MIGHTEE - HI: The relation between the HI gas in galaxies and the cosmic web

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 513, Issue 2, pp.2168-2177

Authors:

Tudorache, Madalina N. ; Jarvis, M. J. ; Heywood, I. ; Ponomareva, A. A. ; Maddox, N. ; Frank, B. S. ; Adams, N. J. ; Bowler, R. A. A. ; Whittam, I. H. ; Baes, M. ; Pan, H. ; Rajohnson, S. H. A. ; Sinigaglia, F. ; Spekkens, K.

Abstract:

We study the 3D axis of rotation (3D spin) of 77 H I galaxies from the MIGHTEE-H I Early Science observations, and its relation to the filaments of the cosmic web. For this HI-selected sample, the alignment between the spin axis and the closest filament (|cos ψ|) is higher for galaxies closer to the filaments, with ⟨|cos ψ|⟩ = 0.66 ± 0.04 for galaxies <5 Mpc from their closest filament compared to ⟨|cos ψ|⟩ = 0.37 ± 0.08 for galaxies at 5 < d < 10 Mpc. We find that galaxies with a low HI-to-stellar mass ratio (log10(MHI/M⋆) < 0.11) are more aligned with their closest filaments, with ⟨|cos ψ|⟩ = 0.58 ± 0.04; whilst galaxies with (log10(MHI/M⋆) > 0.11) tend to be mis-aligned, with ⟨|cos ψ|⟩ = 0.44 ± 0.04. We find tentative evidence that the spin axis of HI-selected galaxies tend to be aligned with associated filaments (d < 10 Mpc), but this depends on the gas fractions. Galaxies that have accumulated more stellar mass compared to their gas mass tend towards stronger alignment. Our results suggest that those galaxies that have accrued high gas fraction with respect to their stellar mass may have had their spin axis alignment with the filament disrupted by a recent gas-rich merger, whereas the spin vector for those galaxies in which the neutral gas has not been strongly replenished through a recent merger tend to orientate towards alignment with the filament. We also investigate the spin transition between galaxies with a high HI content and a low HI content at a threshold of MHI≈10^9.5M⊙ found in simulations; however, we find no evidence for such a transition with the current data.

Magnetogenesis at Cosmic Dawn: Tracing the Origins of Cosmic Magnetic Fields

MNRAS

Authors:

Harley Katz, Sergio Martin-Alvarez, Julien Devriendt, Adrianne Slyz, Taysun Kimm

Abstract:

Despite their ubiquity, the origin of cosmic magnetic fields remains unknown. Various mechanisms have been proposed for their existence including primordial fields generated by inflation, or amplification and injection by compact astrophysical objects. Separating the potential impact of each magnetogenesis scenario on the magnitude and orientation of the magnetic field and their impact on gas dynamics may give insight into the physics that magnetised our Universe. In this work, we demonstrate that because the induction equation and solenoidal constraint are linear with $B$, the contribution from different sources of magnetic field can be separated in cosmological magnetohydrodynamics simulations and their evolution and influence on the gas dynamics can be tracked. Exploiting this property, we develop a magnetic field tracer algorithm for cosmological simulations that can track the origin and evolution of different components of the magnetic field. We present a suite of cosmological magnetohydrodynamical RAMSES simulations that employ this algorithm where the primordial field strength is varied to determine the contributions of the primordial and supernovae-injected magnetic fields to the total magnetic energy as a function of time and spatial location. We find that, for our specific model, the supernova-injected fields rarely penetrate far from haloes, despite often dominating the total magnetic energy in the simulations. The magnetic energy density from the supernova-injected field scales with density with a power-law slope steeper than 4/3 and often dominates the total magnetic energy inside of haloes. However, the star formation rates in our simulations are not affected by the presence of magnetic fields, for the ranges of primordial field strengths examined. These simulations represent a first demonstration of the magnetic field tracer algorithm (abridged).

Modelling baryonic feedback for survey cosmology

Authors:

NE Chisari, AJ Mead, S Joudaki, P Ferreira, A Schneider, J Mohr, T Tröster, D Alonso, IG McCarthy, S Martin-Alvarez, JULIEN Devriendt, A Slyz, MPV Daalen

Abstract:

Observational cosmology in the next decade will rely on probes of the distribution of matter in the redshift range between $0

Multimessenger science opportunities with mHz gravitational waves

Authors:

John Baker, Zoltán Haiman, Elena Maria Rossi, Edo Berger, Niel Brandt, Elmé Breedt, Katelyn Breivik, Maria Charisi, Andrea Derdzinski, Daniel J D'Orazio, Saavik Ford, Jenny E Greene, J Colin Hill, Kelly Holley-Bockelmann, Joey Shapiro Key, Bence Kocsis, Thomas Kupfer, Shane Larson, Piero Madau, Thomas Marsh, Barry McKernan, Sean T McWilliams, Priyamvada Natarajan, Samaya Nissanke, Scott Noble, E Sterl Phinney, Gavin Ramsay, Jeremy Schnittman, Alberto Sesana, David Shoemaker, Nicholas Stone, Silvia Toonen, Benny Trakhtenbrot, Alexey Vikhlinin, Marta Volonteri

Abstract:

LISA will open the mHz band of gravitational waves (GWs) to the astronomy community. The strong gravity which powers the variety of GW sources in this band is also crucial in a number of important astrophysical processes at the current frontiers of astronomy. These range from the beginning of structure formation in the early universe, through the origin and cosmic evolution of massive black holes in concert with their galactic environments, to the evolution of stellar remnant binaries in the Milky Way and in nearby galaxies. These processes and their associated populations also drive current and future observations across the electromagnetic (EM) spectrum. We review opportunities for science breakthroughs, involving either direct coincident EM+GW observations, or indirect multimessenger studies. We argue that for the US community to fully capitalize on the opportunities from the LISA mission, the US efforts should be accompanied by a coordinated and sustained program of multi-disciplinary science investment, following the GW data through to its impact on broad areas of astrophysics. Support for LISA-related multimessenger observers and theorists should be sized appropriately for a flagship observatory and may be coordinated through a dedicated mHz GW research center.

Multimessenger science opportunities with mHz gravitational waves

Authors:

John Baker, Zoltán Haiman, Elena Maria Rossi, Edo Berger, Niel Brandt, Elmé Breedt, Katelyn Breivik, Maria Charisi, Andrea Derdzinski, Daniel J D'Orazio, Saavik Ford, Jenny E Greene, J Colin Hill, Kelly Holley-Bockelmann, Joey Shapiro Key, Bence Kocsis, Thomas Kupfer, Shane Larson, Piero Madau, Thomas Marsh, Barry McKernan, Sean T McWilliams, Priyamvada Natarajan, Samaya Nissanke, Scott Noble, E Sterl Phinney, Gavin Ramsay, Jeremy Schnittman, Alberto Sesana, David Shoemaker, Nicholas Stone, Silvia Toonen, Benny Trakhtenbrot, Alexey Vikhlinin, Marta Volonteri