Redshift and luminosity evolution of the intrinsic alignments of galaxies in Horizon-AGN

ArXiv 1602.08373 (2016)

Authors:

Nora Elisa Chisari, Clotilde Laigle, Sandrine Codis, Yohan Dubois, Julien Devriendt, Lance Miller, Karim Benabed, Adrianne Slyz, Raphael Gavazzi, Christophe Pichon

Abstract:

Intrinsic galaxy shape and angular momentum alignments can arise in cosmological large-scale structure due to tidal interactions or galaxy formation processes. Cosmological hydrodynamical simulations have recently come of age as a tool to study these alignments and their contamination to weak gravitational lensing. We probe the redshift and luminosity evolution of intrinsic alignments in Horizon-AGN between z=0 and z=3 for galaxies with an r-band absolute magnitude of <-20. Alignments transition from being radial at low redshifts and high luminosities, dominated by the contribution of ellipticals, to being tangential at high redshift and low luminosities, where discs dominate the signal. This cannot be explained by the evolution of the fraction of ellipticals and discs alone: intrinsic evolution in the amplitude of alignments is necessary. The alignment amplitude of elliptical galaxies alone is smaller in amplitude by a factor of ~2, but has similar luminosity and redshift evolution as in current observations and in the nonlinear tidal alignment model at projected separations of > 1 Mpc. Alignments of discs are null in projection and consistent with current low redshift observations. The combination of the two populations yields an overall amplitude a factor of ~4 lower than observed alignments of luminous red galaxies with a steeper luminosity dependence. The restriction on accurate galaxy shapes implies that the galaxy population in the simulation is complete only to an r-band absolute magnitude of <-20. Higher resolution simulations will be necessary to avoid extrapolation of the intrinsic alignment predictions to the range of luminosities probed by future surveys.

The atlas 3D Project – XXXI. Nuclear radio emission in nearby early-type galaxies

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 458:2 (2016) 2221-2268

Authors:

K Nyland, LM Young, JM Wrobel, M Sarzi, R Morganti, K Alatalo, L Blitz, F Bournaud, Martin Bureau, M Cappellari, AF Crocker, RL Davies, TA Davis, PT de Zeeuw, P-A Duc, E Emsellem, S Khochfar, D Krajnović, H Kuntschner, RM McDermid, T Naab, T Oosterloo, N Scott, P Serra, A-M Weijmans

Abstract:

We present the results of a high-resolution, 5 GHz, Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array study of the nuclear radio emission in a representative subset of the ATLAS3D survey of early-type galaxies (ETGs). We find that 51 ± 4 per cent of the ETGs in our sample contain nuclear radio emission with luminosities as low as 1018 W Hz-1. Most of the nuclear radio sources have compact (≲25-110 pc) morphologies, although ~10 per cent display multicomponent core+jet or extended jet/lobe structures. Based on the radio continuum properties, as well as optical emission line diagnostics and the nuclear X-ray properties, we conclude that the majority of the central 5 GHz sources detected in the ATLAS3D galaxies are associated with the presence of an active galactic nucleus (AGN). However, even at subarcsecond spatial resolution, the nuclear radio emission in some cases appears to arise from low-level nuclear star formation rather than an AGN, particularly when molecular gas and a young central stellar population is present. This is in contrast to popular assumptions in the literature that the presence of a compact, unresolved, nuclear radio continuum source universally signifies the presence of an AGN. Additionally, we examine the relationships between the 5 GHz luminosity and various galaxy properties including the molecular gas mass and - for the first time - the global kinematic state. We discuss implications for the growth, triggering, and fuelling of radio AGNs, as well as AGN-driven feedback in the continued evolution of nearby ETGs.

Simulated stellar kinematics studies of high-redshift galaxies with the HARMONI Integral Field Spectrograph

(2016)

Authors:

S Kendrew, S Zieleniewski, RCW Houghton, N Thatte, J Devriendt, M Tecza, F Clarke, K O'Brien, B Häussler

LOFAR, VLA, AND CHANDRA OBSERVATIONS OF THE TOOTHBRUSH GALAXY CLUSTER

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 818:2 (2016) 204

Authors:

RJ van Weeren, G Brunetti, M Brüggen, F Andrade-Santos, GA Ogrean, WL Williams, HJA Röttgering, WA Dawson, WR Forman, F de Gasperin, MJ Hardcastle, C Jones, GK Miley, DA Rafferty, L Rudnick, J Sabater, CL Sarazin, TW Shimwell, A Bonafede, PN Best, L Bîrzan, R Cassano, KT Chyży, JH Croston, TJ Dijkema, T Enßlin, C Ferrari, G Heald, M Hoeft, C Horellou, MJ Jarvis, RP Kraft, M Mevius, HT Intema, SS Murray, E Orrú, R Pizzo, SS Sridhar, A Simionescu, A Stroe, S van der Tol, GJ White

THE GLOBAL IMPLICATIONS OF THE HARD EXCESS. II. ANALYSIS OF THE LOCAL POPULATION OF RADIO-QUIET AGNs

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 818:1 (2016) 12

Authors:

MM Tatum, TJ Turner, L Miller, JN Reeves, J DiLiello, J Gofford, A Patrick, M Clayton