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

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 461:3 (2016) 2702-2721

Authors:

N Chisari, C Laigle, S Codis, Y Dubois, J Devriendt, Lance Miller, K Benabed, A Slyz, R Gavazzi, C 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.

Erratum: Towards simulating star formation in turbulent high-z galaxies with mechanical supernova feedback

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 459:1 (2016) 256-256

Authors:

Taysun Kimm, Renyue Cen, Julien Devriendt, Yohan Dubois, Adrianne Slyz

The Horizon-AGN simulation: morphological diversity of galaxies promoted by AGN feedback

(2016)

Authors:

Yohan Dubois, Sebastien Peirani, Christophe Pichon, Julien Devriendt, Raphael Gavazzi, Charlotte Welker, Marta Volonteri

The star-formation rate density from z = 0-6

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 461:1 (2016) Pp. 1100-1111

Authors:

Michael Rowan-Robinson, Seb Oliver, Lingyu Wang, Duncan Farrah, David Clements, Carlotta Gruppioni, Lucia Marchetti, Dimitra Rigopoulou, Mattia Vaccari

Abstract:

We use 3035 Herschel-SPIRE 500$\mu$m sources from 20.3 sq deg of sky in the HerMES Lockman, ES1 and XMM-LSS areas to estimate the star-formation rate density at z = 1-6. 500 mu sources are associated first with 350 and 250 mu sources, and then with Spitzer 24 mu sources from the SWIRE photometric redshift catalogue. The infrared and submillimetre data are fitted with a set of radiative-transfer templates corresponding to cirrus (quiescent) and starburst galaxies. Lensing candidates are removed via a set of colour-colour and colour-redshift constraints. Star-formation rates are found to extend from < 1 to 20,000 Mo/yr. Such high values were also seen in the all-sky IRAS Faint Source Survey. Star-formation rate functions are derived in a series of redshift bins from 0-6, combined with earlier far-infrared estimates, where available, and fitted with a Saunders et al (1990) functional form. The star-formation-rate density as a function of redshift is derived and compared with other estimates. There is reasonable agreement with both infrared and ultraviolet estimates for z < 3, but we find higher star-formation-rate densities than ultraviolet estimates at z = 3-6. Given the considerable uncertainties in the submillimetre estimates, we can not rule out the possibility that the ultraviolet estimates are correct. But the possibility that the ultraviolet estimates have seriously underestimated the contribution of dust-shrouded star-formation can also not be excluded.

DYNAMICAL FORMATION SIGNATURES OF BLACK HOLE BINARIES IN THE FIRST DETECTED MERGERS BY LIGO

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS American Astronomical Society 824:1 (2016) ARTN L12

Authors:

Ryan M O'Leary, Yohai Meiron, Bence Kocsis

Abstract:

© 2016. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.. The dynamical formation of stellar-mass black hole-black hole binaries has long been a promising source of gravitational waves for the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO). Mass segregation, gravitational focusing, and multibody dynamical interactions naturally increase the interaction rate between the most massive black holes in dense stellar systems, eventually leading them to merge. We find that dynamical interactions, particularly three-body binary formation, enhance the merger rate of black hole binaries with total mass M tot roughly as ∝Mtotβ, with β ≳ 4. We find that this relation holds mostly independently of the initial mass function, but the exact value depends on the degree of mass segregation. The detection rate of such massive black hole binaries is only further enhanced by LIGO's greater sensitivity to massive black hole binaries with M tot ≲ 80 . We find that for power-law BH mass functions dN/dM ∝ M -α with α ≤ 2, LIGO is most likely to detect black hole binaries with a mass twice that of the maximum initial black hole mass and a mass ratio near one. Repeated mergers of black holes inside the cluster result in about ∼5% of mergers being observed between two and three times the maximum initial black hole mass. Using these relations, one may be able to invert the observed distribution to the initial mass function with multiple detections of merging black hole binaries.