Formation of compact galaxies in the Extreme-Horizon simulation
(2020)
GalICS 2.1: a new semianalytic model for cold accretion, cooling, feedback, and their roles in galaxy formation
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford Univerity Press 497:1 (2020) 279-301
Abstract:
Dekel & Birnboim proposed that the mass-scale that separates late-type and early-type galaxies is linked to the critical halo mass Mcritvir for the propagation of a stable shock and showed that they could reproduce the observed bimodality scale for plausible values of the metallicity of the accreted gas Zaccr and the shock radius rs. Here, we take their analysis one step further and present a new semianalytic model that computes rs from first principles. This advancement allows us to compute Mcritvir individually for each halo. Separating cold-mode and hot-mode accretion has little effect on the final galaxy masses if feedback does not preferentially couple to the hot gas. We also present an improved model for stellar feedback where ∼70 per cent of the wind mass is in a cold galactic fountain with a shorter reaccretion time-scale at high masses. The latter is the key mechanism that allows us to reproduce the low-mass end of the mass function of galaxies over the entire redshift range 0 < z < 2.5. Cooling must be mitigated to avoid overpredicting the number density of galaxies with stellar mass Mstars>1011M⊙ but is important to form intermediate-mass galaxies. At Mvir>3×1011M⊙, cold accretion is more important at high z, where gas is accreted from smaller solid angles, but this is not true at lower masses because high-z filaments have lower metallicities. Our predictions are consistent with the observed metallicity evolution of the intergalactic medium at 0 < z < 5.Spatially offset black holes in the Horizon-AGN simulation and comparison to observations
(2020)
Resolved observations at 31 GHz of spinning dust emissivity variations in rho Oph
MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 495:3 (2020) 3482-3493
Abstract:
© 2020 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. The ρ Oph molecular cloud is one of the best examples of spinning dust emission, first detected by the cosmic background imager (CBI). Here, we present 4.5 arcmin observations with CBI 2 that confirm 31 GHz emission from ρ Oph W, the PDR exposed to B-Type star HD 147889, and highlight the absence of signal from S1, the brightest IR nebula in the complex. In order to quantify an association with dust-related emission mechanisms, we calculated correlations at different angular resolutions between the 31 GHz map and proxies for the column density of IR emitters, dust radiance, and optical depth templates. We found that the 31 GHz emission correlates best with the PAH column density tracers, while the correlation with the dust radiance improves when considering emission that is more extended (from the shorter baselines), suggesting that the angular resolution of the observations affects the correlation results. A proxy for the spinning dust emissivity reveals large variations within the complex, with a dynamic range of 25 at 3σ and a variation by a factor of at least 23, at 3σ, between the peak in ρ Oph W and the location of S1, which means that environmental factors are responsible for boosting spinning dust emissivities locally.The 16th Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Surveys: First Release from the APOGEE-2 Southern Survey and Full Release of eBOSS Spectra
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES 249:1 (2020) ARTN 3