Do you want to publish a course? Click here

The HI Content of the Universe over the Past 10 Gyrs

206   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Marcel Neeleman
 Publication date 2016
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

We use the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) archive of ultraviolet (UV) quasar spectroscopy to conduct the first blind survey for damped Ly-alpha absorbers (DLAs) at low redshift (z < 1.6). Our statistical sample includes 463 quasars with spectral coverage spanning a total redshift path, dz = 123.3 or an absorption path, dX = 229.7. Within this survey path, we identify 4 DLAs, defined as absorbers with HI column density N(HI) >= 10^20.3cm-2, which implies an incidence per absorption length, l(X)= 0.017(+0.014-0.008) at a median survey path redshift of z=0.623. While our estimate of l(X) is lower than earlier estimates at z ~ 0 from HI 21cm emission studies, the results are consistent within the measurement uncertainties. Our dataset is too small to properly sample the N(HI) frequency distribution function f(N(HI),X), but the observed distribution agrees with previous estimates at z > 2. Adopting the z > 2 shape of f(N(HI),X), we infer an HI mass density at z ~ 0.6 of rho_HI = 0.25(+0.20-0.12) x 10^8 Msol Mpc-3. This is significantly lower than previous estimates from targeted DLA surveys with the HST, but consistent with results from low-z HI 21cm observations, and suggests that the neutral gas density of the universe has been decreasing over the past 10 Gyrs.



rate research

Read More

We study the evolution of the scaling relations between maximum circular velocity, stellar mass and optical half-light radius of star-forming disk-dominated galaxies in the context of LCDM-based galaxy formation models. Using data from the literature combined with new data from the DEEP2 and AEGIS surveys we show that there is a consistent observational and theoretical picture for the evolution of these scaling relations from zsim 2 to z=0. The evolution of the observed stellar scaling relations is weaker than that of the virial scaling relations of dark matter haloes, which can be reproduced, both qualitatively and quantitatively, with a simple, cosmologically-motivated model for disk evolution inside growing NFW dark matter haloes. In this model optical half-light radii are smaller, both at fixed stellar mass and maximum circular velocity, at higher redshifts. This model also predicts that the scaling relations between baryonic quantities evolve even more weakly than the corresponding stellar relations. We emphasize, though, that this weak evolution does not imply that individual galaxies evolve weakly. On the contrary, individual galaxies grow strongly in mass, size and velocity, but in such a way that they move largely along the scaling relations. Finally, recent observations have claimed surprisingly large sizes for a number of star-forming disk galaxies at z sim 2, which has caused some authors to suggest that high redshift disk galaxies have abnormally high spin parameters. However, we argue that the disk scale lengths in question have been systematically overestimated by a factor sim 2, and that there is an offset of a factor sim 1.4 between Halpha sizes and optical sizes. Taking these effects into account, there is no indication that star forming galaxies at high redshifts (zsim 2) have abnormally high spin parameters.
We present new results on the evolution of rest-frame blue/UV sizes and Sersic indices of H$alpha$-selected star-forming galaxies over the last 11 Gyrs. We investigate how the perceived evolution can be affected by a range of biases and systematics such as cosmological dimming and resolution effects. We use GALFIT and an artificial redshifting technique, which includes the luminosity evolution of H$alpha$-selected galaxies, to quantify the change on the measured structural parameters with redshift. We find typical sizes of 2 to 3 kpc and Sersic indices of n~1.2, close to pure exponential disks all the way from z=2.23 to z=0.4. At z=0 we find typical sizes of 4-5 kpc. Our results show that, when using GALFIT, cosmological dimming has a negligible impact on the derived effective radius for galaxies with <10 kpc, but we find a ~20% bias on the estimate of the median Sersic indices, rendering galaxies more disk-like. Star-forming galaxies have grown on average by a factor of 2-3 in the last 11 Gyrs with $r_epropto(1+z)^{-0.75}$. By exploring the evolution of the stellar mass-size relation we find evidence for a stronger size evolution of the most massive star-forming galaxies since z~2, as they grow faster towards z~0 when compared to the lower stellar mass counterparts. As we are tracing the rest-frame blue/UV, we are likely witnessing the growth of disks where star formation is ongoing in galaxies while their profiles remain close to exponential disks, n<1.5, across the same period.
We present new determinations of the stellar-to-halo mass relation (SHMR) at $z=0-10$ that match the evolution of the galaxy stellar mass function, the SFR$-M_*$ relation,and the cosmic star formation rate. We utilize a compilation of 40 observational studies from the literature and correct them for potential biases. Using our robust determinations of halo mass assembly and the SHMR, we infer star formation histories, merger rates, and structural properties for average galaxies, combining star-forming and quenched galaxies. Our main findings: (1) The halo mass $M_{50}$ above which 50% of galaxies are quenched coincides with sSFR/sMAR$sim1$, where sMAR is the specific halo mass accretion rate. (2) $M_{50}$ increases with redshift, presumably due to cold streams being more efficient at high redshift while virial shocks and AGN feedback become more relevant at lower redshifts. (3) The ratio sSFR/sMAR has a peak value, which occurs around $M_{rm vir}sim2times10^{11}M_{odot}$. (4) The stellar mass density within 1 kpc, $Sigma_1$, is a good indicator of the galactic global sSFR. (5) Galaxies are statistically quenched after they reach a maximum in $Sigma_1$, consistent with theoretical expectations of the gas compaction model; this maximum depends on redshift. (6) In-situ star formation is responsible for most galactic stellar mass growth, especially for lower-mass galaxies. (7) Galaxies grow inside out. The marked change in the slope of the size--mass relation when galaxies became quenched, from $dlog R_{rm eff}/dlog M_*sim0.35$ to $sim2.5$, could be the result of dry minor mergers.
419 - L. Wolz , C. Blake , J.S.B. Wyithe 2017
We propose an innovative method for measuring the neutral hydrogen (HI) content of an optically-selected spectroscopic sample of galaxies through cross-correlation with HI intensity mapping measurements. We show that the HI-galaxy cross-power spectrum contains an additive shot noise term which scales with the average HI brightness temperature of the optically-selected galaxies, allowing constraints to be placed on the average HI mass per galaxy. This approach can estimate the HI content of populations too faint to directly observe through their 21cm emission over a wide range of redshifts. This cross-correlation, as a function of optical luminosity or colour, can be used to derive HI-scaling relations. We demonstrate that this signal will be detectable by cross-correlating upcoming Australian SKA Pathfinder (ASKAP) observations with existing optically-selected samples. We also use semi-analytic simulations to verify that the HI mass can be successfully recovered by our technique in the range M_HI > 10^8 M_solar, in a manner independent of the underlying power spectrum shape. We conclude that this method is a powerful tool to study galaxy evolution, which only requires a single intensity mapping dataset to infer complementary HI gas information from existing optical and infra-red observations.
181 - Aseem Paranjape 2021
We model the distribution of the observed profiles of 21 cm line emission from neutral hydrogen (HI) in central galaxies selected from a statistically representative mock catalog of the local Universe in the Lambda-cold dark matter framework. The distribution of these HI velocity profiles (specifically, their widths $W_{50}$) has been observationally constrained, but has not been systematically studied theoretically. Our model profiles derive from rotation curves of realistically baryonified haloes in an N-body simulation, including the quasi-adiabatic relaxation of the dark matter profile of each halo in response to its baryons. We study the predicted $W_{50}$ distribution using a realistic pipeline applied to noisy profiles extracted from our luminosity-complete mock catalog with an ALFALFA-like survey geometry and redshift selection. Our default mock is in good agreement with observed ALFALFA results for $W_{50}gtrsim700$ km/s, being incomplete at lower widths due to the intrinsic threshold of $M_rleq-19$. Variations around the default model show that the velocity width function at $W_{50}gtrsim300$ km/s is most sensitive to a possible correlation between galaxy inclination and host concentration, followed by the physics of quasi-adiabatic relaxation. We also study the excess kurtosis of noiseless velocity profiles, obtaining a distribution which tightly correlates with $W_{50}$, with a shape and scatter that depend on the properties of the turbulent HI disk. Our results open the door towards using the shapes of HI velocity profiles as a novel statistical probe of the baryon-dark matter connection.
comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
Sign in to be able to follow your search criteria
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا