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Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA)

Thu, 22 Jun 2023

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1.Investigating the Correlation of Outflow Kinematics with Radio Activity. Gas Outflows in AGNs. VII

Authors:Ashraf Ayubinia, Jong-Hak Woo, Suvendu Rakshit, Donghoon Son

Abstract: We explore the relationship between the ionized gas outflows and radio activity using a sample of $\sim$ 6000 AGNs at z < 0.4 with the kinematical measurement based on the [O III] line profile and the radio detection in the VLA FIRST Survey. To quantify radio activity, we divide our sample into a series of binary subclasses based on the radio properties, i.e., radio-luminous/radio-weak, AGN-dominated/star-formation-contaminated, compact/extended, and radio-loud/radio-quiet. None of the binary subclasses exhibits a significant difference in the normalized [O III] velocity dispersion at a given [O III] luminosity once we correct for the influence of the host galaxy gravitational potential. We only detect a significant difference of [O III] kinematics between high and low radio-Eddington ratio (L$_{1.4 GHz}$/L$_{Edd}$) AGNs. In contrast, we find a remarkable difference in ionized gas kinematics between high and low bolometric-Eddington ratio AGNs. These results suggest that accretion rate is the primary mechanism in driving ionized gas outflows, while radio activity may play a secondary role providing additional influence on gas kinematics

2.ViCTORIA project: MeerKAT HI observations of the ram pressure stripped galaxy NGC 4523

Authors:A. Boselli, P. Serra, F. de Gasperin, B. Vollmer, P. Amram, H. W. Edler, M. Fossati, G. Consolandi, P. Cote, J. C. Cuillandre, L. Ferrarese, S. Gwyn, J. Postma, M. Boquien, J. Braine, F. Combes, G. Gavazzi, G. Hensler, M. A. Miville-Deschenes, M. Murgia, J. Roediger, Y. Roehlly, R. Smith, H. X. Zhang, N. Zabel

Abstract: We present the first results of a 21 cm HI line pilot observation carried out with MeerKAT in preparation for the ViCTORIA project, an untargeted survey of the Virgo galaxy cluster. The extraordinary quality of the data in terms of sensitivity and angular resolution (rms~0.65 mJy beam^-1 at ~27"x39" and 11 km/s resolution) allowed us to detect an extended (~10 kpc projected length) low column density (N(HI) < 2.5x10^20 cm^-2) HI gas tail associated with the dwarf irregular galaxy NGC4523 at the northern edge of the cluster. The morphology of the tail and of the stellar disc suggest that the galaxy is suffering a hydrodynamic interaction with the surrounding hot intracluster medium (ICM; ram pressure stripping). The orientation of the trailing tail, the gradient in the HI gas column density at the interface between the cold ISM and the hot ICM, the velocity of the galaxy with respect to that of the cluster, and its position indicate that NGC4523 is infalling for the first time into Virgo from the NNW background of the cluster. Using a grid of hydrodynamic simulations we derive the impact parameters with the surrounding ICM, and estimate that the galaxy will be at pericentre (D~500-600 kpc) in ~1 Gyr, where ram pressure stripping will be able to remove most, if not all, of its gas. The galaxy is located on the star formation main sequence when its star formation rate is derived using Halpha images obtained during the VESTIGE survey, suggesting that NGC4523 is only at the beginning of its interaction with the surrounding environment. A few HII regions are detected in the Halpha images within the HI gas tail outside the stellar disc. Their ages, derived by comparing their Halpha, FUV, NUV, and optical colours with the predictions of SED fitting models, are <30 Myr, and suggest that these HII regions have formed within the stripped gas.

3.Similar levels of deuteration in the pre-stellar core L1544 and the protostellar core HH211

Authors:K. Giers, S. Spezzano, P. Caselli, E. Wirström, O. Sipilä, J. E. Pineda, E. Redaelli, C. T. Bop, F. Lique

Abstract: In the centre of pre-stellar cores, deuterium fractionation is enhanced due to the low temperatures and high densities. Therefore, the chemistry of deuterated molecules can be used to study the earliest stages of star formation. We analyse the deuterium fractionation of simple molecules, comparing the level of deuteration in the envelopes of the pre-stellar core L1544 in Taurus and the protostellar core HH211 in Perseus. We used single-dish observations of CCH, HCN, HNC, HCO$^+$, and their $^{13}$C-, $^{18}$O- and D-bearing isotopologues, detected with the Onsala 20m telescope. We derived the column densities and the deuterium fractions of the molecules. Additionally, we used radiative transfer simulations and results from chemical modelling to reproduce the observed molecular lines. We used new collisional rate coefficients for HNC, HN$^{13}$C, DNC, and DCN that consider the hyperfine structure of these molecules. We find high levels of deuteration for CCH (10%) in both sources, consistent with other carbon chains, and moderate levels for HCN (5-7%) and HNC (8%). The deuterium fraction of HCO$^+$ is enhanced towards HH211, most likely caused by isotope-selective photodissociation of C$^{18}$O. Similar levels of deuteration show that the process is likely equally efficient towards both cores, suggesting that the protostellar envelope still retains the chemical composition of the original pre-stellar core. The fact that the two cores are embedded in different molecular clouds also suggests that environmental conditions do not have a significant effect on the deuteration within dense cores. Radiative transfer modelling shows that it is necessary to include the outer layers of the cores to consider the effects of extended structures. Besides HCO$^+$ observations, HCN observations towards L1544 also require the presence of an outer diffuse layer where the molecules are relatively abundant.

4.Fantastic Fits with fantasy of Active Galactic Nuclei Spectra -- Exploring the Fe II emission near the H$α$ line

Authors:Dragana Ilic, Nemanja Rakic, Luka C. Popovic

Abstract: In this study, a refined approach for multicomponent fitting of active galactic nuclei (AGN) spectra is presented utilizing the newly developed Python code $fantasy$ (fully automated python tool for AGN spectra analysis). AGN spectra are modeled by simultaneously considering the underlying broken power-law continuum, predefined emission line lists, and an Fe II model, which is here extended to cover the wavelength range 3700 - 11000 A. The Fe II model, founded solely on atomic data, effectively describes the extensive emission of the complex iron ion in the vicinity of the H$\gamma$ and H$\beta$ lines, as well as near the H$\alpha$ line, which was previously rarely studied. The proposed spectral fitting approach is tested on a sample of high-quality AGN spectra from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 17. The results indicate that when Fe II emission is present near H$\beta$, it is also detected redward from H$\alpha$, potentially contaminating the broad H$\alpha$ line wings and thus affecting the measurements of its flux and width. The production of Fe II emission is found to be strongly correlated with Eddington luminosity and appears to be controlled by the similar mechanism as the hydrogen Balmer lines. The study highlights the benefits of fitting AGN type 1 spectra with the $fantasy$ code, pointing that it may be used as a robust tool for analyzing a large number of AGN spectra in the coming spectral surveys.

5.An Enhanced Massive Black Hole Occupation Fraction Predicted in Cluster Dwarf Galaxies

Authors:Michael Tremmel, Angelo Ricarte, Priyamvada Natarajan, Jillian Bellovary, Ramon Sharma, Thomas R. Quinn

Abstract: The occupation fraction of massive black holes (MBHs) in low mass galaxies offers interesting insights into initial black hole seeding mechanisms and their mass assembly history, though disentangling these two effects remains challenging. Using the Romulus cosmological simulations we examine the impact of environment on the occupation fraction of MBHs in low mass galaxies. Unlike most modern cosmological simulations, Romulus seeds MBHs based on local gas properties, selecting very dense, pristine, and rapidly collapsing regions in the early Universe as sites to host MBHs without assuming anything about MBH occupation as a function of galaxy stellar mass, or halo mass, a priori. The simulations predict that dwarf galaxies with M$_{\star}<10^9$ M$_{\odot}$ in cluster environments are approximately two times more likely to host a MBH compared to those in the field. The predicted occupation fractions are remarkably consistent with those of nuclear star clusters. Across cluster and field environments, dwarf galaxies with earlier formation times are more likely to host a MBH. Thus, while the MBH occupation function is similar between cluster and field environments at high redshift ($z>3$), a difference arises as late-forming dwarfs -- which do not exist in the cluster environment -- begin to dominate in the field and pull the MBH occupation fraction down for low mass galaxies. Additionally, prior to in-fall some cluster dwarfs are similar to progenitors of massive, isolated galaxies, indicating that they might have grown to higher masses had they not been impeded by the cluster environment. While the population of MBHs in dwarf galaxies is already widely understood to be important for understanding MBH formation, this work demonstrates that environmental dependence is important to consider as future observations search for low mass black holes in dwarf galaxies.

6.The Galactic Extinction Horizon with Present and Future Surveys

Authors:Dante Minniti

Abstract: We have made a lot of progress in the study of the MW. In spite of this, much of our Galaxy remains unknown, and amazing breakthroughs await to be made in the exploration of the far side of the Galaxy. Focussing on the Galactic extinction horizon problem with current surveys like the Two Micron All-Sky Survey (2MASS) and the Vista Variables in the Via Lactea Survey (VVV) and its extension VVVX, the extinction horizon is a fundamental difficulty, and it is my intention here to reveal how profound is our ignorance, and also to try to suggest ways for improvement with future near-IR Galactic surveys.

7.Mapping non-axisymmetric velocity fields of external galaxies

Authors:Francesco Sylos Labini, Matteo Straccamore, Giordano De Marzo, Sébastien Comeròn

Abstract: Disk galaxies are typically in a stable configuration where matter moves in almost closed circular orbits. However, non-circular motions caused by distortions, warps, lopsidedness, or satellite interactions are common and leave distinct signatures on galaxy velocity maps. We develop an algorithm that uses an ordinary least square method for fitting a non-axisymmetric model to the observed two-dimensional line-of-sight velocity map of an external galaxy, which allows for anisotropic non-circular motions. The method approximates a galaxy as a flat disk, which is an appropriate assumption for spiral galaxies within the optical radius where warps are rare. In the outer parts of HI distributions, which may extend well into the warp region, we use this method in combination with a standard rotating tilted ring model to constrain the range of radii where the flat disk assumption can be conservatively considered valid. Within this range, the transversal and radial velocity profiles, averaged in rings, can be directly reconstructed from the velocity map. The novelty of the algorithm consists in using arc segments in addition to rings: in this way spatial velocity anisotropies can be measured in both components, allowing for the reconstruction of angularly resolved coarse-grained two-dimensional velocity maps. We applied this algorithm to 25 disk galaxies from the THINGS sample for which we can provide 2D maps of both velocity components.

8.Deficit of Hot Dust in Low-redshift Active Galactic Nuclei

Authors:Suyeon Son, Minjin Kim, Luis C. Ho

Abstract: We assemble a broad-band spectral energy distribution (SED) ranging from optical to mid-infrared of nearby active galactic nuclei at $z < 0.4$. SED fitting analysis is performed using semi-empirical templates derived from Palomar-Green quasars to classify the sample into normal, warm-dust-deficient (WDD), and hot-dust-deficient (HDD) AGNs. Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests reveal that HDD AGNs exhibit, on average higher AGN luminosity than normal and WDD AGNs. HDD fraction, on the other hand, is only weakly correlated with black hole mass and inversely correlated with Eddington ratio. By fixing the other parameters, we conclude that the HDD fraction is primarily connected with the AGN luminosity. It implies that there is a causal connection between the covering factor of the hot dust component and AGN luminosity, possibly due to the sublimation of the innermost dust or the thickening of the intervening gas in the broad-line region. Analysis of the outflow properties traced by the wing of [O III]$\lambda5007$ suggests that outflows may be related to the formation and maintenance of the hot dust component. Finally, we demonstrate through comparison with previous studies that the classification of HDD AGNs requires careful subtraction of the host galaxy light.

9.Star cluster formation and feedback in different environments of a Milky Way-like galaxy

Authors:Ahmad A. Ali, Clare L. Dobbs, Thomas J. R. Bending, Anne S. M. Buckner, Alex R. Pettitt

Abstract: It remains unclear how galactic environment affects star formation and stellar cluster properties. This is difficult to address in Milky Way-mass galaxy simulations because of limited resolution and less accurate feedback compared to cloud-scale models. We carry out zoom-in simulations to re-simulate 100-300 pc regions of a Milky Way-like galaxy using smoothed particle hydrodynamics, including finer resolution (0.4 Msun per particle), cluster-sink particles, ray-traced photoionization from O stars, H$_2$/CO chemistry, and ISM heating/cooling. We select $10^6$ Msun cloud complexes from a galactic bar, inner spiral arm, outer arm, and inter-arm region (in order of galactocentric radius), retaining the original galactic potentials. The surface densities of star formation rate and neutral gas follow $\Sigma_{SFR} \propto \Sigma_{gas}^{1.3}$, with the bar lying higher up the relation than the other regions. However, the inter-arm region forms stars 2-3x less efficiently than the arm models at the same $\Sigma_{gas}$. The bar produces the most massive cluster, the inner arm the second, and the inter-arm the third. Almost all clusters in the bar and inner arm are small (radii < 5 pc), while 30-50 per cent of clusters in the outer arm and inter-arm have larger radii more like associations. Bar and inner arm clusters rotate at least twice as fast, on average, than clusters in the outer arm and inter-arm regions. The degree of spatial clustering also decreases from bar to inter-arm. Our results indicate that young massive clusters, potentially progenitors of globular clusters, may preferentially form near the bar/inner arm compared to outer arm/inter-arm regions.

10.Shock cooling of a red-supergiant supernova at redshift 3 in lensed images

Authors:Wenlei Chen, Patrick L. Kelly, Masamune Oguri, Thomas J. Broadhurst, Jose M. Diego, Najmeh Emami, Alexei V. Filippenko, Tommaso L. Treu, Adi Zitrin

Abstract: The core-collapse supernova of a massive star rapidly brightens when a shock, produced following the collapse of its core, reaches the stellar surface. As the shock-heated star subsequently expands and cools, its early-time light curve should have a simple dependence on the progenitor's size and therefore final evolutionary state. Measurements of the progenitor's radius from early light curves exist for only a small sample of nearby supernovae, and almost all lack constraining ultraviolet observations within a day of explosion. The several-day time delays and magnifying ability of galaxy-scale gravitational lenses, however, should provide a powerful tool for measuring the early light curves of distant supernovae, and thereby studying massive stellar populations at high redshift. Here we analyse individual rest-frame ultraviolet-through-optical exposures taken with the Hubble Space Telescope that simultaneously capture, in three separate gravitationally lensed images, the early phases of a supernova at redshift $z \approx 3$ beginning within $5.8\pm 3.1$ hr of explosion. The supernova, seen at a lookback time of $\sim11.5$ billion years, is strongly lensed by an early-type galaxy in the Abell 370 cluster. We constrain the pre-explosion radius to be $533^{+154}_{-119}$ solar radii, consistent with a red supergiant. Highly confined and massive circumstellar material at the same radius can also reproduce the light curve, but is unlikely since no similar low-redshift examples are known.

11.Spatially Resolved Kinematics of Extraplanar Diffuse Ionized Gas in NGC$\,$3511 and NGC$\,$3513

Authors:Hanjue Zhu, Erin Boettcher, Hsiao-Wen Chen

Abstract: Gaseous, disk-halo interfaces are shaped by physical processes that are critical to disk galaxy evolution, including gas accretion and galactic outflows. However, observations indicate that extraplanar diffuse ionized gas (eDIG) layers have scale heights several times higher than their thermal scale heights. This discrepancy poses a challenge to our current understanding of the disk-halo interface. In this paper, we present a spatially-resolved case study of the eDIG layers in a nearby pair of sub-$L_*$ disk galaxies NGC$\,$3511/3513 using long-slit spectroscopy. We decompose optical nebular lines from the warm interstellar medium and disk-halo interfaces into narrow and broad velocity components. We show that in NGC$\,$3511, the broad component has three distinctive characteristics in comparison to the narrow component: (1) elevated [NII]$\lambda 6583/H\alpha$ and [SII]$\lambda 6716/H\alpha$ line ratios, (2) significantly higher velocity dispersions (a median $\langle\sigma\rangle_{\text{Broad}} = 24\,$km/s compared to $\langle\sigma\rangle_{\text{Narrow}} = 13\,$km/s), and (3) a rotational velocity lag. Together, these characteristics support an origin in an extraplanar, thick gaseous disk. In NGC$\,$3513, the broad component is consistent with localized outflows making their way out of the galactic disk. Our findings demonstrate that gas circulation at the disk-halo interface is present in both galaxies. Additionally, we test a dynamic equilibrium model with pressure support supplied by thermal and turbulent motions. Based on measurements of the eDIG velocity dispersion in NGC$\,$3511, we demonstrate that turbulent motions increase the scale height by at least a factor of a few above the thermal scale height, with $h_{z} \gtrsim 0.2 - 0.4$ kpc at $R = 3 - 5$ kpc. This highlights the importance of turbulent motions to the vertical structure of the gaseous, disk-halo interface.

12.Magellanic System Stars Identified in the SMACS J0723.3-7327 JWST ERO Images

Authors:Jake Summers, Rogier A. Windhorst, Seth H. Cohen, Rolf A. Jansen, Timothy Carleton, Patrick S. Kamieneski, Benne W. Holwerda, Christopher J. Conselice, Nathan J. Adams, Brenda Frye, Jose M. Diego, Christopher N. A. Willmer, Rafael Ortiz III, Cheng Cheng, Alex Pigarelli, Aaron Robotham, Jordan C. J. D'Silva, Scott Tompkins, Simon P. Driver, Haojing Yan, Dan Coe, Norman Grogin, Anton Koekemoer, Madeline A. Marshall, Nor Pirzkal, Russell E. Ryan Jr

Abstract: We identify 68 distant stars in JWST/NIRCam ERO images of the field of galaxy cluster SMACS J0723.3-7327 (SMACS 0723). Given the relatively small ($\sim$$10^{\circ}$) angular separation between SMACS 0723 and the Large Magellanic Cloud, it is likely that these stars are associated with the LMC outskirts or Leading Arm. This is further bolstered by a spectral energy distribution analysis, which suggests an excess of stars at a physical distance of $40-100$ kpc, consistent with being associated with or located behind the Magellanic system. In particular, we find that the overall surface density of stars brighter than 27.0 mag in the field of SMACS 0723 is $\sim$2.3 times that of stars in a blank field with similar galactic latitude (the North Ecliptic Pole Time Domain Field), and that the density of stars in the SMACS 0723 field with SED-derived distances consistent with the Magellanic system is $\sim$7.3 times larger than that of the blank field. The candidate stars at these distances are consistent with a stellar population at the same distance modulus with [Fe/H] $= -1.0$ and an age of $\sim$$5.0$ Gyr. On the assumption that all of the 68 stars are associated with the LMC, then the stellar density of the LMC at the location of the SMACS 0723 field is $\sim$$710$ stars kpc$^{-3}$, which helps trace the density of stars in the LMC outskirts.