MaNGA DynPop. VII. A Unified Bulge–Disk–Halo Model for Explaining Diversity in Circular Velocity Curves of 6000 Spiral and Early-type Galaxies
The Astrophysical Journal: Supplement Series American Astronomical Society 280:2 (2025) 55
Abstract:
We derive circular velocity curves (CVCs) from stellar dynamical models for ∼6000 nearby galaxies in the final data release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-IV MaNGA survey with integral-field spectroscopy, exploring connections between the inner gravitational potential (traced by CVC amplitude/shape) and galaxy properties. The maximum circular velocity ( Vcircmax ) and circular velocity at the half-light radius ( Vcirc(Remaj) ) both scale linearly with the stellar second velocity moment σe2≡〈V2+σ2〉 within the half-light isophote, following Vcircmax≈1.72σe (7% error) and Vcirc(Remaj)≈1.62σe (7% error). CVC shapes (rising, flat, declining) correlate strongly with structural and stellar population properties: declining curves dominate in massive, early-type, bulge-dominated galaxies with old, metal-rich stars and early quenching, while rising CVCs prevail in disk-dominated systems with younger stellar populations and ongoing star formation. Using a unified bulge–disk–halo model, we predict CVC shapes with minimal bias, identifying three governing parameters: bulge-to-total mass ratio (B/T), dark matter fraction within Re, and bulge Sérsic index. The distribution of CVC shapes across the mass–size plane reflects evolutionary pathways driven by (i) in situ star formation (spurring bulge growth) and (ii) dry mergers. This establishes CVC morphology as a diagnostic for galaxy evolution, linking dynamical signatures to structural and stellar population histories.Getting More Out of Black Hole Superradiance: a Statistically Rigorous Approach to Ultralight Boson Constraints from Black Hole Spin Measurements
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) (2025) staf1564
Abstract:
The dependence of the Type Ia Supernova colour–luminosity relation on their host galaxy properties
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 543:3 (2025) 2180-2203
Abstract:
Using the Dark Energy Survey 5-yr sample, we determine the properties of type Ia supernova (SN Ia) host galaxies across a wide multiwavelength range – from the optical to far-infrared – including data from the Herschel and Spitzer space telescopes. We categorize the SNe Ia into three distinct groups according to the distribution of their host galaxies on the star formation rate (SFR) – stellar mass () plane. Each region comprises host galaxies at distinct stages in their evolutionary pathways: Region 1 – low-mass hosts; Region 2 – high-mass, star-forming hosts and Region 3 – high-mass, passive hosts. We find SNe Ia in host galaxies located in Region 1 have the steepest slope (quantified by ) between their colours and luminosities, with . This differs at the significance level to SNe Ia in Region 3, which have the shallowest colour–luminosity slope with . After correcting SNe Ia in each subsample by their respective , events in Region 3 (high-mass, passive hosts) are mag () brighter, post-standardization. We conclude that future cosmological analyses should apply standardization relations to SNe Ia based upon the region in which the SN host galaxy lies in the SFR– plane. Alternatively, cosmological analyses should restrict the SN Ia sample to events whose host galaxies occupy a single region of this plane.Supermassive Black Hole Growth in Hierarchically Merging Nuclear Star Clusters
The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 991:1 (2025) 58
Abstract:
Supermassive black holes are prevalent at the centers of massive galaxies, and their masses scale with galaxy properties, increasing evidence suggesting that these trends continue to low stellar masses. Seeds are needed for supermassive black holes, especially at the highest redshifts explored by the James Webb Space Telescope. We study the hierarchical merging of galaxies via cosmological merger trees and argue that the seeds of supermassive black holes formed in nuclear star clusters via stellar black hole mergers at early epochs. Observable tracers include intermediate-mass black holes, nuclear star clusters, and early gas accretion in host dwarf galaxies, along with a potentially detectable stochastic gravitational-wave background, ejection of intermediate and supermassive black holes, and consequences of a significant population of early tidal disruption events and extreme mass ratio inspirals.Evidence for inverse Compton scattering in high-redshift Lyman-break galaxies
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 543:1 (2025) 507-517