Structures Of Dust and gAs (SODA): Constraining the innermost dust properties of II Zw96 with JWST observations of H2O and CO

Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences 682 (2024) l5

Authors:

I García-Bernete, M Pereira-Santaella, E González-Alfonso, D Rigopoulou, A Efstathiou, FR Donnan, N Thatte

Emergence and cosmic evolution of the Kennicutt–Schmidt relation driven by interstellar turbulence

Astronomy and Astrophysics EDP Sciences 682 (2024) A50

Authors:

Katarina Kraljic, Florent Renaud, Yohan Dubois, Christophe Pichon, Oscar Agertz, Eric Andersson, Julien Devriendt, Jonathan Freundlich, Sugata Kaviraj, Taysun Kimm, Garreth Martin, Sébastien Peirani, Álvaro Segovia Otero, Marta Volonteri, Sukyoung K Yi

Abstract:

The scaling relations between the gas content and star formation rate of galaxies provide useful insights into the processes governing their formation and evolution. We investigated the emergence and the physical drivers of the global Kennicutt-Schmidt (KS) relation at 0:25 ≤ z ≤ 4 in the cosmological hydrodynamic simulation NewHorizon, capturing the evolution of a few hundred galaxies with a resolution down to 34 pc. The details of this relation vary strongly with the stellar mass of galaxies and the redshift. A power-law relation ΣSFR / Σa gas with a ≈ 1:4, like that found empirically, emerges at z ≈ 2..3 for the more massive half of the galaxy population. However, no such convergence is found in the lower-mass galaxies, for which the relation gets shallower with decreasing redshift. At galactic scales, the star formation activity correlates with the level of turbulence of the interstellar medium, quantified by the Mach number, rather than with the gas fraction (neutral or molecular), confirming the conclusions found in previous works. With decreasing redshift, the number of outliers with short depletion times diminishes, reducing the scatter of the KS relation, while the overall population of galaxies shifts toward low densities. Our results, from parsec-scale star formation models calibrated with local Universe physics, demonstrate that the cosmological evolution of the environmental (e.g., mergers) and internal conditions (e.g., gas fractions) conspire to shape the KS relation. This is an illustration of how the interplay of global and local processes leaves a detectable imprint on galactic-scale observables and scaling relations.

The MASSIVE survey - XIX. Molecular gas measurements of the supermassive black hole masses in the elliptical galaxies NGC 1684 and NGC 0997

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) (2024) stae314-stae314

Authors:

Pandora Dominiak, Martin Bureau, Timothy A Davis, Chung-Pei Ma, Jenny E Greene, Meng Gu

Mapping dust in the giant molecular cloud Orion A

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 528:4 (2024) 5763-5782

Authors:

Amery Gration, Stephen Magorrian

Abstract:

The Sun is located close to the Galactic mid-plane, meaning that we observe the Galaxy through significant quantities of dust. Moreover, the vast majority of the Galaxy’s stars also lie in the disc, meaning that dust has an enormous impact on the massive astrometric, photometric and spectroscopic surveys of the Galaxy that are currently underway. To exploit the data from these surveys we require good three-dimensional maps of the Galaxy’s dust. We present a new method for making such maps in which we form the best linear unbiased predictor of the extinction at an arbitrary point based on the extinctions for a set of observed stars. This method allows us to avoid the artificial inhomogeneities (so-called ‘fingers of God’) and resolution limits that are characteristic of many published dust maps. Moreover, it requires minimal assumptions about the statistical properties of the interstellar medium. In fact, we require only a model of the first and second moments of the dust density field. The method is suitable for use with directly measured extinctions, such as those provided by the Rayleigh–Jeans colour excess method, and inferred extinctions, such as those provided by hierarchical Bayesian models like StarHorse. We test our method by mapping dust in the region of the giant molecular cloud Orion A. Our results indicate a foreground dust cloud at a distance of 350 pc, which has been identified in work by another author.

The MASSIVE survey -- XIX. Molecular gas measurements of the supermassive black hole masses in the elliptical galaxies NGC 1684 and NGC 0997

(2024)

Authors:

Pandora Dominiak, Martin Bureau, Timothy A Davis, Chung-Pei Ma, Jenny E Greene, Meng Gu