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Black Hole

Lensing of space time around a black hole. At Oxford we study black holes observationally and theoretically on all size and time scales - it is some of our core work.

Credit: ALAIN RIAZUELO, IAP/UPMC/CNRS. CLICK HERE TO VIEW MORE IMAGES.

Adrianne Slyz

Professor of Astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Beecroft Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology
Adrianne.Slyz@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)83013
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 555D
  • About
  • Publications

Dark matter within high surface brightness spiral galaxies

Astrophysical Journal 586:1 I (2003) 143-151

Authors:

T Kranz, A Slyz, HW Rix

Abstract:

We present results from a detailed dynamical analysis of five high surface brightness, late-type spiral galaxies, NGC 3810, NGC 3893, NGC 4254, NGC 5676, and NGC 6643, which were studied with the aim of quantifying the luminous-to-dark matter ratio inside their optical radii. The galaxies' stellar light distribution and gas kinematics have been observed and compared to hydrodynamic gas simulations that predict the gasdynamics arising in response to empirical gravitational potentials, which are combinations of differing stellar disk and dark halo contributions. The gravitational potential of the stellar disk was derived from near-infrared photometry, color corrected to yield a constant stellar mass-to-light ratio (M/L); for the dark halo, the mass density distribution of an axisymmetric isothermal sphere with a core was chosen. Hydrodynamic gas simulations were performed for each galaxy for a sequence of five different mass fractions of the stellar disk and for a wide range of spiral pattern speeds. These two parameters mainly determine the modeled gas distribution and kinematics. The agreement between the simulated and observed gas kinematics permitted us to conclude that the galaxies with the highest rotation velocities tend to possess very massive stellar disks that dominate the gasdynamics within the optical radius. In less massive galaxies, with a maximal rotation velocity of less than 200 km s-1, the mass of the dark halo at least equals the stellar mass within 2-3 disk scale lengths. The maximal disk stellar mass-to-light ratio in the K band was found to lie at about M/LK ≈ 0.6. Furthermore, the gasdynamic simulations provide a powerful tool for accurately determining the dominant spiral pattern speed for galaxies, independent of a specific density wave theory. It was found that the location of the corotation resonance falls into a narrow range of around three exponential disk scale lengths for all galaxies from the sample. The corotation resonance encloses the strong part of the stellar spiral in all cases. Based on the experience gained from this project, the use of a color correction to account for local stellar population differences is strongly encouraged when properties of galactic disks are studied that rely on their stellar mass distributions.
More details from the publisher

Dark matter within high surface brightness spiral galaxies

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL 586:1 (2003) 143-151

Authors:

T Kranz, A Slyz, HW Rix
More details from the publisher

Star Formation in a Multi-Phase Interstellar Medium

Chapter in The Evolution of Galaxies, Springer Nature (2003) 539-542

Authors:

Adrianne Slyz, Julien Devriendt, Greg Bryan, Joseph Silk
More details from the publisher

Dark matter within high surface brightness spiral galaxies

ArXiv astro-ph/0212290 (2002)

Authors:

Thilo Kranz, Adrianne Slyz, Hans-Walter Rix

Abstract:

We present results from a detailed dynamical analysis of five high surface brightness, late type spirals, studied with the aim to quantify the luminous-to-dark matter ratio inside their optical radii. The galaxies' stellar light distribution and gas kinematics have been observed and compared to hydrodynamic gas simulations, which predict the 2D gas dynamics arising in response to empirical gravitational potentials, which are combinations of differing stellar disk and dark halo contributions. The gravitational potential of the stellar disk was derived from near-infrared photometry, color-corrected to constant (M/L); the dark halo was modelled by an isothermal sphere with a core. Hydrodynamic gas simulations were performed for each galaxy for a sequence of five different mass fractions of the stellar disk and for a wide range of spiral pattern speeds. These two parameters mainly determine the modelled gas distribution and kinematics. The agreement between the non-axisymmetric part of the simulated and observed gas kinematics permitted us to conclude that the galaxies with the highest rotation velocities tend to possess near-maximal stellar disks. In less massive galaxies, with v_max<200 km/s, the mass of the dark halo at least equals the stellar mass within 2-3 R_disk. The simulated gas morphology provides a powerful tool to determine the dominant spiral pattern speed. The corotation radius for all galaxies was found to be constant at R_corotation ~ 3 R_disk and encloses the strong part of the stellar spiral in all cases.
Details from ArXiV
More details from the publisher

Dark matter within high surface brightness spiral galaxies

(2002)

Authors:

Thilo Kranz, Adrianne Slyz, Hans-Walter Rix
More details from the publisher

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