SDSS-IV MaNGA: the different quenching histories of fast and slow rotators

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 473:2 (2017) 2679-2687

Authors:

RJ Smethurst, KL Masters, Christopher J Lintott, A Weijmans, M Merrifield, SJ Penny, A Aragón-Salamanca, J Brownstein, K Bundy, N Drory, Law, RC Nichol

Abstract:

Do the theorised different formation mechanisms of fast and slow rotators produce an observable difference in their star formation histories? To study this we identify quenching slow rotators in the MaNGA sample by selecting those which lie below the star forming sequence and identify a sample of quenching fast rotators which were matched in stellar mass. This results in a total sample of 194 kinematically classified galaxies, which is agnostic to visual morphology. We use u-r and NUV-u colours from SDSS and GALEX and an existing inference package, STARPY, to conduct a first look at the onset time and exponentially declining rate of quenching of these galaxies. An Anderson-Darling test on the distribution of the inferred quenching rates across the two kinematic populations reveals they are statistically distinguishable ($3.2\sigma$). We find that fast rotators quench at a much wider range of rates than slow rotators, consistent with a wide variety of physical processes such as secular evolution, minor mergers, gas accretion and environmentally driven mechanisms. Quenching is more likely to occur at rapid rates ($\tau \lesssim 1~\rm{Gyr}$) for slow rotators, in agreement with theories suggesting slow rotators are formed in dynamically fast processes, such as major mergers. Interestingly, we also find that a subset of the fast rotators quench at these same rapid rates as the bulk of the slow rotator sample. We therefore discuss how the total gas mass of a merger, rather than the merger mass ratio, may decide a galaxy's ultimate kinematic fate.

The new galaxy evolution paradigm revealed by the Herschel surveys

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 473:3 (2017) 3507-3524

Authors:

S Eales, D Smith, N Bourne, J Loveday, K Rowlands, PVD Werf, S Driver, L Dunne, S Dye, C Furlanetto, RJ Ivison, S Maddox, A Robotham, MWL Smith, EN Taylor, E Valiante, A Wright, P Cigan, G De Zotti, Matthew J Jarvis, L Marchetti, MJ Michałowski, S Phillipps, S Viaene, C Vlahakis

Abstract:

The Herschel Space Observatory has revealed a very different galaxyscape from that shown by optical surveys which presents a challenge for galaxy-evolution models. The Herschel surveys reveal (1) that there was rapid galaxy evolution in the very recent past and (2) that galaxies lie on a a single Galaxy Sequence (GS) rather than a star-forming `main sequence' and a separate region of `passive' or `red-and-dead' galaxies. The form of the GS is now clearer because far-infrared surveys such as the Herschel ATLAS pick up a population of optically-red star-forming galaxies that would have been classified as passive using most optical criteria. The space-density of this population is at least as high as the traditional star-forming population. By stacking spectra of H-ATLAS galaxies over the redshift range 0.001 < z < 0.4, we show that the galaxies responsible for the rapid low-redshift evolution have high stellar masses, high star-formation rates but, even several billion years in the past, old stellar populations - they are thus likely to be relatively recent ancestors of early-type galaxies in the Universe today. The form of the GS is inconsistent with rapid quenching models and neither the analytic bathtub model nor the hydrodynamical EAGLE simulation can reproduce the rapid cosmic evolution. We propose a new gentler model of galaxy evolution that can explain the new Herschel results and other key properties of the galaxy population.

Further observational evidence for a critical ionizing luminosity in active galaxies

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 470:4 (2017) 4600-4607

Authors:

SJ Curran, RW Hunstead, HM Johnston, MT Whiting, EM Sadler, JR Allison, C Bignell

Hydrogen-rich supernovae beyond the neutrino-driven core-collapse paradigm

Nature Astronomy Springer Nature 1:10 (2017) 713-720

Authors:

G Terreran, ML Pumo, T-W Chen, TJ Moriya, F Taddia, L Dessart, L Zampieri, SJ Smartt, S Benetti, C Inserra, E Cappellaro, M Nicholl, M Fraser, Ł Wyrzykowski, A Udalski, DA Howell, C McCully, S Valenti, G Dimitriadis, K Maguire, M Sullivan, KW Smith, O Yaron, DR Young, JP Anderson, M Della Valle, N Elias-Rosa, A Gal-Yam, A Jerkstrand, E Kankare, A Pastorello, J Sollerman, M Turatto, Z Kostrzewa-Rutkowska, S Kozłowski, P Mróz, M Pawlak, P Pietrukowicz, R Poleski, D Skowron, J Skowron, I Soszyński, MK Szymański, K Ulaczyk

The Arcminute Microkelvin Imager catalogue of gamma-ray burst afterglows at 15.7 GHz

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 473:2 (2017) 1512-1536

Authors:

GE Anderson, Timothy D Staley, AJ van der Horst, Robert P Fender, A Rowlinson, KP Mooley, JW Broderick, RAMJ Wijers, C Rumsey, DJ Titterington

Abstract:

We present the Arcminute Microkelvin Imager (AMI) Large Array catalogue of 139 gammaray bursts (GRBs). AMI observes at a central frequency of 15.7 GHz and is equipped with a fully automated rapid-response mode, which enables the telescope to respond to high-energy transients detected by Swift. On receiving a transient alert, AMI can be on-target within 2 min, scheduling later start times if the source is below the horizon. Further AMI observations are manually scheduled for several days following the trigger. The AMI GRB programme probes the early-time (<1 d) radio properties of GRBs, and has obtained some of the earliest radio detections (GRB 130427A at 0.36 and GRB 130907A at 0.51 d post-burst). As all Swift GRBs visible to AMI are observed, this catalogue provides the first representative sample of GRB radio properties, unbiased by multiwavelength selection criteria.We report the detection of six GRB radio afterglows that were not previously detected by other radio telescopes, increasing the rate of radio detections by 50 per cent over an 18-month period. The AMI catalogue implies a Swift GRB radio detection rate of ≳15 per cent, down to∼0.2mJy beam−1. However, scaling this by the fraction of GRBs AMI would have detected in the Chandra & Frail sample (all radio-observed GRBs between 1997 and 2011), it is possible ∼44–56 per cent of Swift GRBs are radio bright, down to ∼0.1–0.15 mJy beam−1. This increase from the Chandra & Frail rate (∼30 per cent) is likely due to the AMI rapid-response mode, which allows observations to begin while the reverse-shock is contributing to the radio afterglow.