[PDF] Star Formation In Merging Clusters Of Galaxies eBook

Star Formation In Merging Clusters Of Galaxies Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle version is available to download in english. Read online anytime anywhere directly from your device. Click on the download button below to get a free pdf file of Star Formation In Merging Clusters Of Galaxies book. This book definitely worth reading, it is an incredibly well-written.

Merging Processes in Galaxy Clusters

Author : L. Feretti
Publisher : Springer Science & Business Media
Page : 329 pages
File Size : 50,23 MB
Release : 2006-04-18
Category : Science
ISBN : 0306480964

GET BOOK

Mergers are the mechanisms by which galaxy clusters are assembled through the hierarchical growth of smaller clusters and groups. Major cluster mergers are the most energetic events in the Universe since the Big Bang. Many of the observed properties of clusters depend on the physics of the merging process. These include substructure, shock, intra cluster plasma temperature and entropy structure, mixing of heavy elements within the intra cluster medium, acceleration of high-energy particles, formation of radio halos and the effects on the galaxy radio emission. This book reviews our current understanding of cluster merging from an observational and theoretical perspective, and is appropriate for both graduate students and researchers in the field.

Star Formation in Merging Clusters of Galaxies

Author : Alison Seiler Mansheim
Publisher :
Page : pages
File Size : 27,7 MB
Release : 2016
Category :
ISBN : 9781369616767

GET BOOK

This thesis straddles two areas of cosmology, each of which are active, rich and plagued by controversy in their own right: merging clusters and the environmental dependence of galaxy evolution. While the greater context of this thesis is major cluster mergers, our individual subjects are galaxies, and we apply techniques traditionally used to study the differential evolution of galaxies with environment. Our first system (Chapter 2) is a cluster merger known as Musket Ball that is in a post-merging state. Our second system (Chapter 3), referred to as Cl J0910, is comprised of two clusters that have not yet merged. The order in which they are presented is intentional because, while it would have made more sense to study the pre-merger system first, our approach in Chapter 3 was shaped by what we learned by handling the significantly more difficult post-merger system. The body of this thesis is drawn from two papers: Mansheim et al. 2016a and Mansheim et al. 2016b, one on each system. Both projects benefited from exquisite data sets assembled as part of the Merging Cluster Collaboration (MC2), and Observations of Redshift Evolution in Large Scale Environments (ORELSE) survey, allowing us to scrutinize the evolutionary states of galaxy populations in multiple lights. Multi-band optical and near-infrared imaging was available for both systems, allowing us to calculate photometric redshifts for completeness corrections, colors (red vs. blue) and stellar masses to view the ensemble properties of the populations in and around each merger. High-resolution spectroscopy was also available for both systems, allowing us to confirm cluster members by measuring spectroscopic redshifts, which are unparalleled in accuracy, and gauge star formation rates and histories by measuring the strengths of certain spectral features. We had the luxury of HST imaging for Musket Ball, allowing us to use galaxy morphology (late-type vs. early-type) as an additional diagnostic. For Cl J0910, 24 [mu]m imaging allowed us to defeat a most pernicious source of uncertainty (dusty starburst vs. quiescent). Details on the acquisition and reduction of multi-wavelength data for each system are found within each respective chapter. It is important to note that the research presented in Chapter 3 is based on a letter which had significant space restrictions, so much of the observational details are outsourced to papers written by ORELSE collaboration members. Below is a free-standing summary of each project, drawn from the abstracts of each paper. The Chapter 1 contains an introduction to the topic and motivation to fill a vacuum in knowledge using our hypothesis. Chapter 4, following the meat of the thesis in Chapters 2 and 3, gives closure and looks to the future. In Chapter 2, we investigate star formation in DLSCL J0916.2+2953, a dissociative merger of two clusters at z=0.53 that has progressed 1.1[superscript +1.3][subscript-0.4] Gyr since first pass-through. We attempt to reveal the effects a collision may have had on the evolution of the cluster galaxies by tracing their star formation history. We probe current and recent activity to identify a possible star formation event at the time of the merger using EW(H[delta]), EW[(OII)], and D[subscript n](4000) measured from the composite spectra of 64 cluster and 153 coeval field galaxies. We supplement Keck DEIMOS spectra with DLS and HST imaging to determine the color, stellar mass, and morphology of each galaxy and conduct a comprehensive study of the populations in this complex structure. Spectral results indicate the average cluster and cluster red sequence galaxies experienced no enhanced star formation relative to the surrounding field during the merger, ruling out a predominantly merger-quenched population. We find that the average blue galaxy in the North cluster is currently active and in the South cluster is currently post-starburst having undergone a recent star formation event. While the North activity could be latent or long-term merger effects, a young blue stellar population and irregular geometry suggest the cluster was still forming prior the collision. While the South activity coincides with the time of the merger, the blue early-type population could be a result of secular cluster processes. The evidence suggests that the dearth or surfeit of activity is indiscernible from normal cluster galaxy evolution. In Chapter 3, we examine the effects of an impending cluster merger on galaxies in the large scale structure (LSS) RX Cl J0910 at z =1.105. Using multi-wavelength data, including 102 spectral members drawn from the ORELSE survey and precise photometric redshifts, we calculate extinction-corrected star formation rates and map the specific star formation rate density of the LSS galaxies. These analyses along with an investigation of the color-magnitude properties of LSS galaxies indicate lower levels of star formation activity in the region between the merging clusters relative to the outskirts of the system. We suggest gravitational tidal forces due to the potential of merging halos may be the physical mechanisms responsible for the observed suppression of star formation in galaxies caught between the merging clusters.

Galaxy Formation and Mergers with Stars and Massive Black Holes

Author : Chi-hun Kim
Publisher : Stanford University
Page : 189 pages
File Size : 33,18 MB
Release : 2011
Category :
ISBN :

GET BOOK

While mounting observational evidence suggests the coevolution of galaxies and their embedded massive black holes (MBHs), a comprehensive astrophysical understanding which incorporates both galaxies and MBHs has been missing. To tackle the nonlinear processes of galaxy formation, we develop a state-of-the-art numerical framework which self-consistently models the interplay between galactic components: dark matter, gas, stars, and MBHs. Utilizing this physically motivated tool, we present an investigation of a massive star-forming galaxy hosting a slowly growing MBH in a cosmological LCDM simulation. The MBH feedback heats the surrounding gas and locally suppresses star formation in the galactic inner core. In simulations of merging galaxies, the high-resolution adaptive mesh allows us to observe widespread starbursts via shock-induced star formation, and the interplay between the galaxies and their embedding medium. Fast growing MBHs in merging galaxies drive more frequent and powerful jets creating sizable bubbles at the galactic centers. We conclude that the interaction between the interstellar gas, stars and MBHs is critical in understanding the star formation history, black hole accretion history, and cosmological evolution of galaxies. Expanding upon our extensive experience in galactic simulations, we are well poised to apply this tool to other challenging, yet highly rewarding tasks in contemporary astrophysics, such as high-redshift quasar formation.

Stellar Populations in Nearby Merging Galaxies

Author : Alexander J. Mulia
Publisher :
Page : 109 pages
File Size : 35,64 MB
Release : 2015
Category : Galaxies
ISBN :

GET BOOK

Galaxy mergers were common in the early universe. To better understand this critical step in galaxy evolution, we perform detailed studies of three nearby merging systems. Using images from the Hubble Space Telescope, we identify hundreds of star clusters in these systems, most of which formed as a result of a merger. By studying these clusters, we are able to constrain the properties of their host galaxies. These properties include: the timescale of the interaction, morphology of the merger's progenitor galaxies, and the conditions in which stars and clusters formed. We find clusters in all tidal tails of our galaxy sample, even tails that were previously reported to be clusterless. Ages of clusters are similar to ages of their host tidal tails as predicted from simulations. We also find a color gradient across some tails, indicative of a gradient in ages that suggest star formation takes place primarily in the center of the tails, where gas is likely densest. In addition, cluster ages allow us to probe the star formation histories in these systems by predicting past SFRs in various regions of the galaxies using a new method involving the cluster mass function. The mergers also present an interesting environment to study star clusters themselves. We find that the formation and evolution of star clusters in mergers fits the "quasi-universal'' picture of clusters seen in many other galaxies.

Dynamics of the Tidal Fields and Formation of Star Clusters in Galaxy Mergers

Author : Florent Renaud
Publisher :
Page : 258 pages
File Size : 39,36 MB
Release : 2010
Category : Galaxy mergers
ISBN :

GET BOOK

In interacting galaxies, strong tidal forces disturb the global morphology of the progenitors and give birth to the long stellar, gaseous and dusty tails often observed. In addition to this destructive effect, tidal forces can morph into a transient, protective setting called compressive mode. Such modes then shelter the matter in their midst by increasing its gravitational binding energy. This thesis focuses on the study of this poorly known regime by quantifying its properties thanks to numerical and analytical tools applied to a spectacular merging system of two galaxies, commonly known as the Antennae galaxies. N-body simulations of this pair yield compressive modes in the regions where observations reveal a burst of star formation. Furthermore, characteristic time- and energy scales of these modes match well those of self-gravitating substructures such as star clusters and tidal dwarf galaxies. Comparisons with star formation rates derived from hydrodynamical runs confirm the correlation between the location of compressive modes and sites where star formation is likely to show enhanced activity. Altogether, these results suggest that the compressive modes of tidal fields plays an important role in the formation and evolution of young clusters, at least in a statistical sense, over a lapse of ~10 million years. Preliminary results from simulations of stellar associations highlight the importance of embedding the clusters in the evolving background galaxies to account precisely for their morphology and internal evolution. These conclusions have been extended to numerous configurations of interacting galaxies and remain robust to a variation of the main parameters that characterize a merger. We report however a clear anti-correlation between the importance of the compressive mode and the distance between the galaxies. Further studies including hydrodynamics are now underway and will help pin down the exact role of the compressive mode on the formation and later survival of star clusters. Early comparisons with such computations suggest that compressive modes act as catalysts or triggers of star formation.

Galactic Dynamics

Author : James Binney
Publisher : Princeton University Press
Page : 902 pages
File Size : 10,3 MB
Release : 2011-10-30
Category : Science
ISBN : 1400828724

GET BOOK

Since it was first published in 1987, Galactic Dynamics has become the most widely used advanced textbook on the structure and dynamics of galaxies and one of the most cited references in astrophysics. Now, in this extensively revised and updated edition, James Binney and Scott Tremaine describe the dramatic recent advances in this subject, making Galactic Dynamics the most authoritative introduction to galactic astrophysics available to advanced undergraduate students, graduate students, and researchers. Every part of the book has been thoroughly overhauled, and many sections have been completely rewritten. Many new topics are covered, including N-body simulation methods, black holes in stellar systems, linear stability and response theory, and galaxy formation in the cosmological context. Binney and Tremaine, two of the world's leading astrophysicists, use the tools of theoretical physics to describe how galaxies and other stellar systems work, succinctly and lucidly explaining theoretical principles and their applications to observational phenomena. They provide readers with an understanding of stellar dynamics at the level needed to reach the frontiers of the subject. This new edition of the classic text is the definitive introduction to the field. ? A complete revision and update of one of the most cited references in astrophysics Provides a comprehensive description of the dynamical structure and evolution of galaxies and other stellar systems Serves as both a graduate textbook and a resource for researchers Includes 20 color illustrations, 205 figures, and more than 200 problems Covers the gravitational N-body problem, hierarchical galaxy formation, galaxy mergers, dark matter, spiral structure, numerical simulations, orbits and chaos, equilibrium and stability of stellar systems, evolution of binary stars and star clusters, and much more Companion volume to Galactic Astronomy, the definitive book on the phenomenology of galaxies and star clusters

Cosmic Collisions

Author : Lars Lindberg Christensen
Publisher : Springer Science & Business Media
Page : 143 pages
File Size : 33,7 MB
Release : 2010-04-07
Category : Science
ISBN : 0387938559

GET BOOK

Like no other telescope ever invented, the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has given us magnificent high resolution views of the gigantic cosmic collisions between galaxies. Hubble's images are snapshots in time and catch the colliding galaxies in different stages of collision. Thanks to a new and amazing set of 60 Hubble images, for the first time these different stages can be put together to form a still-frame movielike montage showing the incredible processes taking place as galaxies collide and merge. The significance of these cosmic encounters reaches far beyond aesthetics. Galaxy mergers may, in fact, be some of the most important processes that shape our universe. Colliding galaxies very likely, hold some of the most important clues to our cosmic past and to our destiny. It now seems clear that the Milky Way is continuously undergoing merging events, some small scale, others on a gigantic scale. And the importance of this process in the lives of galaxies is much greater than what was previously thought.

Groups of Galaxies in the Nearby Universe

Author : Ivo Saviane
Publisher : Springer Science & Business Media
Page : 380 pages
File Size : 44,2 MB
Release : 2007-08-01
Category : Science
ISBN : 3540711732

GET BOOK

For every galaxy in the field or in clusters, there are about three galaxies in groups. The Milky Way itself resides in a group. Groups in the local universe offer the chance to study galaxies in environments characterized by strong interactions. In the cosmological context, groups trace large-scale structures better than clusters; the evolution of groups and clusters appears to be related. All these aspects of research are summarized in this book.

Physical Processes in the Interstellar Medium

Author : Lyman Spitzer, Jr.
Publisher : John Wiley & Sons
Page : 335 pages
File Size : 12,7 MB
Release : 2008-11-20
Category : Science
ISBN : 3527617736

GET BOOK

Physical Processes in the Interstellar Medium discusses the nature of interstellar matter, with a strong emphasis on basic physical principles, and summarizes the present state of knowledge about the interstellar medium by providing the latest observational data. Physics and chemistry of the interstellar medium are treated, with frequent references to observational results. The overall equilibrium and dynamical state of the interstellar gas are described, with discussions of explosions produced by star birth and star death and the initial phases of cloud collapse leading to star formation.