The birth of molecular clouds:formation of atomic precursors in colliding flows

Astrophysical Journal 648 (2006) 1052-1065

Authors:

AD Slyz, Fabian Heitsch, Julien Devriendt, Lee Hartmann

AEGIS: A Panchromatic Study of IRAC-selected Extremely Red Objects with Confirmed Spectroscopic Redshifts

(2006)

Authors:

G Wilson, JS Huang, GG Fazio, R Yan, AM Koekemoer, S Salim, SM Faber, J Lotz, CNA Willmer, M Davis, AL Coil, JA Newman, CJ Conselice, C Papovich, MLN Ashby, P Barmby, SP Willner, R Ivison, S Miyazaki, D Rigopoulou

AEGIS: Infrared Spectroscopy of An Infrared Luminous Lyman Break Galaxy at z=3.01

(2006)

Authors:

J-S Huang, D Rigopoulou, C Papovich, MLN Ashby, SP Willner, R Ivison, ES Laird, T Webb, G Wilson, P Barmby, S Chapman, C Conselice, B Mcleod, CG Shu, HA Smith, E Le Floc'h, E Egami, CAN Willmer, G Fazio

The rapid formation of a large rotating disk galaxy three billion years after the Big Bang

Nature 442:7104 (2006) 786-789

Authors:

R Genzel, LJ Tacconi, F Eisenhauer, NM Förster Schreiber, A Cimatti, E Daddi, N Bouché, R Davies, MD Lehnert, D Lutz, N Nesvadba, A Verma, R Abuter, K Shapiro, A Sternberg, A Renzini, X Kong, N Arimoto, M Mignoli

Abstract:

Observations and theoretical simulations have established a framework for galaxy formation and evolution in the young Universe. Galaxies formed as baryonic gas cooled at the centres of collapsing dark-matter haloes; mergers of haloes and galaxies then led to the hierarchical build-up of galaxy mass. It remains unclear, however, over what timescales galaxies were assembled and when and how bulges and disks - the primary components of present-day galaxies - were formed. It is also puzzling that the most massive galaxies were more abundant and were forming stars more rapidly at early epochs than expected from models. Here we report high-angular-resolution observations of a representative luminous star-forming galaxy when the Universe was only 20% of its current age. A large and massive rotating protodisk is channelling gas towards a growing central stellar bulge hosting an accreting massive black hole. The high surface densities of gas, the high rate of star formation and the moderately young stellar ages suggest rapid assembly, fragmentation and conversion to stars of an initially very gas-rich protodisk, with no obvious evidence for a major merger. © 2006 Nature Publishing Group.

Star formation and figure rotation in the early-type galaxy NGC2974

(2006)

Authors:

Hyunjin Jeong, Martin Bureau, Sukyoung Ken Yi, Davor Krajnovic, Roger L Davies