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Dwarf Galaxies in the Leo I Group: the Group Luminosity Function beyond the Local Group

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 Added by Kathleen Flint
 Publication date 2001
  fields Physics
and research's language is English
 Authors K. Flint -




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We present first results of a survey of the Leo I group at 10 Mpc for M_R < -10 dwarf galaxies. This is part of a larger program to measure the faint end of the galaxy luminosity function in nearby poor groups. Our method is optimized to find Local-Group-like dwarfs down to dwarf spheroidal surface brightnesses, but we also find very large LSB dwarfs in Leo I with no Local Group counterpart. A preliminary measurement of the luminosity function yields a slope consistent with that measured in the Local Group.



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XMM-Newton and Chandra have ushered in a new era for the study of dwarf galaxies in the Local Group. We provide an overview of the opportunities, challenges, and some early results. The large number of background sources relative to galaxy sources is a major theme. Despite this challenge, the identification of counterparts has been possible, providing hints that the same mechanisms producing X-ray sources in larger galaxies are active in dwarf galaxies. A supersoft X-ray source within 2 of the supermassive black hole in M32 may be a remnant of the tidal disruption of a giant, although other explanations cannot be ruled out.
99 - Azadeh Fattahi 2019
We study the Local Group (LG) dwarf galaxy population predicted by the apostle $Lambda$CDM cosmological hydrodynamics simulations. These indicate that: (i)~the total mass within $3$ Mpc of the Milky Way-Andromeda midpoint ($M_{rm 3Mpc}$) typically exceeds $sim 3$ times the sum of the virial masses ($M_{rm 200crit}$) of the two primaries and (ii)~the dwarf galaxy formation efficiency per unit mass is uniform throughout the volume. This suggests that the satellite population within the virial radii of the Milky Way and Andromeda should make up fewer than one third of all LG dwarfs within $3$ Mpc. This is consistent with the fraction of observed LG galaxies with stellar mass $M_*>10^7,M_{odot}$ that are satellites ($12$ out of $42$; i.e., $28$ per cent). For the apostle galaxy mass-halo mass relation, the total number of such galaxies further suggests a LG mass of $M_{rm 3 Mpc}sim 10^{13} , M_{odot}$. At lower galaxy masses, however, the observed satellite fraction is substantially higher ($42$ per cent for $M_*>10^5,M_{odot}$). If this is due to incompleteness in the field sample, then $sim 50$ dwarf galaxies at least as massive as the Draco dwarf spheroidal must be missing from the current LG {it field} dwarf inventory. The incompleteness interpretation is supported by the pronounced flattening of the LG luminosity function below $M_*sim 10^7, M_{odot}$, and by the scarcity of low-surface brightness LG field galaxies compared to satellites. The simulations indicate that most missing dwarfs should lie near the virial boundaries of the two LG primaries, and predict a trove of nearby dwarfs that await discovery by upcoming wide-field imaging surveys.
309 - Daniel R. Weisz 2011
We compare the cumulative star formation histories (SFHs) of Local Group (LG) dwarf galaxies with those in the volume-limited ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey Treasury (ANGST) sample (D < 4 Mpc), in order to understand how typical the LG dwarf galaxies are relative to those in the nearby universe. The SFHs were derived in a uniform manner from high quality optical color-magnitude diagrams constructed from Hubble Space Telescope imaging. We find that the {it mean} cumulative SFHs of the LG dwarfs are comparable to the mean cumulative SFHs of the ANGST sample for the three different morphological types (dwarf spheroidals/ellipticals: dSph/dE; dwarf irregulars: dI; transition dwarfs: dTrans). We also discuss effects such as population gradients and systematic uncertainties in the stellar models that may influence the derived SFHs. Both the ANGST and Local Group dwarf galaxies show a consistent and strong morphology-density relationship, emphasizing the importance of environment in the evolution of dwarf galaxies. Specifically, we confirm that dIs are found at lower densities and higher luminosities than dSphs, within this large sample. We also find that dTrans are located in similar environments to those occupied by dwarf irregular galaxies, but have systematically lower luminosities that are more comparable to those of dwarf spheroidals. The similarity of the SFHs and morphology-density relationships of the LG and ANGST dwarf galaxies suggests that the LG dwarfs are a good representation of dwarf galaxies in the local universe.
We present Giant Meterwave Radio Telescope (GMRT) and Westerbork ynthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT) observations of the recently discovered Local Group dwarf galaxy, Leo T. The peak HI column density is measured to be 7x10^20 cm^-2, and the total HI mass is 2.8Xx10^5 Msun, based on a distance of 420 kpc. Leo T has both cold (~ 500 K) and warm (~ 6000 K) HI at its core, with a global velocity dispersion of 6.9 km/s, from which we derive a dynamical mass within the HI radius of 3.3x10^6 Msun, and a mass-to-light ratio of greater than 50. We calculate the Jeans mass from the radial profiles of the HI column density and velocity dispersion, and predict that the gas should be globally stable against star formation. This finding is inconsistent with the half light radius of Leo T, which extends to 170 pc, and indicates that local conditions must determine where star formation takes place. Leo T is not only the lowest luminosity galaxy with on-going star formation discovered to date, it is also the most dark matter dominated, gas-rich dwarf in the Local Group.
Recent observational and theoretical studies of the Local Group (LG) dwarf galaxies have highlighted their unique star formation history, stellar metallicity, gas content, and kinematics. We investigate the commonality of these tantalizing features by comparing constrained LG and field central dwarf halo simulations in the NIHAO project. For the first time, constrained LG simulations performed with NIHAO hydrodynamics which track the evolution of MW and M31 along with ~100 dwarfs in the Local Group are presented. The total gas mass and stellar properties (velocity dispersion, evolution history, etc.) of present-day LG dwarfs are found to be similar to field systems. Overall, the simulated LG dwarfs show representative stellar properties to other dwarfs in the Universe. However, relative to fields, LG dwarfs have more cold gas in their central parts and more metal-rich gas in the halo stemming from interactions with MW/M31 and/or feedback. The larger gas metal content in LG dwarfs results in early star formation events that lead to strong feedback and subsequent quenching. We also test for the impact of metal diffusion on the chemical evolution of LG dwarfs, and find that metal diffusion does not affect the stellar or gaseous content of LG relative to field dwarfs; the largest differences are found with the gas metallicity (~0.1 dex). Our results show that properties from LG dwarfs may be used as general constraints for studying the overall dwarf population in the Universe, providing a powerful local laboratory for galaxy formation tests and comparisons.
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