ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

The Gas Content and Stripping of Local Group Dwarf Galaxies

239   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Mary E. Putman
 تاريخ النشر 2021
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English
 تأليف Mary E. Putman




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

The gas content of the complete compilation of Local Group dwarf galaxies (119 within 2 Mpc) is presented using HI survey data. Within the virial radius of the Milky Way (224 kpc here), 53 of 55 dwarf galaxies are devoid of gas to limits of M$_{rm HI}<10^4$ M$_odot$. Within the virial radius of M31 (266 kpc), 27 of 30 dwarf galaxies are devoid of gas (with limits typically $<10^5$ M$_odot$). Beyond the virial radii of the Milky Way and M31, the majority of the dwarf galaxies have detected HI gas and have HI masses higher than the limits. When the relationship between gas content and distance is investigated using a Local Group virial radius, more of the non-detected dwarf galaxies are within this radius (85$pm1$ of the 93 non-detected dwarf galaxies) than within the virial radii of the Milky Way and M31. Using the Gaia proper motion measurements available for 38 dwarf galaxies, the minimum gas density required to completely strip them of gas is calculated. Halo densities between $10^{-5}$ and $5 times 10^{-4}$ cm$^{-3}$ are typically required for instantaneous stripping at perigalacticon. When compared to halo density with radius expectations from simulations and observations, 80% of the dwarf galaxies with proper motions are consistent with being stripped by ram pressure at Milky Way pericenter. The results suggest a diffuse gaseous galactic halo medium is important in quenching dwarf galaxies, and that a Local Group medium also potentially plays a role.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

The shallow faint-end slope of the galaxy mass function is usually reproduced in $Lambda$CDM galaxy formation models by assuming that the fraction of baryons that turns into stars drops steeply with decreasing halo mass and essentially vanishes in ha loes with maximum circular velocities $V_{rm max}<20$-$30$ km/s. Dark matter-dominated dwarfs should therefore have characteristic velocities of about that value, unless they are small enough to probe only the rising part of the halo circular velocity curve (i.e., half-mass radii, $r_{1/2}ll 1$ kpc). Many dwarfs have properties in disagreement with this prediction: they are large enough to probe their halo $V_{rm max}$ but their characteristic velocities are well below $20$ km/s. These `cold faint giants (an extreme example is the recently discovered Crater 2 Milky Way satellite) can only be reconciled with our $Lambda$CDM models if they are the remnants of once massive objects heavily affected by tidal stripping. We examine this possibility using the APOSTLE cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of the Local Group. Assuming that low velocity dispersion satellites have been affected by stripping, we infer their progenitor masses, radii, and velocity dispersions, and find them in remarkable agreement with those of isolated dwarfs. Tidal stripping also explains the large scatter in the mass discrepancy-acceleration relation in the dwarf galaxy regime: tides remove preferentially dark matter from satellite galaxies, lowering their accelerations below the $a_{rm min}sim 10^{-11} m/s^2$ minimum expected for isolated dwarfs. In many cases, the resulting velocity dispersions are inconsistent with the predictions from Modified Newtonian Dynamics, a result that poses a possibly insurmountable challenge to that scenario.
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 ex ceeds $sim 3$ 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.
We use dust masses ($M_{dust}$) derived from far-infrared data and molecular gas masses ($M_{mol}$) based on CO luminosity, to calibrate proxies based on a combination of the galaxy Balmer decrement, disk inclination and gas metallicity. We use such proxies to estimate $M_{dust}$ and $M_{mol}$ in the local SDSS sample of star-forming galaxies (SFGs). We study the distribution of $M_{dust}$ and $M_{mol}$ along and across the Main Sequence (MS) of SFGs. We find that $M_{dust}$ and $M_{mol}$ increase rapidly along the MS with increasing stellar mass ($M_*$), and more marginally across the MS with increasing SFR (or distance from the relation). The dependence on $M_*$ is sub-linear for both $M_{dust}$ and $M_{mol}$. Thus, the fraction of dust ($f_{dust}$) and molecular gas mass ($f_{mol}$) decreases monotonically towards large $M_*$. The star formation efficiency (SFE, the inverse of the molecular gas depletion time) depends strongly on the distance from the MS and it is constant along the MS. As nearly all galaxies in the sample are central galaxies, we estimate the dependence of $f_{dust}$ and $f_{gas}$ on the host halo mass and find a tight anti-correlation. As the region where the MS is bending is numerically dominated by massive halos, we conclude that the bending of the MS is due to lower availability of molecular gas mass in massive halos rather than a lower efficiency in forming stars.
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 b y 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.
We present a search for CO(1->0) emission in three Local Group dwarf irregular galaxies: IC5152, the Phoenix dwarf, and UGCA438, using the ATNF Mopra radio telescope. Our scans largely cover the optical extent of the galaxies and the stripped HI clou d West of the Phoenix dwarf. Apart from a tentative but non-significant emission peak at one position in the Phoenix dwarf, no significant emission was detected in the CO spectra of these galaxies. For a velocity width of 6 km/s, we derive 4sigma upper limits of 0.03 K km/s, 0.04 K km/s and 0.06 K km/s for IC5152, the Phoenix dwarf and UGCA438, respectively. This is an improvement of over a factor of 10 compared with previous observations of IC5152; the other two galaxies had not yet been observed at millimeter wavelengths. Assuming a Galactic CO-to-H_2 conversion factor, we derive upper limits on the molecular gas mass of 6.2 x 10^4 M_sun, 3.7 x 10^3 M_sun and 1.4 x 10^5 M_sun for IC5152, the Phoenix dwarf and UGCA438, respectively. We investigate two possible causes for the lack of CO emission in these galaxies. On the one hand, there may be a genuine lack of molecular gas in these systems, in spite of the presence of large amounts of neutral gas. However, in the case of IC5152 which is actively forming stars, molecular gas is at least expected to be present in the star forming regions. On the other hand, there may be a large increase in the CO-to-H_2 conversion factor in very low-metallicity dwarfs (-2 <= [Fe/H] <= -1), making CO a poor tracer of the molecular gas content in dwarf galaxies.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا