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Flattening of the Galactic SpheroidWhite, S. D. M. 10 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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MALIN: A Quiescent Disk Galaxy|MALIN 1: A Quiescent Disk GalaxyImpey, C. D., Bothun, G. D. 11 1900 (has links)
We present new optical and radio spectroscopic observations of the remarkable galaxy
Malin 1. This galaxy has unique features that include an extremely low surface brightness
disk with an enormous mass of neutral hydrogen, and a low luminosity Seyfert nucleus.
Malin 1 is exceptional in its values of MHO, LB, and MHI /Ln, and modest in its surface
mass density of gas and stars. Spirals with large Min /LB tend to have low mean column
densities of HI, and are close to the threshold for star formation due to instabilities in
a rotating gas disk. In these terms, Malin 1 has a disk with extremely inefficient star
formation. The bulge spectrum is dominated by the absorption features of an old, metal
rich stellar population, although there is some evidence for hot (young) stars. The emission
line excitations and widths in the nucleus are typical of a Seyfert galaxy; but Malin 1 is in
the lowest 5% of the luminosity function of Seyferts, despite a copious fuel supply. Malin 1
is in a low density region of the universe. We propose it as an unevolving disk galaxy, where
the surface mass density is so low that the chemical composition and mass fraction in gas
change very slowly over a Hubble time. Its properties are similar to those of the damped
Lyman -a absorption systems seen in the spectra of high redshift quasars. We emphasize
that there are strong observational selection effects against finding gas -rich galaxies that
are both massive and diffuse. Finally, we suggest that large and massive HI disks may
have formed as early as z - 2, and remained quiescent to the present day.
Subject headings : individual (Malin 1) - galaxies : photometry - galaxies : Seyfert -
galaxies : stellar content - radio sources : 21 cm radiation - stars : formation
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MALIN: A Quiescent Disk Galaxy|MALIN 1: A Quiescent Disk GalaxyImpey, C. D., Bothun, G. D. 11 1900 (has links)
A study of the Galactic Center stellar population is continuing with
a sensitive 2μm CCD camera. Using a 64 x 64 detector array, background limited
images are recorded with modest amounts of observing time (tob, 20 sec to reach
K =13). Magnitudes have been extracted using DAOPHOT from repeated imaging
of the central 5' x 5' to search among approximately 1500 stars for long period
variables (LPV's, P > 200d), particularily Miras. Miras have a well defined period -
luminosity relationship as well as one in period -mass. This program investigates
the nature of highly luminous stars at the Galactic Center. Presently 12 variables
have been found and have several characteristics consistant with Miras. They have
a maximum bolometric luminosity of -4.4 mag which supports the case that high
luminosity stars in the central 6 pc are young supergiants.
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Revealing the Physics of Multiphase Galactic Winds Through Massively-Parallel Hydrodynamics SimulationsSchneider, Evan Elizabeth, Schneider, Evan Elizabeth January 2017 (has links)
This thesis documents the hydrodynamics code Cholla and a numerical study of multiphase galactic winds. Cholla is a massively-parallel, GPU-based code designed for astrophysical simulations that is freely available to the astrophysics community. A static-mesh Eulerian code, Cholla is ideally suited to carrying out massive simulations (> 2048 ³ cells) that require very high resolution. The code incorporates state-of-the-art hydrodynamics algorithms including third-order spatial reconstruction, exact and linearized Riemann solvers, and unsplit integration algorithms that account for transverse fluxes on multidimensional grids. Operator-split radiative cooling and a dual-energy formalism for high mach number flows are also included. An extensive test suite demonstrates Cholla's superior ability to model shocks and discontinuities, while the GPU-native design makes the code extremely computationally efficient - speeds of 5-10 million cell updates per GPU-second are typical on current hardware for 3D simulations with all of the aforementioned physics.
The latter half of this work comprises a comprehensive study of the mixing between a hot, supernova-driven wind and cooler clouds representative of those observed in multiphase galactic winds. Both adiabatic and radiatively-cooling clouds are investigated. The analytic theory of cloud-crushing is applied to the problem, and adiabatic turbulent clouds are found to be mixed with the hot wind on similar timescales as the classic spherical case (4-5 t_cc) with an appropriate rescaling of the cloud-crushing time. Radiatively cooling clouds survive considerably longer, and the differences in evolution between turbulent and spherical clouds cannot be reconciled with a simple rescaling. The rapid incorporation of low-density material into the hot wind implies efficient mass-loading of hot phases of galactic winds. At the same time, the extreme compression of high-density cloud material leads to long-lived but slow-moving clumps that are unlikely to escape the galaxy.
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Inferring the 3D gravitational field of the Milky Way with stellar streamsPrice-Whelan, Adrian Michael January 2016 (has links)
We develop two new methods to measure the structure of matter around the Milky Way using stellar tidal streams from disrupting dwarf galaxies and globular clusters. The dark matter halo of the Milky Way is expected to be triaxial and filled with substructure, but measurements of the shape and profile of dark matter around the Galaxy are highly uncertain and often contradictory. We demonstrate that kinematic data from near-future surveys for stellar streams or shells produced by tidal disruption of stellar systems around the Milky Way will provide precise measures of the gravitational potential to test these predictions. We develop a probabilistic method for inferring the Galactic potential with tidal streams based on the idea that the stream stars were once close in phase space and test this method on synthetic datasets generated from N-body simulations of satellite disruption with observational uncertainties chosen to mimic current and near-future surveys of various stars. We find that with just four well-measured stream stars, we can infer properties of a triaxial potential with precisions of order 5--7 percent. We then demonstrate that, if the Milky Way's dark matter halo is triaxial and is not fully integrable (as is expected), an appreciable fraction of orbits will be chaotic. We examine the influence of chaos on the phase-space morphology of cold tidal streams and show that streams even in weakly chaotic regions look very different from those in regular regions. We discuss the implications of this fact given that we see several long, thin streams in the Galactic halo; our results suggest that long, cold streams around our Galaxy must exist only on regular (or very nearly regular) orbits and potentially provide a map of the regular regions of the Milky Way potential. We then apply this understanding of stream formation along chaotic orbits to the interpretation of a newly-discovered, puzzling stellar stream near the Galactic bulge. We conclude that the morphology of this stream is consistent with forming along chaotic orbits due to the presence of the time-dependent Galactic bar. These results are encouraging for the eventual goal of using flexible, time-dependent potential models combined with larger data sets to unravel the detailed shape of the dark matter distribution around the Milky Way.
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Observationally Constrained Metal Signatures of Galaxy Evolution in the Stars and Gas of Cosmological SimulationsCorlies, Lauren Nicole January 2016 (has links)
The halos of galaxies - consisting of gas, stars, and satellite galaxies - are formed and shaped by the most fundamental processes: hierarchical merging and the flow of gas into and out of galaxies. While these processes are hard to disentangle, metals are tied to the gas that fuels star formation and entrained in the wind that the deaths of these stars generate. As such, they can act as important indicators of the star formation, the chemical enrichment, and the outflow histories of galaxies. Thus, this thesis aims to take advantage of such metal signatures in the stars and gas to place observational constraints on current theories of galaxy evolution as implemented in cosmological simulations.
The first two chapters consider the metallicities of stars in the stellar halo of the Milky Way and its surviving satellite dwarf galaxies. Chapter 2 pairs an N-body simulation with a semi-analytic model for supernova-driven winds to examine the early environment of a Milky Way-like galaxy. At z=10, progenitors of surviving z=0 satellite galaxies are found to sit preferentially on the outskirts of progenitor halos of the eventual main halo. The consequence of these positions is that main halo progenitors are found to more effectively cross-pollute each other than satellite progenitors. Thus, inhomogeneous cross-pollution as a result of different high-z spatial locations of different progenitors can help to explain observed differences in abundance patterns measured today. Chapter 3 expands this work into the analysis of a cosmological, hydrodynamical simulation of dwarf galaxies in the early universe. We find that simple assumptions for modeling the extent of supernova-driven winds used in Chapter 2 agree well with the simulation whereas the presence of inhomogeneous mixing in the simulation has a large effect on the stellar metallicities. Furthermore, the star-forming halos show both bursty and continuous SFHs, two scenarios proposed by stellar metallicity data. However, the metallicity distribution functions of the simulated halos are both too metal rich and too peaked when compared to the data. This comparison reveals that a complex SFH and a broad metallicity distribution can develop rapidly in the early Universe.
The third chapter moves to the present day with a consideration of the circumgalactic medium (CGM) around nearby Milky Way-like galaxies. We compare a cosmological simulation of a Milky Way-like galaxy to recent absorption line data and find that a reduced extragalactic ultraviolet background brings the column density predictions into better agreement with the data. Similarly, when the observationally derived physical properties of the gas are compared to the simulation, we find that the simulation gas is always at temperatures approximately 0.5 dex higher. Thus, similar column densities can be produced from fundamentally different gas. Metal-line emission is then considered as a complementary approach to studying the CGM. From the simulations, we find that the brightest emission is less sensitive to the extragalactic background and that it closely follows the fundamental filamentary structure of the halo. This becomes increasingly true as the galaxy evolves from z = 1 to z = 0 and the majority of the gas transitions to a hotter, more diffuse phase. Finally, resolution is a limiting factor for the conclusions we can draw from emission observations but with moderate resolution and reasonable detection limits, upcoming instrumentation should place constraints on the physical properties of the CGM.
Future work advancing the techniques in this thesis remain promising for putting new observational constraints on our theories of galaxy evolution.
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AGN Feedback in Cool-Core Galaxy ClustersLi, Yuan January 2014 (has links)
Solving the cooling flow problem in cool-core galaxy clusters is critical to under- standing the largest structures in the universe. In addition, cool-core systems are the only places where we have observed direct evidence of AGN feedback, and thus provide the unique opportunity to test models of AGN feedback and various other physical processes.
In this thesis we study the influence of momentum-driven AGN feedback on cool-core clusters using high-resolution adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) simulations. We find that run-away cooling first happens only in the central 50 pc region while no local instability develops outside the very center of the cluster. The gas is accreted onto the super-massive black hole (SMBH) which powers AGN jets at an increasing rate as the entropy continues to decrease in the core. The ICM first cools into clumps along the propagation direction of the AGN jets due to the non-linear perturbation. As the jet power increases, gas condensation occurs isotropically, forming spatially extended (up to a few tens kpc) structures that resemble the observed Hα filaments in Perseus and many other cool-core cluster. Jet heating elevates the gas entropy and cooling time, halting clump formation. The cold gas that is not accreted onto the SMBH settles into a rotating disk. In the last few Gyr, the ICM cools onto the disk directly while the innermost region of the disk continues to accrete onto the SMBH, powering the AGN jets to achieve a thermal balance.
The mass cooling rate averaged over 7 Gyr is &sim 30 solarmass/yr, an order of magnitude lower than the classic cooling flow value (which we obtain in runs without the AGN). Owing to its self-regulating mechanism, AGN feedback can successfully balance cooling with a wide range of model parameters. Besides suppressing cooling, our model produces cold structures in early stages (up to &sim 2 Gyr) that are in good agreement with the observations. However, the long-lived massive cold disk is unrealistic, suggesting that additional physical processes are still needed. Our recent investigation shows that star formation may play an important role.
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Influence of sky conditions on carbon dioxide uptake by forestsDengel, Sigrid January 2009 (has links)
Sky conditions play an important role in the Earth’s climate system, altering the solar radiation reaching the Earth’s surface and determining the fraction of incoming direct and diffuse radiation. Sky conditions dictate the radiation distribution inside plant canopies and also the carbon dioxide uptake by forests during the growing season. On the long term these diffuse conditions may have a positive influence on forest growth in Northern Britain during the last 50 years. We compared the quantity (amount) and quality (spectral distribution) of direct and diffuse radiation above, inside and below a forest stand under sunny, cloudy and overcast conditions in a thinned Sitka spruce [Picea sitchensis (Bong.) Carr.] forest (28 years, with an leaf area index (LAI) of around 5 m2m-2). Similar radiation properties (sky conditions) were used for analysis of light response and canopy conductance measurements in the same and also in a different spruce forest of the same species (33 years, LAI of around 7 m2 m-2) over the growing season 2008 in order to compare canopy activity under these conditions. In order to integrate short-term and longterm studies, we were looking at how far these conditions are influencing forest growth over several decades. To do so, we used freshly cut tree discs of Sitka spruce from a felled forest (planting year 1953) in southern Scotland and solar direct and diffuse radiation along with other meteorological data from the nearest meteorological station. Our analysis show that the amount and quality of solar radiation is distributed differently inside forest stands under various sky conditions, leading to an enhanced carbon dioxide uptake and canopy stomatal activity under diffuse cloudy and overcast conditions. Furthermore we demonstrated which factors have influenced diffuse radiation distribution over the past 50 years and how these are correlated with forest growth in southern Scotland.
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Kinematics and evolution of massive star formation in the central molecular zone of the galactic centerButterfield, Natalie 01 August 2018 (has links)
The environmental conditions in the center of the Milky Way galaxy (Central Molecular Zone; CMZ) are much more extreme than in the disk of the galaxy with molecular gas properties similar to those seen in galaxies at z~2. While the CMZ hosts several massive star clusters, the formation of stars from these dense molecular clouds and the feedback of these massive stars on the ISM is not well understood. I present in my thesis a case study of a few regions in the CMZ using VLA continuum and spectral line observations. I explore feedback eects of recent star formation (a young massive stellar cluster) on the surrounding ISM (molecular and ionized gas). Using the kinematic information of molecular and ionized gas, obtained dierent species of spectral lines, I will determine the line of sight geometry of the dierent gas components. I will then establish the relationship of these components to the larger structure of molecular gas in the CMZ.
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Chemistry and Radiative Feedback of Early Galaxies: Seeding the First Supermassive Black HolesWolcott-Green, Jemma Rose January 2019 (has links)
The abundance of molecular hydrogen (H2), the primary coolant in primordial gas, is critical for the thermodynamic evolution and star–formation histories in early protogalaxies. Suppression of H2–cooling in early protogalaxies can occur via photodissociation of H2 (by ultraviolet Lyman–Werner [LW] photons) or by photodetachment of H−, a precursor in H2 formation (by infrared [IR] photons). It is widely believed that the formation of the first massive black hole “seeds,” with masses 104−6 M⊙, in primordial halos may be enabled if H2–cooling is suppressed.
We study the radiative feedback processes that suppress H2–cooling in primordial proto- galaxies. Previous studies have typically adopted idealized spectra, with a blackbody or a power–law shape, in modeling the chemistry of metal–free protogalaxies, and utilized a single parameter, the critical UV flux, or Jcrit, to determine whether H2–cooling is prevented. This can be misleading, as independent of the spectral shape, there is a a critical curve in the (kLW,kH−) plane, where kLW and kH− are the H2–dissociation rates by LW and IR photons, which determines whether a protogalaxy can cool below ∼ 1000 Kelvin. In Chapter 1, we use a one–zone model to follow the chemical and thermal evolution of gravitationally collapsing protogalactic gas, to compute this critical curve, and provide an accurate analytical fit for it. We improve on previous works by considering a variety of more realistic Pop III or Pop II-type spectra from population synthesis models and perform fully frequency–dependent calculations of the H2–photodissociation rates for each spectrum. We compute the ratio kLW/kH− for each spectrum, as well as the minimum stellar mass M∗, for various IMFs and metallicities, required to prevent cooling in a neighboring halo a distance d away. We provide critical M∗/d2 values for suppression of H2–cooling, with analytic fits, which can be used in future studies.
Determining the photodissociation rate of H2 by an incident LW flux is crucial, but prohibitively expensive to calculate on the fly in simulations. The rate is sensitive to the H2 rovibrational distribution, which in turn depends on the gas density, temperature, and incident LW radiation field. In Chapter 2, we use the publicly available cloudy package to model primordial gas clouds and compare exact photodissociation rate calculations to commonly–used fitting formulae. We find the fit from Wolcott-Green et al. (2011) is most accurate for moderate densities n ∼ 103cm−3 and temperatures, T ∼ 103K, and we provide a new fit, which captures the increase in the rate at higher densities and temperatures, owing to the increased excited rovibrational populations in this regime. Our new fit has typical errors of a few percent percent up to n ≤ 107 cm−3, T ≤ 8000K, and H2 column density NH2 ≤ 1017 cm−2, and can be easily utilized in simulations. We also show that pumping of the excited rovibrational states of H2 by a strong LW flux further modifies the level populations when the gas density is low, and noticeably decreases self-shielding for J21 > 103 and n < 102cm−3. This may lower the “critical flux” at which primordial gas remains H2–poor in some protogalaxies, enabling massive black hole seed formation.
In Chapter 3, we study the thermal evolution of UV–irradiated atomic cooling halos using high–resolution three–dimensional hydrodynamic simulations. We consider the effect of H− photodetachment by Lyα cooling radiation in the optically–thick cores of three such halos, a process which has not been included in previous simulations. H− is a precursor of molecular hydrogen, and therefore, its destruction can diminish the H2 abundance and cooling. We find that the critical UV flux for suppressing H2–cooling is decreased by up to a factor of a few when H− photodetachment by Lyα is included. In a more conservative estimate of the trapped Lyα energy density, we find the critical flux is decreased by ∼ 15 − 50 per cent. Our results suggest that Lyα radiation may have an important effect on the thermal evolution of UV–irradiated halos, and therefore on the potential for massive black hole formation.
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