E's per Gyr; 4) there are evidences that the interstellar gas of Spirals is stripped by an hot intergalactic medium; 5) there are also indirect hints that major/minor merging events have played a role in the transformation of Spiral galaxies. In particular, we show that: 1) the ratio between the number of S0's and Spirals (NS0/NSp) in the WINGS clusters is correlated with their X-ray luminosity LXL_X ; 2) that the brightest and massive S0's are always close to the cluster center; 3) that the mean Sersic index of S0's is always larger than that of Spirals (and lower than E's) for galaxy stellar masses above 109.510^9.5 Msun; 4) that the number of E's in clusters cannot be constant; 5) that the largest difference between the mean mass of S0's and E's with respect to Spirals is observed in clusters with low velocity dispersion. Finally, by comparing the properties of the various morphological types for galaxies in clusters and in the field, we find that the most significant effect of the environment is the stripping of the outer galaxy regions, resulting in a systematic difference in effective radius and Sersic index.Comment: 38 pages, 20 figure

    The parallelism between galaxy clusters and early-type galaxies: I. The light and mass profiles

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    We have analyzed the parallelism between the properties of galaxy clusters and early-type galaxies (ETGs) by looking at the similarity between their light profiles. We find that the equivalent luminosity profiles of all these systems in the \vfilt\ band, once normalized to the effective radius \re\ and shifted in surface brightness, can be fitted by the S\'ersic's law \Sers\ and superposed with a small scatter (≤0.3\le0.3 mag). By grouping objects in different classes of luminosity, the average profile of each class slightly deviates from the other only in the inner and outer regions (outside 0.1≤r/Re≤30.1\leq r/R_e\leq 3), but the range of values of nn remains ample for the members of each class, indicating that objects with similar luminosity have quite different shapes. The "Illustris" simulation reproduces quite well the luminosity profiles of ETGs, with the exception of in the inner and outer regions where feedback from supernovae and active galactic nuclei, wet and dry mergers, are at work. The total mass and luminosity of galaxy clusters as well as their light profiles are not well reproduced. By exploiting simulations we have followed the variation of the effective half-light and half-mass radius of ETGs up to z=0.8z=0.8, noting that progenitors are not necessarily smaller in size than current objects. We have also analyzed the projected dark+baryonic and dark-only mass profiles discovering that after a normalization to the half-mass radius, they can be well superposed and fitted by the S\'ersic's law.Comment: 25 pages, 19 figure

    The scaling relations of galaxies back in time: the road toward virialization

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    Context. The structural scaling relations (SSRs) of galaxies, i.e. the observed correlations between effective radius, effective surface intensity and velocity dispersion, are important tools for understanding how evolution proceeds. Aims. In this paper we aim to demonstrate that the evolution of the SSRs back in time is governed by the combination of the virial theorem (VT) and the relation L=L0′σβ(t)L=L'_0 \sigma^{\beta(t)}, where the parameters β\beta and L0′L'_0 vary with time and from galaxy to galaxy. Methods. Using the WINGS database for the galaxies at redshift z=0z=0 and the Illustris-1 and Illustris-TNG databases of artificial galaxies, for the galaxies up to redshift z=4z=4, we analyse the SSRs back in time and, by means of simple algebraic expressions for L0′L'_0 and β\beta (functions of time and other physical quantities), we derive the expected paths followed by galaxies in the various SSRs toward the distributions observed at z=0z=0. Results. The distribution of galaxies in the SSRs is ultimately related to the evolution in luminosity and velocity dispersion that are empirically mirrored by the L=L0′σβ(t)L=L'_0 \sigma^{\beta(t)} law. Furthermore, the β\beta parameter works as a thermometer of the virialization of a galaxy. This parameter can assume either positive or negative values, and its absolute value attains high values when the galaxy is close to the virial condition, while it tends to zero when the galaxy is far from it. Conclusions. As the SSRs change with time, the method we are proposing allows us to decipher the temporal evolution of galaxies.Comment: 21 pages, 20 figure

    A new framework for understanding the evolution of early-type galaxies

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    We have recently suggested that the combination of the scalar virial theorem (Ms∼Reσ2M_s \sim R_e \sigma^2) and the L=L0′σβ(t)L=L'_0 \sigma^\beta(t) law, with L'_0 and β\beta changing from galaxy to galaxy (and with time), can provide a new set of equations valid for investigating the evolution of early-type galaxies (ETGs) (Donofrio & Chiosi, 2022). These equations are able to account for the tilt of the Fundamental Plane (FP) and to explain the observed distributions of ETGs in all its projections. In this paper we analyze the advantages offered by those equations, derive the β\beta and L0′L'_0 parameters for real and simulated galaxies, and demonstrate that, according to the value of β\beta, galaxies can move only along some permitted directions in the FP projections. Then, we show that simple galaxy models that grow in mass by infall of gas and form stars with a star formation rate depending on the stellar velocity dispersion nicely reproduce the observed distributions of ETGs in the FP projections and yield β\betas that agree with the measured ones. We derive the mutual relationships among the stellar mass, effective radius, velocity dispersion, and luminosity of ETGs as a function of β\beta and calculate the coefficients of the FP. Then, using the simple infall models, we show that the star formation history of ETGs is compatible with the σ\sigma-dependent star formation rate, and that both positive and negative values of β\beta are possible in a standard theory of galaxy evolution. The parameter β(t)\beta(t) offers a new view of the evolution of ETGs. In brief, i) it gives a coherent interpretation of the FP and of the motions of galaxies in its projections; ii) it is the fingerprint of their evolution; iii) it measures the degree of virialization of ETGs; iv) and finally it allows us to infer their evolution in the near past.Comment: 25 pages, 30 figures, 5 table

    A multimessenger view of galaxies and quasars from now to mid-century

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    In the next 30 years, a new generation of space and ground-based telescopes will permit to obtain multi-frequency observations of faint sources and, for the first time in human history, to achieve a deep, almost synoptical monitoring of the whole sky. Gravitational wave observatories will detect a Universe of unseen black holes in the merging process over a broad spectrum of mass. Computing facilities will permit new high-resolution simulations with a deeper physical analysis of the main phenomena occurring at different scales. Given these development lines, we first sketch a panorama of the main instrumental developments expected in the next thirty years, dealing not only with electromagnetic radiation, but also from a multi-messenger perspective that includes gravitational waves, neutrinos, and cosmic rays. We then present how the new instrumentation will make it possible to foster advances in our present understanding of galaxies and quasars. We focus on selected scientific themes that are hotly debated today, in some cases advancing conjectures on the solution of major problems that may become solved in the next 30 years.Comment: 43 pages, 8 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1801.03298 by other author

    Dependency of halo concentration on mass, redshift and fossilness in Magneticum hydrodynamic simulations

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    We study the dependency of the concentration on mass and redshift using three large N-body cosmological hydrodynamic simulations carried out by the Magneticum project. We constrain the slope of the mass-concentration relation with an unprecedented mass range for hydrodynamic simulations and find a negative trend on the mass-concentration plane and a slightly negative redshift dependency, in agreement with observations and other numerical works. We also show how the concentration correlates with the fossil parameter, defined as the stellar mass ratio between the central galaxy and the most massive satellite, in agreement with observations. We find that haloes with high fossil parameter have systematically higher concentration and investigate the cause in two different ways. First we study the evolution of haloes that lives unperturbed for a long period of time, where we find that the internal region keeps accreting satellites as the fossil parameter increases and the scale radius decreases (which increases the concentration). We also study the dependency of the concentration on the virial ratio and the energy term from the surface pressure EsE_s. We conclude that fossil objects have higher concentration because they are dynamically relaxed, with no in-fall/out-fall material and had time to accrete their satellites.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figure

    Cosmic Star Formation: a simple model of the SFRD(z)

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    We investigate the evolution of the cosmic star formation rate density (SFRD) from redshift z=20 to z=0 and compare it with the observational one by Madau and Dickinson derived from recent compilations of UV and IR data. The theoretical SFRD(z) and its evolution are obtained using a simple model which folds together the star formation histories of prototype galaxies designed to represent real objects of different morphological type along the Hubble sequence and the hierarchical growing of structures under the action of gravity from small perturbations to large scale objects in \Lambda-CDM cosmogony, i.e. the number density of dark matter halos N(M,z). Although the overall model is very simple and easy to set up, it provides results that well mimic those obtained from large scale N-body simulations of great complexity. The simplicity of our approach allows us to test different assumptions for the star formation law in galaxies, the effects of energy feedback from stars to interstellar gas and the efficiency of galactic winds, and also the effect of N(M,z). The result of our analysis is that in the framework of the hierarchical assembly of galaxies the so-called time-delayed star formation under plain assumptions mainly for the energy feedback and galactic winds can reproduce the observational SFRD(z).Comment: ApJ (accepted for publication

    The parallelism between galaxy clusters and early-type galaxies: II. Clues on the origin of the scaling relations

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    Context. This is the second work dedicated to the observed parallelism between galaxy clusters and early-type galaxies. The focus is on the distribution of these systems in the scaling relations (SRs) observed when effective radii, effective surface brightness, total luminosities and velocity dispersions are mutually correlated. Aims. Using the data of the Illustris simulation we try to speculate on the origin of the observed SRs. Methods. We compare the observational SRs extracted from the database of the WIde-field Nearby Galaxy-cluster Survey (WINGS) with the relevant parameters coming from the Illustris simulations. Then we use the simulated data at different redshift to infer the evolution of the SRs. Results. The comparison demonstrate that galaxy clusters (GCs) at z~0 follow the same log(L)-log(sigma) relation of early-type galaxies (ETGs) and that both in the log(Ie)-log(Re) and log(Re)-log(M*) planes the distribution of GCs is along the sequence defined by the brightest and massive early-type galaxies (BCGs). The Illustris simulation reproduces the tails of the massive galaxies visible both in the log(Ie)-log(Re) and log(Re)-log(M*) planes, but fail to give the correct estimate of the effective radii of the dwarf galaxies that appear too large and those of GCs that are too small. The evolution of the SRs up to z=4 permits to reveal the complex evolutionary paths of galaxies in the SRs and indicate that the line marking the Zone of Exclusion (ZoE), visible both in the log(Ie)-log(Re) and log(Re)-log(M*) planes, is the trend followed by virialized and passively evolving systems. Conclusions. We speculate that the observed SRs originate from the intersection of the virial theorem and a relation L=L_0 x sigma^beta where the luminosities depend on the star formation history.Comment: 22 pages, 14 figures, 4 table

    The connection between shape and stellar population in early-type galaxies

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