Download - Lorentz Center

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
massive galaxies at
high redshift:
models confront observations
rachel somerville
STScI
GIRLS; Leiden, September 2008
 shock heating &
radiative cooling
 photoionization
squelching
 merging
 star formation
(quiescent &
burst)
 SN heating & SNdriven winds
 chemical
evolution
 stellar populations
& dust
z=5.7 (t=1.0 Gyr)
z=1.4 (t=4.7 Gyr)
z=0 (t=13.6 Gyr)
Springel et al. 2006
Wechsler et al. 2002
fairly broad consensus:
 SN-driven winds remove baryons in small-mass halos
 some process(es) prevent(s) cooling in large-mass
halos (radio jets, clumps, conduction, cosmic ray
pressure?)
rss, Hopkins, Cox, Robertson & Hernquist 2008, MN in press
quenching of massive galaxies
(note the slope is wrong for
low mass galaxies.
this is not due to AGN FB, &
cannot be easily solved by
‘tweaking’)
stellar mass
rss, Hopkins, Cox, Robertson & Hernquist 2008, MN in press
hot vs. cold flows
 halos with primarily “cold” vs.
“hot” flows separated by a
critical mass of few x 1012 Msun
at low redshift (e.g. Birnboim
& Dekel 2003; Keres et al.
2004);
 heating processes only
effective when a quasi-static
hot gas halo is present (i.e. in
large mass halos)
simulations:
A. Kravtsov
dense cold filaments can penetrate the hot medium
in large-mass halos at high redshift
1014
1013
Mvir
[Mʘ]
all hot
1012
cold filaments
in hot medium
Mshock~M
Mshock>>M*
*
all cold
1011
1010
109
Mshock
Dekel,
Birnboim,
Zinger,
Kravtsov
M*
0
1
2
3
redshift z
4
5
QSO/bright mode
 associated with optical/Xray luminous AGN/QSO
 triggered/fed by mergers
or secular (bar) instabilities
 high accretion rates (0.1-1
LEdd), fueled by cold gas
via thin accretion disk
 may drive winds that can
shut off further accretion
onto the BH and sweep
the ISM out of the galaxy
Radio Mode
 radio galaxies (classical FR
I and FR II type sources);
generally no optical
emission lines
 ‘low accretion state’ (low
Eddington ratio, <10-3
Bondi accretion or ADAF?)
 jets may heat gas in a
hydrostatic hot halo,
offsetting or quenching
cooling flow
time-dependent IMF?
SFR at high-z overestimated?
star formation history
blue: fiducial model
(cLCDM 8=0.9)
red: WMAP3
orange: no cooling if
Mh<1011 Msun
stellar mass build-up
all stars
star formation
in bursts
stellar mass function evolution
Fontanot, de Lucia, Monaco & rss
in prep
“raw” model predictions
solid: MORGANA
dash: Munich Mill.
dot-dash: rss08
with convolved errors
stellar mass assembly
without mass errors
with errors (0.25 dex)
solid: MORGANA
dash: Munich Mill.
dot-dash: rss08
data:
red: Conselice et al.
blue: composite MF
Fontanot et al. in prep
star formation rate density as
function of galaxy mass
solid: MORGANA
dash: Munich Mill.
dot-dash: rss08
green: GOODS; blue: Zheng et al. (COMBO-17)
red: Conselice et al.; cyan: Mobasher et al. 2008
Fontanot et al. in prep
evolution of the SF ‘main sequence’
data:
red square: Drory et al. 2008
blue: Bell et al. 2007
cyan: Martin et al. 2007
green: Grazian et al. 2006
magenta: Noeske et al. 2007
red x: Chen et al. 2008
blue diamond: Dunne et al. 2008
Fontanot et al. in prep
archeological downsizing
data: Panter et al. 2007
data: Gallazzi et al. 2007
Fontanot et al. in prep
when did the red
sequence emerge?
 the red sequence is still clearly identifiable
in the field & clusters up to z~1 (Bell et al.
2005; Faber et al. 2007)
 recently, a population of massive red
galaxies detected in the field at 2<z<3
(Kriek et al. 2008; Taylor et al. 2008)
 very red populations discovered in
clusters up to z~2, but absent by z~3 (Zirm
et al. 2008; Kodama et al. 2008)
Kriek et al. 2008
field
population
Zirm et al. 2008
color-magnitude
relation for coma
black points: SDSS
red points: SAM
Trager & rss 2008
rest-frame u-r for proto-clusters (M>1014 Msun)
z~0
SDSS
RS
Millennium
z=2 clusters
‘field’ RS
from Taylor
et al. ECDFS
observed frame J-H for proto-clusters (M>1014 Msun)
z=2
Zirm et al.
data
H(AB)
Testing physical parameter extraction
from broad-band photometry
 created SAM mock catalogs (including
dust & IGM) and extracted U-, B-, and Vdropouts using GOODS selection criteria
 added photometric errors by
bootstrapping from GOODS data
 ran a fairly standard BC03-based SEDfitting code on ACS+ISAAC+IRAC
photometry (extract stellar mass, stellar
population age, and SFR)
S. Lee, R. Idzi, H. Ferguson, rss, T. Wikland, M. Giavalisco
-19%
-65%
x2
U-drops (z~3); redshift fixed
-25%
-58%
x2
B-drops (z~4); redshift fixed
B-drops; redshift fit
U-drops with largest mass errors
U-drops with smallest mass errors
z~0.4-1.4
DEEP+Palomar photometry
fixed redshift
bootstrapped photometric
errors
Bundy et al. (2006) mass
estimation method
no significant offset or
mass trend
--> scatter ~0.15 dex
Stringer et al. 2008
parameter estimation summary
 sources of error:
 mismatch between assumed “tau” SFHs and
SAM predicted SFH
 ‘hiding’ of mass beneath young stellar
population
 ‘conspiracy’ of overestimated age (-->
higher mass estimate) + ‘youth bias’
(lowers mass estimate) actually reduces
mass errors
 two-component models (with ‘maximally
old’ component or secondary burst)
produce improved age & SFR estimates,
but poorer mass estimates!
summary
 differences between observational datasets much
larger than differences between models!
 number/mass density of massive galaxies is
reproduced fairly well by models (when mass errors
convolved) to z~2
 SFR of massive galaxies at z~1-2 underestimated by
factor of ~few in models if observational estimates
taken at face value (IMF, AGN contamination,
large errors in SED-fit based estimates?)
 low mass galaxies form too early in models --> mass
assembly “upsizes” rather than “downsizes”
 massive galaxies in large mass halos are being
quenched too late in models (RS emerges late)
 errors in stellar masses, SFR, and ages derived from
SED fitting to broad-band photometry at high
redshift may be larger than we think...
bias in line-strength
derived ages
mass weighted age
LS derived age
for 20 realizations of
a Coma-sized halo
stellar mass
Trager & rss 2008
star formation histories of early type galaxies
as a function of stellar mass
 SF histories of E’s in hierarchical models show
qualitatively correct ‘downsizing’ behavior
 but, probably not strong enough (new evidence
from /Fe ratios -- Arrigoni, Trager & rss in prep)
the original downsizing plot
~SSFR
~stellar mass
Cowie et al. 1996
the many manifestations
of ‘downsizing’
 SF history from lookback studies (original Cowie
definition): star formation activity shifts to lower
mass galaxies over time
 mass assembly histories: high mass galaxies
assembled early, low mass galaxies assembled
later
 archeological downsizing: stellar ages are
younger in low mass galaxies, indicating a later
epoch of SF
 chemo-archeological downsizing: higher [/Fe]
ratios in more massive galaxies indicate a shorter
epoch of formation
Related documents