understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

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Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments Yipeng Jing Shanghai Astronomical Observ atory

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Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments. Yipeng Jing Shanghai Astronomical Observatory. A brief overview of structure formation. A concordance LCDM model emerged; Structures form from bottom up; Most basic properties of dark matter halos well understood now, - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Yipeng Jing

Shanghai Astronomical Observatory

Page 2: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

A brief overview of structure formation

• A concordance LCDM model emerged;• Structures form from bottom up;• Most basic properties of dark matter halos well u

nderstood now,– Number density approximately by PS; – Internal structure by NFW profile;– Halos are triaxial with larger halos being more elongat

ed;– Halos are pointed along nearby filaments; also pointe

d preferentially to each other;– Halos are slowly rotating with the spin parameter 0.05;

spin parameters are log-normal distributed;– Rotation preferentially along the minor axis of halos

Page 3: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Structure formation

Page 4: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Physical processes of galaxy formation

• Gas cooling and disk galaxy formation;• Galaxies falling into bigger halos with halos

merges; ram pressure and tidal stripping may take away hot gas and even cold gas from satellite galaxies;

• Mergers of gaseous galaxies lead to starbursts; • dry mergers are important as well; formation of E

galaxies• Black holes grow with merges and accretion;• Supernova feedback and AGN feedback

Page 5: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

JYP & Suto, Y. 2000, ApJ, 529, L69

Page 6: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Okamoto et al. 2005, MNRAS, 363,129

Formation of galactic disk depends on the formation of stars and the feedback; much more complicated than the conventional disk formation scenario by Fall and Efstathiou (1980)

Page 7: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Physical processes of galaxy formation

• Gas cooling and disk galaxy formation;• Galaxies falling into bigger halos with halos

merges; ram pressure and tidal stripping may take away hot gas and cold gas from satellite galaxies;

• Mergers of gaseous galaxies lead to starbursts; • dry mergers are important as well; formation of E

galaxies• Black holes grows with merges and accretion;• Supernova feedback and AGN feedback

Page 8: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Strangulation: hot gas stripping

Gravitational tidal force can remove cold gas and even part of stellar mass of a satellite galaxy

Wang, H.Y., Jing et al., in preparation

Page 9: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Physical processes of galaxy formation

• Gas cooling and disk galaxy formation;• Galaxies falling into bigger halos with halos

merges; ram pressure and tidal stripping may take away hot gas and even cold gas from satellite galaxies;

• Mergers of gaseous galaxies lead to starbursts;

• dry mergers are important as well; formation of E galaxies

• Black holes grows with merges and accretion;• Supernova feedback and AGN feedback

Page 10: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

• Hierarchical formation, galaxies falling into bigger halos, and galaxies mergers

Page 11: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Physical processes of galaxy formation

• Gas cooling and disk galaxy formation;• Galaxies falling into bigger halos with halos

merges; ram pressure and tidal stripping may take away hot gas and even cold gas from satellite galaxies;

• Mergers of gaseous galaxies lead to starbursts; • dry mergers are important as well; formation of E

galaxies• Black holes grows with merges and

accretion;• Supernova feedback and AGN feedback

Page 12: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments
Page 13: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Spectroscopic (redshift) survey of 10**6 galaxies

Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS)

Page 14: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Orientation of central galaxies relative to host halos

• Yang X.H., et al. astroph/0601040, MN, 2006

• Kang X., et al. , MN, 2007

Page 15: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Isodensity Surfaces of halos

• Use SPH method to get the density for each particle and form the isodensity surfaces (Jing & Suto 2002)

Page 16: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Why do we do this?

• Understanding disk formation– Relation with the rotation (spin) of the dark

matter halos;– Dynamical evolution;

• Understanding elliptical formation– Major merges

Page 17: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Observational Sample

• SDSS DR2

• Halo based groups (unique!); selected from SDSS (Yang et al. 2005 MNRAS 356, 1293)

• Useful information– Central and satellites; – Mass of the halos– Color of the group members

Page 18: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments
Page 19: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Alignment for the whole sample

• f= N(θ) /N_ran(θ) • 24,728 pairs

Page 20: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Dependences on the color

Page 21: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Dependences on group mass

Page 22: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Which satellites contributed ?

Page 23: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Summary for the observation

• Satellites align with the major axis of the centrals, in contrast with the classic Holmberg(1969) effect;

• The effect stronger for red centrals/satellites; vanishes for blue centrals; have chance to have our Milky Way

• Stronger for richer systems;• Stronger for satellites at smaller halo-

centric distance

Page 24: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Jing & Suto 2002

Page 25: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Jing & Suto 2002

Page 26: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Radius RJing & Suto (2002)

Page 27: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Semi-analytical modeling of galaxy formation based on N-body simulations

• Physical processes: heating, cooling, star formation and feedback, chemical evolution, dust extinction, SSP, galaxy mergers and morphology transformation; (quite complete compared with previous works)

• Subhalos well resolved; Galaxy mergers are dealt with much better than previous works;

• Cooling time scale is longer than standard; flat faint end of LF;

• Cut off cooling in massive halos with AGN formation and feedback

• Kang X., YPJ, H.J.Mo, G. Boerner (2005) • Kang, Jing, Silk, 2006

Page 28: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Predictions from Semi-analytical model + Numerical Simulation

• Difficulty to predict the orientation of the central galaxies– Spiral galaxies: may

not be related to halo spin from recent simulations

– Ellipticals: detailed simulation of mergers

• Useful constraints from the observation

Page 29: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Assumption on the orietation of the central galaxy

• Central galaxy aligns perfectly with the dark matter within r_vir or within 0.3 r_vir

Page 30: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Predictions from Semi-analytical model + Numerical Simulation

• Difficulty to predict the orientation of the central galaxies– Spiral galaxies: may

not be related to halo spin from recent simulations

– Ellipticals: detailed simulation of mergers

• Useful constraints from the observation

Page 31: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

If some misalignment between the central galaxy and its host halo

• Gaussian distribution with the width – 60 degrees for blue – 30 degrees for red

Page 32: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Dependence on halo mass

Page 33: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

• Schematic picture to explain the alignment

Page 34: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Conclusions from the modeling

• The alignment effect is explained if– the red central has some mis-alignment with t

he host halo(Gaussian width 30degrees)– the blue central has more (60 degrees)

• Color and halo mass dependences explained;

• Important Implications: Is the disk of spirals determined by the spin of the host? Intrinsic alignment for weak lensing?

Page 35: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Color of centrals and satellites

• To understand– Hot gas stripping– Cold gas and stars stripping by tides– AGN activity

Page 36: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Weinmann et al. 2006

More severe for more massive clusters

But hot gas not stripped immediately!

Fraction of blue galaxies

Page 37: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Astroph/0709.1354; downsizing

Page 38: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Monaco et al. 2006, ApJ

Downsizing requires satellite galaxies to lose a significant amount of stars before merging into the central galaxies

Page 39: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

A few points for the future work

• Hot gas stripped not immediately after falling into the host; need more work to quantify this;

• Stars of satellites must be stripped out by tides; existence of the IC stars;

• In order to keep the central galaxies red, blue components of satellites must be removed

Page 40: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Interaction-induced star formation enhancement (Li et al. 2008a)

• Sample selection– SDSS DR4; 400,000 galaxies r<17.7– Use emission line diagram to select star-forming

galaxies r<17.6– Use SFR/M*, specific star formation rate as the

star formation strength

Page 41: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Clustering properties

Overall comparison for different typesBrinchmann et al. 2004

Page 42: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Methods

• cross correlation function with spectroscopic sample of all galaxies ; neighbour counts

• Enhancement function with reference to galaxies in a photometric sample to limiting magnitude 19; other limits18.5 and 19.5 also used, to study the effect of companion’s mass;

• Morphology --- sign of interaction

Page 43: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments
Page 44: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Clustering properties

high/low SFR/M*

Projected cross-correlation function

Page 45: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Clustering properties

As a function of SFR/M*, at different scales

Page 46: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Interaction-induced enhancement function

dependence on mass of the SF galaxy

Average boot of SFR/M* as a function of the distance to the nearest neighbor in r<19 but r-r_sfg<1.4

Page 47: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Weak dependence on mass of the companion

Page 48: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Dependence on the concentration of star-forming galaxies

Page 49: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Highly concentrated star forming galaxies, as ellipticals

Page 50: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

neighbour counts of SF galaxies; <30% have a neighbor at r_p<100 kpc/h

Page 51: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

high SFR/M* star forming without a neighbour

Page 52: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Summary

• SF galaxies have more close neighbors• High SF galaxies are small in small halos with cold

gas; low SF galaxies are bigger in larger halos without gas

• little dependence found on mass of the companion; • Interaction increases SF with decrease of the scaled

separation; • Strong star forming galaxies are more concentrated,

consistent with the merging scenario• High SF galaxies do not necessarily have close

neighbors, but many are post mergers;

Page 53: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Are AGN the products of galaxy mergers?

• Li, C et al. (2008b)

Page 54: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Clustering properties

Overall comparison for different typesBrinchmann et al. 2004L(O III)/M_bh indicator f

or the strength of accretion rate

Page 55: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments
Page 56: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments
Page 57: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments
Page 58: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Matched sample in redshift, stellar mass and 4000 °A break index D4000

Page 59: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Strong star formation of AGN!

but are these stars the same as in the starburst or produced with the black hole accretion ?

Page 60: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Conclusion

• no evidence that enhanced AGN activity is also connected with interactions;

• Open questions– are young stars produced with accretion?– Are AGN post-merger events?

• Our results consistent with the picture:merger, starburst, AGN (with or without young

stars formed)

Page 61: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments
Page 62: Understanding formation of galaxies from their environments

Final Remarks

• The observations have provided important clues to the important processes of galaxy formation, but the interpretation is far from definite;

• Detailed theoretical modeling, especially numerical simulations, are needed.