A detailed study of feedback from a massive star

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 448:4 (2015) 3248-3264

Authors:

Sam Geen, Joakim Rosdahl, Jeremy Blaizot, Julien Devriendt, Adrianne Slyz

Abstract:

We present numerical simulations of a 15 M star in a suite of idealized environments in order to quantify the amount of energy transmitted to the interstellar medium (ISM). We include models of stellar winds, UV photoionization and the subsequent supernova based on theoretical models and observations of stellar evolution. The system is simulated in 3D using RAMSES-RT, an Adaptive Mesh Refinement Radiation Hydrodynamics code. We find that stellar winds have a negligible impact on the system owing to their relatively low luminosity compared to the other processes. The main impact of photoionization is to reduce the density of the medium into which the supernova explodes, reducing the rate of radiative cooling of the subsequent supernova. Finally, we present a grid of models quantifying the energy and momentum of the system that can be used to motivate simulations of feedback in the ISM unable to fully resolve the processes discussed in this work.

Far beyond stacking: Fully bayesian constraints on sub-microJy radio source populations over the XMM-LSS-VIDEO field

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 453:2 (2015) 1740-1753

Authors:

Jonathan TL Zwart, Mario Santos, Matthew J Jarvis

Abstract:

Measuring radio source counts is critical for characterizing new extragalactic populations, brings a wealth of science within reach and will inform forecasts for SKA and its pathfinders. Yet there is currently great debate (and few measurements) about the behaviour of the 1.4-GHz counts in the microJy regime. One way to push the counts to these levels is via 'stacking', the covariance of a map with a catalogue at higher resolution and (often) a different wavelength. For the first time, we cast stacking in a fully bayesian framework, applying it to (i) the SKADS simulation and (ii) VLA data stacked at the positions of sources from the VIDEO survey. In the former case, the algorithm recovers the counts correctly when applied to the catalogue, but is biased high when confusion comes into play. This needs to be accounted for in the analysis of data from any relatively-low-resolution SKA pathfinders. For the latter case, the observed radio source counts remain flat below the 5-sigma level of 85 microJy as far as 40 microJy, then fall off earlier than the flux hinted at by the SKADS simulations and a recent P(D) analysis (which is the only other measurement from the literature at these flux-density levels, itself extrapolated in frequency). Division into galaxy type via spectral-energy distribution reveals that normal spiral galaxies dominate the counts at these fluxes.

The SAMI Galaxy Survey: instrument specification and target selection

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 447:3 (2015) 2857-2879

Authors:

JJ Bryant, MS Owers, ASG Robotham, SM Croom, SP Driver, MJ Drinkwater, NPF Lorente, L Cortese, N Scott, M Colless, A Schaefer, EN Taylor, IS Konstantopoulos, JT Allen, I Baldry, L Barnes, AE Bauer, J Bland-Hawthorn, JV Bloom, AM Brooks, S Brough, G Cecil, W Couch, D Croton, R Davies, S Ellis, LMR Fogarty, C Foster, K Glazebrook, M Goodwin, A Green, ML Gunawardhana, E Hampton, I-T Ho, AM Hopkins, L Kewley, JS Lawrence, SG Leon-Saval, S Leslie, R McElroy, G Lewis, J Liske, ÁR López-Sánchez, S Mahajan, AM Medling, N Metcalfe, M Meyer, J Mould, D Obreschkow, S O'Toole, M Pracy, SN Richards, T Shanks, R Sharp, SM Sweet, AD Thomas, C Tonini, CJ Walcher

Milking the spherical cow: on aspherical dynamics in spherical coordinates

(2015)

Authors:

Andrew Pontzen, Justin Read, Romain Teyssier, Fabio Governato, Alessia Gualandris, Nina Roth, Julien Devriendt

Black hole masses, accretion rates and hot- and cold-mode accretion in radio galaxies at z ∼ 1

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 447:2 (2015) 1184-1203

Authors:

CAC Fernandes, MJ Jarvis, A Martínez-Sansigre, S Rawlings, J Afonso, MJ Hardcastle, M Lacy, JA Stevens, E Vardoulaki