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The stellar orbit distribution in present-day galaxies inferred from the CALIFA survey

Authors :
Zhu, Ling
van de Ven, Glenn
Bosch, Remco van den
Rix, Hans-Walter
Lyubenova, Mariya
Falcón-Barroso, Jesús
Martig, Marie
Mao, Shude
Xu, Dandan
Jin, Yunpeng
Obreja, Aura
Grand, Robert J. J.
Dutton, Aaron A.
Maccio, Andrea V.
Gómez, Facundo A.
Walcher, Jakob C.
García-Benito, Rubén
Zibetti, Stefano
Sánchez, Sebastian F.
Zhu, Ling
van de Ven, Glenn
Bosch, Remco van den
Rix, Hans-Walter
Lyubenova, Mariya
Falcón-Barroso, Jesús
Martig, Marie
Mao, Shude
Xu, Dandan
Jin, Yunpeng
Obreja, Aura
Grand, Robert J. J.
Dutton, Aaron A.
Maccio, Andrea V.
Gómez, Facundo A.
Walcher, Jakob C.
García-Benito, Rubén
Zibetti, Stefano
Sánchez, Sebastian F.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Galaxy formation entails the hierarchical assembly of mass, along with the condensation of baryons and the ensuing, self-regulating star formation. The stars form a collisionless system whose orbit distribution retains dynamical memory that can constrain a galaxy's formation history. The ordered-rotation dominated orbits with near maximum circularity $\lambda_z \simeq1$ and the random-motion dominated orbits with low circularity $\lambda_z \simeq0$ are called kinematically cold and kinematically hot, respectively. The fraction of stars on `cold' orbits, compared to the fraction of stars on `hot' orbits, speaks directly to the quiescence or violence of the galaxies' formation histories. Here we present such orbit distributions, derived from stellar kinematic maps via orbit-based modelling for a well defined, large sample of 300 nearby galaxies. The sample, drawn from the CALIFA survey, includes the main morphological galaxy types and spans the total stellar mass range from $10^{8.7}$ to $10^{11.9}$ solar masses. Our analysis derives the orbit-circularity distribution as a function of galaxy mass, $p(\lambda_z~|~M_\star)$, and its volume-averaged total distribution, $p(\lambda_z)$. We find that across most of the considered mass range and across morphological types, there are more stars on `warm' orbits defined as $0.25\le \lambda_z \le 0.8$ than on either `cold' or `hot' orbits. This orbit-based "Hubble diagram" provides a benchmark for galaxy formation simulations in a cosmological context.<br />Comment: Published in Nature Astronomy, 1 January 2018; doi:10.1038/s41550-017-0348-1; 22pages, 8 figures, 2 tables

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1098126394
Document Type :
Electronic Resource