A statistical investigation of the mass discrepancy–acceleration relation

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 464:4 (2016) 4160-4175

Abstract:

We use the mass discrepancy–acceleration relation (the correlation between the ratio of total-to-visible mass and acceleration in galaxies; MDAR) to test the galaxy–halo connection. We analyse the MDAR using a set of 16 statistics that quantify its four most important features: shape, scatter, the presence of a ‘characteristic acceleration scale’, and the correlation of its residuals with other galaxy properties. We construct an empirical framework for the galaxy– halo connection inLCDMto generate predictions for these statistics, starting with conventional correlations (halo abundance matching;AM)and introducing more where required. Comparing to the SPARC data, we find that: (1) the approximate shape of the MDAR is readily reproduced by AM, and there is no evidence that the acceleration at which dark matter becomes negligible has less spread in the data than in AM mocks; (2) even under conservative assumptions, AM significantly overpredicts the scatter in the relation and its normalization at low acceleration, and furthermore positions dark matter too close to galaxies’ centres on average; (3) the MDAR affords 2σ evidence for an anticorrelation of galaxy size and Hubble type with halo mass or concentration at fixed stellar mass. Our analysis lays the groundwork for a bottom-up determination of the galaxy–halo connection from relations such as the MDAR, provides concrete statistical tests for specific galaxy formationmodels, and brings into sharper focus the relative evidence accorded by galaxy kinematics to LCDM and modified gravity alternatives.

Galaxy Zoo: comparing the demographics of spiral arm number and a new method for correcting redshift bias

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 461:4 (2016) 3663-3682

Authors:

RE Hart, SP Bamford, KW Willett, KL Masters, C Cardamone, CJ Lintott, RJ Mackay, RC Nichol, CK Rosslowe, BD Simmons, RJ Smethurst

Calibrating Cluster Number Counts with CMB lensing

(2016)

Authors:

Thibaut Louis, David Alonso

Galaxy Zoo: Evidence for rapid, recent quenching within a population of AGN host galaxies

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 463:3 (2016) 2986-2996

Authors:

Rebecca J Smethurst, Christopher Lintott, Brooke D Simmons, Kevin Schawinski, Steven P Bamford, Carolin N Cardamone, Sandor I Kruk, Karen L Masters, Claudia M Urry, Kyle W Willett, O Ivy Wong

Abstract:

We present a population study of the star formation history of 1244 Type 2 AGN host galaxies, compared to 6107 inactive galaxies. A Bayesian method is used to determine individual galaxy star formation histories, which are then collated to visualise the distribution for quenching and quenched galaxies within each population. We find evidence for some of the Type 2 AGN host galaxies having undergone a rapid drop in their star formation rate within the last 2 Gyr. AGN feedback is therefore important at least for this population of galaxies. This result is not seen for the quenching and quenched inactive galaxies whose star formation histories are dominated by the effects of downsizing at earlier epochs, a secondary effect for the AGN host galaxies. We show that histories of rapid quenching cannot account fully for the quenching of all the star formation in a galaxy's lifetime across the population of quenched AGN host galaxies, and that histories of slower quenching, attributed to secular (non-violent) evolution, are also key in their evolution. This is in agreement with recent results showing both merger-driven and non-merger processes are contributing to the co-evolution of galaxies and supermassive black holes. The availability of gas in the reservoirs of a galaxy, and its ability to be replenished, appear to be the key drivers behind this co-evolution.

Baryonic acoustic oscillations from 21cm intensity mapping: the Square Kilometre Array case

(2016)

Authors:

Francisco Villaescusa-Navarro, David Alonso, Matteo Viel