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Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)
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Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Jan 23, 2016

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Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again). Changing Paradigms of Galaxy Formation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve…..

(ARAA again)

Page 2: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Changing Paradigms of Galaxy FormationChanging Paradigms of Galaxy Formation

• Classical (1963-1985): galaxies evolve in isolation present-day properties governed by SF history ellipticals: prompt conversion of gas starsspirals: gradual consumption of gas, continuous SF

• Dark matter-based (1985-): g. instability governs merging of DM haloslow mass halos collapse first (bottom up formation)mergers transform morphologies (ellipticals form late)dense environments evolve faster (clusters older than field)

• Importance of feedback and other processes (1995-) evolution of morphology-density relation environment

assembly history as a function of mass downsizing

Page 3: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Hubble’s sequence: basically a run of spheroid --> disk

Split is not fundamental.

If only Hubble had Photoshop and a Bubble-jet color printer…

Page 4: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

“..describes a true order among the galaxies, not one imposed by the classifier” (Sandage 2005)

Distinguishes dynamically distinct structures: spirals & S0s – rotating stellar disks spheroids – ellipsoidal/triaxial systems with anisotropic dispersions There exist physical variables that change along the sequence:

* gas content/integrated color ratio of current to past average star formation rate* inner structures bulge/disk ratio

Hubble’s Morphological SequenceHubble’s Morphological Sequence

Page 5: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Monolithic CollapseHierarchical Assembly

How

Did

Galaxies

Form?

Nature NurtureShort course:

Page 6: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Hierarchical Hierarchical AssemblyAssembly

• DM fractionates prior to recombination (halos) which grow whilst baryons locked to radiation

• After recombination gas cools into halos which continue to merge hierarchically

• `Morphology’ is directly linked to mergers: disks form first and those that merge form ellipticals

Baugh et al MNRAS 283, 1361 (1996)

Page 7: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Numerical simulations suggest product of equal mass encounter may resemble spheroidal

• Toomre, A 1977 Yale Conference `Evolution of Galaxies’ ed. Tinsley & Larson

• Barnes & Hernquist 1996 Ap J 471, 115

Mass ratio used as the basis of defining morphological transformations in semi-analytic models

Mergers are a key feature

Page 8: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

From the 1970’s through the ‘80’s (the “dark matter-based era”) these two simple ideas formed the basis for thinking about the morphology of galaxies and where it came from:

Elliptical galaxies are merged spirals

S0 galaxies are “stripped” spirals.

Despite their popularity, it was clear through this period that these ideas really don’t work to explain basic morphology:

Problem #1 (which is enough): Most S0 galaxies (~90%) are in low-density environments -- they have never seen the inside of a cluster. Hot gas, ram pressure, harassment? -- only for the few, not the many.

Page 9: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

.

Problem #1: The stars in ellipticals are old, especially massive systems L > 4L* -- 90% of stars formed before z=2. Even when it is said that there is a young population, it’s just a “frosting” accounting for only a few percent of the stars (the ages are luminosity weighted)

Problem #2: alpha-element enhancement requires prompt star formation, then very little or nothing (type-II SN) -- see Tantalo & Chiosi 2003 MNRAS 353, 917)

Elliptical in the making? Not likely.

Page 10: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Ashman & Zepf 1992

How about this one? Maybe. Mostly, they are spheroids already.

How about this one? No way.

Page 11: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

VISUAL VERSUS AUTOMATED ALGORITHMS

Page 12: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

MORPHOLOGIES

HST breakthrough

Page 13: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Morphological Evolution: HSTMorphological Evolution: HST

z = 0 z > 1

Page 14: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Clusters of galaxies: cl0016+16 z=0.55

Smail et al. 1997

(MORPHS collaboration)

Page 15: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Dressler et al. 1999

Page 16: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)
Page 17: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

55 nearby clusters from Dressler 1980’s sample – (plot from Dressler et al. 1997)

MORPHOLOGY-DENSITY RELATION

projected surface density (log)

Fra

ctio

n of

gal

axie

s

ESpirals

S0

Page 18: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Dressler et al. 1997

Z=0

Z=0.4-0.5

RedshiftN

S0/N

E0 0.6

ESpirals

S0

Page 19: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Fasano et al. 2000

Page 20: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

MORPHOLOGIES OF DISTANT CLUSTER GALAXIES

• Lots of spirals, many disturbed (Dressler et al. 1994, Couch et al. 1994, Wirth et al. 1994, Dressler et al. 1997, Oemler et al. 1997, Couch et al. 1998. BUT, many of them are red and passive, Poggianti et al. 1999)

• Low S0 fraction in clusters at z=0.4. Already as many ellipticals as at z=0. Spirals evolving into S0s? (Dressler et al. 1997, Fasano et al. 2000, Kodama & Smail 2001)

• Capability to recognize S0s questioned (Andreon 1998,

Fabricant et al. 2000) -- “Diplomatic” evolution of early-type fraction (van Dokkum et al. 2000, Lubin et al. 0206442)

Page 21: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Lubin et al. 03

Page 22: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Desai et al. in prep.

EDisCS: Galaxy morphologies with HST

Redshift

Sp

+Ir

r %

E

+S

0 %

S0

%

E

%

0.80.0

Page 23: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Morphology-density at z~1

Postman et al. 2005projected density

f_S

p+

Irr

f

_S

0

f_

E

f_E

+S

0

Page 24: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Three paths from spiral to S0

1. Some spirals simply exhaust their gas, particularly those dominated by large spheroids (bulges). Outside triggers or intervention may not be necessary.

2. Mergers of gas-rich galaxies may lead to another spiral, but it may more likely leave an S0 after a starburst.

3. Strong interactions and accretions may speed a spiral’s evolution by stimulating star formation (exhausting the gas). Although most common in rich clusters, this kind of action probably happens in groups of galaxies -- as galaxy density increases, refueling by intergalactic gas may be cut off. Gas is heating up as the universe ages.

Page 25: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Desai et al. 2007

Morphological fractions and redshift

Page 26: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Desai et al. 2007

Page 27: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Desai et al. 2007

Morphological fractions and velocity dispersion – at high z

Page 28: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)

Morphological fractions and LX

Postman et al. 2005

S

0 %

E

%

E

+S

0 %

z = 0.8 -1.0

LX

Page 29: Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)