952,840 research outputs found
Color Gradients in Early-Type Galaxies in Clusters at the Redshift from 0.37 to 0.56
Color gradients in elliptical galaxies in distant clusters ()
are examined by using the archival deep imaging data of Wide Field Planetary
Camera 2 (WFPC2) on-board the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Obtained color
gradients are compared with the two model gradients to examine the origin of
the color gradients. In one model, a color gradient is assumed to be caused by
a metallicity gradient of stellar populations, while in the other one, it is
caused by an age gradient. Both of these model color gradients reproduce the
average color gradient seen in nearby ellipticals, but predict significantly
different gradients at a redshift larger than 0.3. Comparison between the
observed gradients and the model gradients reveals that the metallicity
gradient is much more favorable as the primary origin of color gradients in
elliptical galaxies in clusters. The same conclusion has been obtained for
field ellipticals by using those at the redshift from 0.1 to 1.0 in the Hubble
Deep Field-North by Tamura et al. (2000). Thus, it is also suggested that the
primary origin of the color gradients in elliptical galaxies does not depend on
galaxy environment.Comment: 23 pages LaTeX, 5 PostScript figures, accepted for publication in The
Astronomical Journa
Tracing the vertical composition of disc galaxies through colour gradients
(Abbreviated) Optical observations of a statistically complete sample of
edge-on disc galaxies are used to study the intrinsic vertical colour gradients
in the galactic discs, to constrain the effects of population gradients,
residual dust extinction and gradients in the galaxies' metal abundance. It
appears that the intrinsic vertical colour gradients are either non-existent,
or small and relatively constant as a function of position along the galaxies'
major axes. Our results are consistent with the absence of any vertical colour
gradient in the discs of the early-type sample galaxies. In most galaxies
small-scale variations in the magnitude and even the direction of the vertical
gradient are observed: at larger galactocentric distances they generally
display redder colours with increasing z height, whereas the opposite is often
observed in and near the galactic centres. For a significant fraction of our
sample galaxies another mechanism in addition to the effects of stellar
population gradients is required to explain the magnitude of the observed
gradients. The non-zero colour gradients in a significant fraction of our
sample galaxies are likely (at least) partially due to residual dust extinction
at these z heights, as is also evidenced from the sometimes significant
differences between the vertical colour gradients measured on either side of
the galactic planes. We suggest that initial vertical metallicity gradients, if
any, have likely not been accentuated by accretion or merging events over the
lifetimes of our sample galaxies. On the other hand, they may have weakened any
existing vertical metallicity gradients, although they also may have left the
existing correlations unchanged.Comment: 17 pages LaTeX, incl. 5 embedded postscript figures, resubmitted to
MNRAS (referee's comments taken into account
The Hot Interstellar Medium in Normal Elliptical Galaxies III: The Thermal Structure of the Gas
This is the third paper in a series analyzing X-ray emission from the hot
interstellar medium in a sample of 54 normal elliptical galaxies observed by
Chandra, focusing on 36 galaxies with sufficient signal to compute radial
temperature profiles. We distinguish four qualitatively different types of
profile: positive gradient (outwardly rising), negative gradients (falling),
quasi-isothermal (flat) and hybrid (falling at small radii, then rising). We
measure the mean logarithmic temperature gradients in two radial regions: from
0--2 -band effective radii (excluding the central point source), and
from 2--. We find the outer gradient to be uncorrelated with intrinsic
host galaxy properties, but strongly influenced by the environment: galaxies in
low-density environments tend to show negative outer gradients, while those in
high-density environments show positive outer gradients, suggesting influence
of circumgalactic hot gas. The inner temperature gradient is unaffected by the
environment but strongly correlated with intrinsic host galaxy characteristics:
negative inner gradients are more common for smaller, optically faint, low
radio-luminosity galaxies, whereas positive gradients are found in bright
galaxies with stronger radio sources. There is no evidence for bimodality in
the distribution of inner or outer gradients. We propose three scenarios to
explain the inner temperature gradients: (1) Weak AGN heat the ISM locally,
higher-luminosity AGN heat the system globally through jets inflating cavities
at larger radii; (2) The onset of negative inner gradients indicates a
declining importance of AGN heating relative to other sources, such as
compressional heating or supernovae; (3) The variety of temperature profiles
are snapshots of different stages of a time-dependent flow.Comment: 18 pages, emulateapj, 55 figures (36 online-only figures included in
astro-ph version), submitted to Ap
Color and stellar population gradients in galaxies. Correlation with mass
We analyze the color gradients (CGs) of ~50000 nearby SDSS galaxies. From
synthetic spectral models based on a simplified star formation recipe, we
derive the mean spectral properties, and explain the observed radial trends of
the color as gradients of the stellar population age and metallicity (Z). The
most massive ETGs (M_* > 10^{11} Msun) have shallow CGs in correspondence of
shallow (negative) Z gradients. In the stellar mass range 10^(10.3-10.5) < M_*
< 10^(11) Msun, the Z gradients reach their minimum of ~ -0.5 dex^{-1}. At M_*
~ 10^{10.3-10.5} Msun, color and Z gradient slopes suddenly change. They turn
out to anti-correlate with the mass, becoming highly positive at the very low
masses. We have also found that age gradients anti-correlate with Z gradients,
as predicted by hierarchical cosmological simulations for ETGs. On the other
side, LTGs have gradients which systematically decrease with mass (and are
always more negative than in ETGs), consistently with the expectation from gas
infall and SN feedback scenarios. Z is found to be the main driver of the trend
of color gradients, especially for LTGs, but age gradients are not negligible
and seem to play a significant role too. We have been able to highlight that
older galaxies have systematically shallower age and Z gradients than younger
ones. Our results for high-mass galaxies are in perfect agreement with
predictions based on the merging scenario, while the evolution of LTGs and
younger and less massive ETGs seems to be mainly driven by infall and SN
feedback. (Abridged)Comment: 20 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication on MNRAS. This version
includes revisions after the referee's report
Predicting Axonal Response to Molecular Gradients with a Computational Model of Filopodial Dynamics
Axons are often guided to their targets in the developing nervous system by attractive or repulsive molecular concentration gradients. We propose a computational model for gradient sensing and directed movement of the growth cone mediated by filopodia. We show that relatively simple
mechanisms are sufficient to generate realistic rajectories for both the short-term response of axons to steep gradients and the long-term response of axons to shallow gradients. The model makes testable predictions for axonal response to attractive and repulsive gradients of different
concentrations and steepness, the size of the intracellular amplification of the gradient signal, and the differences in intracellular signaling required for repulsive versus attractive turning
- …
