396 research outputs found
The Universality of Initial Conditions for Globular Cluster Formation
We investigate a simple model for globular cluster (GC) formation. We
simulate the violent relaxation of initially homogeneous isothermal stellar
spheres and show that it leads to the formation of clusters with radial density
profiles that match the observed profiles of GCs. The best match is achieved
for dynamically unevolved clusters. In this model, all the observed
correlations between global GC parameters are accurately reproduced if one
assumes that all the clusters initially had the same value of the stellar
density and the velocity dispersion. This suggests that the gas which formed
GCs had the same values of density and temperature throughout the universe.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Global HI profiles of spiral galaxies
In this paper we present short HI synthesis observations of 57 galaxies
without HI information in the RC3. These are a by-product of a large survey
with the WSRT of the neutral hydrogen gas in spiral and irregular galaxies.
Global profiles and related quantities are given for the 42 detected galaxies
and upper limits for the remaining 15. A number of galaxies have low values of
HI mass-to-blue luminosity ratio.Comment: A LATEX file without figures. The postscript version including all
the figures can be retrieved from http://www.astro.rug.nl:80/~secr/ Accepted
for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics Suppl. Serie
The Sloan-Lens ACS Survey II: stellar populations and internal structure of early-type lens galaxies
We derive Fundamental Plane parameters of 15 early-type lens galaxies
identified by the Sloan Lens ACS (SLACS) Survey. The size of the sample allows
us to investigate for the first time the distribution of lens galaxies in the
FP space. After correcting for evolution, we find that lens galaxies occupy a
subset of the local FP. The edge-on projection (approximately M vs M/L) is
indistinguishable from that of normal early-type galaxies. However -- within
the fundamental plane -- the lens galaxies appear to concentrate at the edge of
the region populated by normal early-type galaxies. We show that this is a
result of our selection procedure (approximately velocity dispersion
sigma>240km/s). We conclude that SLACS lenses are a fair sample of high
velocity dispersion early-type galaxies. By comparing the central stellar
velocity dispersion that of the best fit lens model, we find
== =1.01+-0.02 with 0.065 rms scatter. We conclude that
within the Einstein radii the SLACS lenses are very well approximated by
isothermal ellipsoids, requiring a fine tuning of the stellar and dark matter
distribution (bulge-halo ``conspiracy''). Interpreting the offset from the
local FP in terms of evolution of the stellar mass-to-light ratio, we find for
the SLACS lenses d log M/L_B/dz=-0.69+-0.08 (rms 0.11) consistent with the rate
found for field early-type galaxies and with a scenario where most of the stars
were formed at high redshift (>2) with secondary episodes of star formation
providing less than ~10% of the stellar mass below z=1. We discuss star
formation history and structural homogeneity in the context of formation
mechanisms such as collisionless (``dry'') mergers. [Abridged]Comment: 2006, ApJ, 604, 622; 13 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables. Replaced Table 2,
since the previous version was incorrectly sorted. Updated references. No
changes in plots or content. More info available at SLACS website
www.slacs.or
The Westerbork HI Survey of Spiral and Irregular Galaxies I. HI Imaging of Late-type Dwarf Galaxies
Neutral hydrogen observations with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope
are presented for a sample of 73 late-type dwarf galaxies. These observations
are part of the WHISP project (Westerbork HI Survey of Spiral and Irregular
Galaxies). Here we present HI maps, velocity fields, global profiles and radial
surface density profiles of HI, as well as HI masses, HI radii and line widths.
For the late-type galaxies in our sample, we find that the ratio of HI extent
to optical diameter, defined as 6.4 disk scale lengths, is on average 1.8+-0.8,
similar to that seen in spiral galaxies. Most of the dwarf galaxies in this
sample are rich in HI, with a typical M_HI/L_B of 1.5. The relative HI content
M_HI/L_R increases towards fainter absolute magnitudes and towards fainter
surface brightnesses. Dwarf galaxies with lower average HI column densities
also have lower average optical surface brightnesses. We find that lopsidedness
is as common among dwarf galaxies as it is in spiral galaxies. About half of
the dwarf galaxies in our sample have asymmetric global profiles, a third has a
lopsided HI distribution, and about half shows signs of kinematic lopsidedness.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 18 pages. 39 MB version with all
figures is available http://www.robswork.net/publications/WHISPI.ps.g
The Balance of Dark and Luminous Mass in Rotating Galaxies
A fine balance between dark and baryonic mass is observed in spiral galaxies.
As the contribution of the baryons to the total rotation velocity increases,
the contribution of the dark matter decreases by a compensating amount. This
poses a fine-tuning problem for \LCDM galaxy formation models, and may point to
new physics for dark matter particles or even a modification of gravity.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX. Phys. Rev. Letters, in pres
On the apparent coupling of neutral hydrogen and dark matter in spiral galaxies
We have studied a mass model for spiral galaxies in which the dark matter
surface density is a scaled version of the observed HI surface density.
Applying this mass model to a sample of 24 spiral galaxies with reliable
rotation curves one obtains good fits for most galaxies. The scaling factors
cluster around 7, after correction for the presence of primordial helium. But
for several cases different, often larger, values are found. For galaxies that
can not be fitted well the discrepancy occurs at large radii and results from a
fairly rapid decline of the HI surface density in the outermost regions.
Because of such imperfections and in view of possible selection effects it is
not possible to conclude here that there is a real coupling between HI and dark
matter in spiral galaxies.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; 8 pages, 3 figure
Cosmological Origin of the Stellar Velocity Dispersions in Massive Early-Type Galaxies
We show that the observed upper bound on the line-of-sight velocity
dispersion of the stars in an early-type galaxy, sigma<400km/s, may have a
simple dynamical origin within the LCDM cosmological model, under two main
hypotheses. The first is that most of the stars now in the luminous parts of a
giant elliptical formed at redshift z>6. Subsequently, the stars behaved
dynamically just as an additional component of the dark matter. The second
hypothesis is that the mass distribution characteristic of a newly formed dark
matter halo forgets such details of the initial conditions as the stellar
"collisionless matter" that was added to the dense parts of earlier generations
of halos. We also assume that the stellar velocity dispersion does not evolve
much at z<6, because a massive host halo grows mainly by the addition of
material at large radii well away from the stellar core of the galaxy. These
assumptions lead to a predicted number density of ellipticals as a function of
stellar velocity dispersion that is in promising agreement with the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey data.Comment: ApJ, in press (2003); matches published versio
The scale-free character of the cluster mass function and the universality of the stellar IMF
Our recent determination of a Salpeter slope for the IMF in the field of 30
Doradus (Selman and Melnick 2005) appears to be in conflict with simple
probabilistic counting arguments advanced in the past to support observational
claims of a steeper IMF in the LMC field. In this paper we re-examine these
arguments and show by explicit construction that, contrary to these claims, the
field IMF is expected to be exactly the same as the stellar IMF of the clusters
out of which the field was presumably formed. We show that the current data on
the mass distribution of clusters themselves is in excellent agreement with our
model, and is consistent with a single spectrum {\it by number of stars} of the
type with beta between -1.8 and -2.2 down to the smallest clusters
without any preferred mass scale for cluster formation. We also use the random
sampling model to estimate the statistics of the maximal mass star in clusters,
and confirm the discrepancy with observations found by Weidner and Kroupa
(2006). We argue that rather than signaling the violation of the random
sampling model these observations reflect the gravitationally unstable nature
of systems with one very large mass star. We stress the importance of the
random sampling model as a \emph{null hypothesis} whose violation would signal
the presence of interesting physics.Comment: 9 pages emulateap
Constraining global properties of the Draco dwarf spheroidal galaxy
By fitting a flexible stellar anisotropy model to the observed surface
brightness and line-of-sight velocity dispersion profiles of Draco we derive a
sequence of cosmologically plausible two-component (stars + dark matter) models
for this galaxy. The models are consistent with all the available observations
and can have either cuspy Navarro-Frenk-White or flat-cored dark matter density
profiles. The dark matter halos either formed relatively recently (at z~2...7)
and are massive (up to ~5x10^9 M_Sun), or formed before the end of the
reionization of the universe (z~7...11) and are less massive (down to ~7x10^7
M_Sun). Our results thus support either of the two popular solutions of the
"missing satellites" problem of Lambda cold dark matter cosmology - that dwarf
spheroidals are either very massive, or very old. We carry out high-resolution
simulations of the tidal evolution of our two-component Draco models in the
potential of the Milky Way. The results of our simulations suggest that the
observable properties of Draco have not been appreciably affected by the
Galactic tides after 10 Gyr of evolution. We rule out Draco being a "tidal
dwarf" - a tidally disrupted dwarf galaxy. Almost radial Draco orbits (with the
pericentric distance <15 kpc) are also ruled out by our analysis. The case of a
harmonic dark matter core can be consistent with observations only for a very
limited choice of Draco orbits (with the apocentric-to-pericentric distances
ratio of <2.5).Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures; accepted by Ap
Self-consistent models of triaxial galaxies in MOND gravity
The Bekenstein-Milgrom gravity theory with a modified Poisson equation is
tested here for the existence of triaxial equilibrium solutions. Using the
non-negative least square method, we show that self-consistent triaxial
galaxies exist for baryonic models with a mild density cusp . Self-consistency is achieved for a wide range of central
concentrations, , representing
low-to-high surface brightness galaxies. Our results demonstrate for the first
time that the orbit superposition technique is fruitful for constructing galaxy
models beyond Newtonian gravity, and triaxial cuspy galaxies might exist
without the help of Cold dark Matter.Comment: 19 pages, 1 table, 7 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
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