The role of galaxy mass on AGN emission: a view from the VANDELS survey

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 493:3 (2020) 3838-3853

Authors:

M Magliocchetti, L Pentericci, M Cirasuolo, G Zamorani, R Amorin, A Bongiorno, A Cimatti, A Fontana, B Garilli, A Gargiulo, NP Hathi, DJ McLeod, RJ McLure, M Brusa, A Saxena, M Talia

Why do extremely massive disc galaxies exist today?

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 494:4 (2020) 5568-5575

Authors:

Ra Jackson, G Martin, S Kaviraj, C Laigle, JEG Devriendt, Y Dubois, C Pichon

Abstract:

Galaxy merger histories correlate strongly with stellar mass, largely regardless of morphology. Thus, at fixed stellar mass, spheroids and discs share similar assembly histories, both in terms of the frequency of mergers and the distribution of their mass ratios. Since mergers drive disc-to-spheroid morphological transformation, and the most massive galaxies typically have the richest merger histories, it is surprising that discs exist at all at the highest stellar masses (e.g. beyond the knee of the mass function). Using Horizon-AGN, a cosmological hydroynamical simulation, we show that extremely massive (M* > 1011.4 M⊙) discs are created via two channels. In the primary channel (accounting for 70per cent of these systems and 8per cent of massive galaxies), the most recent, significant (mass ratio > 1:10) merger between a massive spheroid and a gas-rich satellite ‘spins up’ the spheroid by creating a new rotational stellar component, leaving a massive disc as the remnant. In the secondary channel (accounting for 30 per cent of these systems and 3 per cent of massive galaxies), a system maintains a disc throughout its lifetime, due to an anomalously quiet merger history. Not unexpectedly, the fraction of massive discs increases towards higher redshift, due to the Universe being more gas-rich. The morphological mix of galaxies at the highest stellar masses is, therefore, a strong function of the gas fraction of the Universe. Finally, these massive discs have similar black hole masses and accretion rates to massive spheroids, providing a natural explanation for why some powerful AGN are surprisingly found in disc galaxies.

X-ray variability analysis of a large series of XMM-Newton + NuSTAR observations of NGC 3227

ArXiv 2004.03824 (2020)

Authors:

AP Lobban, TJ Turner, JN Reeves, V Braito, L Miller

The properties of He IIλ1640 emitters at z ∼  2.5–5 from the VANDELS survey

Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences 636 (2020) a47

Authors:

A Saxena, L Pentericci, M Mirabelli, D Schaerer, R Schneider, F Cullen, R Amorin, M Bolzonella, A Bongiorno, AC Carnall, M Castellano, O Cucciati, A Fontana, JPU Fynbo, B Garilli, A Gargiulo, L Guaita, NP Hathi, TA Hutchison, AM Koekemoer, F Marchi, DJ McLeod, RJ McLure, C Papovich, L Pozzetti, M Talia, G Zamorani

Why do extremely massive disc galaxies exist today?

(2020)

Authors:

Ryan A Jackson, Garreth Martin, Sugata Kaviraj, Clotilde Laigle, Julien Devriendt, Yohan Dubois, Christophe Pichon