NEW CONSTRAINTS ON THE MOLECULAR GAS IN THE PROTOTYPICAL HyLIRGs BRI 1202–0725 AND BRI 1335–0417

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 830:2 (2016) 63

Authors:

GC Jones, CL Carilli, E Momjian, J Wagg, DA Riechers, F Walter, R Decarli, K Ota, R McMahon

HERUS: A CO Atlas from SPIRE Spectroscopy of local ULIRGs

(2016)

Authors:

Chris Pearson, Dimitra Rigopoulou, Peter Hurley, Duncan Farrah, Jose Afonso, Jeronimo Bernard-Salas, Colin Borys, David L Clements, Diane Cormier, Andreas Efstathiou, Eduardo Gonzalez-Alfonso, Vianney Lebouteiller, Henrik Spoon

Dominant dark matter and a counter rotating disc: MUSE view of the low luminosity S0 galaxy NGC 5102

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 464 (2016) 4789-4806

Authors:

M Mitzkus, Michele Cappellari, CJ Walcher

Abstract:

The kinematics and stellar populations of the low-mass nearby S0 galaxy NGC 5102 are studied from integral field spectra taken with the Multi-Unit Spectroscopic Explorer. The kinematic maps reveal for the first time that NGC 5102 has the characteristic 2σ peaks indicative of galaxies with counter-rotating discs. This interpretation is quantitatively confirmed by fitting two kinematic components to the observed spectra. Through stellar population analysis, we confirm the known young stellar population in the centre and find steep age and metallicity gradients. We construct axisymmetric Jeans anisotropic models of the stellar dynamics to investigate the initial mass function (IMF) and the dark matter halo of the galaxy. The models show that this galaxy is quite different from all galaxies previously studied with a similar approach: even within the half-light radius, it cannot be approximated with the self-consistent mass-follows-light assumption. Including a Navarro, Frenk & White dark matter halo, we need a heavy IMF and a dark matter fraction of 0.37 ± 0.04 within a sphere of one Re radius to describe the stellar kinematics. The more general model with a free slope of the dark matter halo shows that slope and IMF are degenerate, but indicates that a light weight IMF (Chabrier-like) and a higher dark matter fraction, with a steeper (contracted) halo, fit the data better. Regardless of the assumptions about the halo profile, we measure the slope of the total mass density to be −1.75 ± 0.04. This is shallower than the slope of −2 of an isothermal halo and shallower than published slopes for more massive early-type galaxies.

Galaxy Zoo: Quantitative Visual Morphological Classifications for 48,000 galaxies from CANDELS

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 464:4 (2016) 4420-4447

Authors:

Brooke D Simmons, Christopher Lintott, KW Willett, KL Masters, JS Kartaltepe, Boris Häußler, S Kaviraj, C Krawczyk, SJ Kruk, DH McIntosh, RJ Smethurst, RC Nichol, C Scarlata, K Schawinski, CJ Conselice, O Almaini, HC Ferguson, L Fortson, W Hartley, D Kocevski, AM Koekemoer, A Mortlock, JA Newman, SP Bamford, NA Grogin, RA Lucas, NP Hathi, E McGrath, M Peth, J Pforr, Z Rizer, S Wuyts, G Barro, EF Bell, M Castellano, T Dahlen, ADJ Ownsworth, SM Faber, SL Finkelstein, A Fontana, A Galametz, R Grützbauch, D Koo, J Lotz, B Mobasher, M Mozena, M Salvato, T Wiklind

Abstract:

We present quantified visual morphologies of approximately 48 000 galaxies observed in three Hubble Space Telescope legacy fields by the Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS) and classified by participants in the Galaxy Zoo project. 90 per cent of galaxies have z ≤ 3 and are observed in rest-frame optical wavelengths by CANDELS. Each galaxy received an average of 40 independent classifications, which we combine into detailed morphological information on galaxy features such as clumpiness, bar instabilities, spiral structure, and merger and tidal signatures. We apply a consensus-based classifier weighting method that preserves classifier independence while effectively down-weighting significantly outlying classifications. After analysing the effect of varying image depth on reported classifications, we also provide depth-corrected classifications which both preserve the information in the deepest observations and also enable the use of classifications at comparable depths across the full survey. Comparing the Galaxy Zoo classifications to previous classifications of the same galaxies shows very good agreement; for some applications, the high number of independent classifications provided by Galaxy Zoo provides an advantage in selecting galaxies with a particular morphological profile, while in others the combination of Galaxy Zoo with other classifications is a more promising approach than using any one method alone. We combine the Galaxy Zoo classifications of ‘smooth’ galaxies with parametric morphologies to select a sample of featureless discs at 1 ≤ z ≤ 3, which may represent a dynamically warmer progenitor population to the settled disc galaxies seen at later epochs.

Dominant dark matter and a counter rotating disc: MUSE view of the low luminosity S0 galaxy NGC 5102

(2016)

Authors:

Martin Mitzkus, Michele Cappellari, C Jakob Walcher