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What shapes a galaxy? - Unraveling the role of mass, environment and star formation in forming galactic structure

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 Added by Asa Bluck
 Publication date 2019
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We investigate the dependence of galaxy structure on a variety of galactic and environmental parameters for ~500,000 galaxies at z<0.2, taken from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey data release 7 (SDSS-DR7). We utilise bulge-to-total stellar mass ratio, (B/T)_*, as the primary indicator of galactic structure, which circumvents issues of morphological dependence on waveband. We rank galaxy and environmental parameters in terms of how predictive they are of galaxy structure, using an artificial neural network approach. We find that distance from the star forming main sequence (Delta_SFR), followed by stellar mass (M_*), are the most closely connected parameters to (B/T)_*, and are significantly more predictive of galaxy structure than global star formation rate (SFR), or any environmental metric considered (for both central and satellite galaxies). Additionally, we make a detailed comparison to the Illustris hydrodynamical simulation and the LGalaxies semi-analytic model. In both simulations, we find a significant lack of bulge-dominated galaxies at a fixed stellar mass, compared to the SDSS. This result highlights a potentially serious problem in contemporary models of galaxy evolution.



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135 - R. Retes-Romero 2017
We study the star formation (SF) law in 12 Galactic molecular clouds with ongoing high-mass star formation (HMSF) activity, as traced by the presence of a bright IRAS source and other HMSF tracers. We define the molecular cloud (MC) associated to each IRAS source using 13CO line emission, and count the young stellar objects (YSOs) within these clouds using GLIMPSE and MIPSGAL 24 micron Spitzer databases.The masses for high luminosity YSOs (Lbol>10~Lsun) are determined individually using Pre Main Sequence evolutionary tracks and the evolutionary stages of the sources, whereas a mean mass of 0.5 Msun was adopted to determine the masses in the low luminosity YSO population. The star formation rate surface density (sigsfr) corresponding to a gas surface density (siggas) in each MC is obtained by counting the number of the YSOs within successive contours of 13CO line emission. We find a break in the relation between sigsfr and siggas, with the relation being power-law (sigsfr ~ siggas^N) with the index N varying between 1.4 and 3.6 above the break. The siggas at the break is between 150-360 Msun/pc^2 for the sample clouds, which compares well with the threshold gas density found in recent studies of Galactic star-forming regions. Our clouds treated as a whole lie between the Kennicutt (1998) relation and the linear relation for Galactic and extra-galactic dense star-forming regions. We find a tendency for the high-mass YSOs to be found preferentially in dense regions at densities higher than 1200 Msun/pc^2 (~0.25 g/cm^2).
The star formation rate (SFR) in the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ, i.e. the central 500 pc) of the Milky Way is lower by a factor of >10 than expected for the substantial amount of dense gas it contains, which challenges current star formation theories. In this paper, we quantify which physical mechanisms could be responsible. On scales larger than the disc scale height, the low SFR is found to be consistent with episodic star formation due to secular instabilities or possibly variations of the gas inflow along the Galactic bar. The CMZ is marginally Toomre-stable when including gas and stars, but highly Toomre-stable when only accounting for the gas, indicating a low condensation rate of self-gravitating clouds. On small scales, we find that the SFR in the CMZ may be caused by an elevated critical density for star formation due to the high turbulent pressure. The existence of a universal density threshold for star formation is ruled out. The HI-H$_2$ phase transition of hydrogen, the tidal field, a possible underproduction of massive stars due to a bottom-heavy initial mass function, magnetic fields, and cosmic ray or radiation pressure feedback also cannot individually explain the low SFR. We propose a self-consistent cycle of star formation in the CMZ, in which the effects of several different processes combine to inhibit star formation. The rate-limiting factor is the slow evolution of the gas towards collapse - once star formation is initiated it proceeds at a normal rate. The ubiquity of star formation inhibitors suggests that a lowered central SFR should be a common phenomenon in other galaxies. We discuss the implications for galactic-scale star formation and supermassive black hole growth, and relate our results to the star formation conditions in other extreme environments.
We present a robust method, weighted von Mises kernel density estimation, along with boundary correction to reconstruct the underlying number density field of galaxies. We apply this method to galaxies brighter than $rm HST/F160wle 26$ AB mag at the redshift range of $0.4leq z leq 5$ in the five CANDELS fields (GOODS-N, GOODS-S, EGS, UDS, and COSMOS). We then use these measurements to explore the environmental dependence of the star formation activity of galaxies. We find strong evidence of environmental quenching for massive galaxies ($rm M gtrsim 10^{11} rm {M}_odot$) out to $zsim 3.5$ such that an over-dense environment hosts $gtrsim 20%$ more massive quiescent galaxies compared to an under-dense region. We also find that environmental quenching efficiency grows with stellar mass and reaches $sim 60%$ for massive galaxies at $zsim 0.5$. The environmental quenching is also more efficient in comparison to the stellar mass quenching for low mass galaxies ($rm M lesssim 10^{10} rm {M}_odot$) at low and intermediate redshifts ($zlesssim 1.2$). Our findings concur thoroughly with the over-consumption quenching model where the termination of cool gas accretion (cosmological starvation) happens in an over-dense environment and the galaxy starts to consume its remaining gas reservoir in depletion time. The depletion time depends on the stellar mass and could explain the evolution of environmental quenching efficiency with the stellar mass.
121 - Louis E. Abramson 2014
The slope of the star formation rate/stellar mass relation (the SFR Main Sequence; ${rm SFR}-M_*$) is not quite unity: specific star formation rates $({rm SFR}/M_*)$ are weakly-but-significantly anti-correlated with $M_*$. Here we demonstrate that this trend may simply reflect the well-known increase in bulge mass-fractions -- portions of a galaxy not forming stars -- with $M_*$. Using a large set of bulge/disk decompositions and SFR estimates derived from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, we show that re-normalizing SFR by disk stellar mass $({rm sSFR_{rm disk}equiv SFR}/M_{*,{rm disk}})$ reduces the $M_*$-dependence of SF efficiency by $sim0.25$ dex per dex, erasing it entirely in some subsamples. Quantitatively, we find $log {rm sSFR_{disk}}-log M_*$ to have a slope $beta_{rm disk}in[-0.20,0.00]pm0.02$ (depending on SFR estimator and Main Sequence definition) for star-forming galaxies with $M_*geq10^{10}M_{odot}$ and bulge mass-fractions $B/Tlesssim0.6$, generally consistent with a pure-disk control sample ($beta_{rm control}=-0.05pm0.04$). That $langle{rm SFR}/M_{*,{rm disk}}rangle$ is (largely) independent of host mass for star-forming disks has strong implications for aspects of galaxy evolution inferred from any ${rm SFR}-M_*$ relation, including: manifestations of mass quenching (bulge growth), factors shaping the star-forming stellar mass function (uniform $dlog M_*/dt$ for low-mass, disk-dominated galaxies), and diversity in star formation histories (dispersion in ${rm SFR}(M_*,t)$). Our results emphasize the need to treat galaxies as composite systems -- not integrated masses -- in observational and theoretical work.
145 - Jens Kauffmann 2017
A brief overview of recent advances in the study of star formation in the Galactic Center (GC) environment is presented. Particular attention is paid to new insights concerning the suppression of star formation in GC molecular clouds. Another focus is the question whether the GC can be used as a template for the understanding of starburst galaxies in the nearby and distant universe: this must be done with care. Some of the particular conditions in the center of the Milky Way do not necessarily play a role in starburst galaxies.
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