What did today’s passive galaxies do in the past Bianca Poggianti INAF – Osservatorio Astronomico Padova.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Star formation histories and environment Bianca M. Poggianti INAF – Osservatorio Astronomico di Padova WE ARE ALL AFTER THE BIG PICTURE: 1)To what extent,
Advertisements

Panoramic View of Cluster Evolution Distant Clusters of Galaxies (Ringberg, 24 Oct 2005) Taddy Kodama (NAOJ), Masayuki Tanaka (Univ. of Tokyo), PISCES.
Improving mass and age estimates of unresolved stellar clusters Margaret Hanson & Bogdan Popescu Department of Physics.
Kevin Bundy, Caltech The Mass Assembly History of Field Galaxies: Detection of an Evolving Mass Limit for Star-Forming Galaxies Kevin Bundy R. S. Ellis,
Life Before the Fall: Group Galaxy Evolution Prior to Cluster Assembly Anthony Gonzalez (Florida) Kim-Vy Tran (CfA) Michelle Conbere (Florida) Dennis Zaritsky.
Gabriella De Lucia, November 1,Tucson MPA The emergence of the red-sequence Gabriella De Lucia Max-Planck Institut für Astrophysik A Workshop on Massive.
Sandage 1986 Roughly speaking, the Hubble sequence is also a sequence in star formation histories. HUBBLE TYPES and STAR_FORMATION HISTORIES.
Searching for massive galaxy progenitors with GMASS (Galaxy Mass Assembly ultradeep Spectroscopic Survey) (a progress report) Andrea Cimatti (INAF-Arcetri)
Dark Halos of Fossil Groups and Clusters Observations and Simulations Ali Dariush, Trevor Ponman Graham Smith University of Birmingham, UK Frazer Pearce.
The HI gas content of galaxies around Abell 370, a galaxy cluster at z = 0.37 International SKA Forum 2010 Philip Lah A New Golden Age for Radio Astronomy.
Galaxies and their Environments Nick Cowan UW Astronomy January 26, 2007 Nick Cowan UW Astronomy January 26, 2007.
RESULTS AND ANALYSIS Mass determination Kauffmann et al. determined masses using SDSS spectra (Hdelta & D4000) Comparison with our determination: Relative.
Figure 5: Example of stacked images. Figure 6: Number count plot where the diamonds are the simulated data assuming no evolution from z=3-4 to z=5 and.
SFR and COSMOS Bahram Mobasher + the COSMOS Team.
Star Formation Rates, Ages and Masses of Massive Galaxies in the FORS Deep and GOODS South fields R. Bender, A. Bauer, N. Drory, G. Feulner, A. Gabasch,
C. Halliday, A. Cimatti, J. Kurk, M. Bolzonella, E. Daddi, M. Mignoli, P. Cassata, M. Dickinson, A. Franceschini, B. Lanzoni, C. Mancini, L. Pozzetti,
Venice – March 2006 Discovery of an Extremely Massive and Evolved Galaxy at z ~ 6.5 B. Mobasher (STScI)
The Properties of LBGs at z>5 Matt Lehnert (MPE) Malcolm Bremer (Bristol) Aprajita Verma (MPE) Natascha Förster Schreiber (MPE) and Laura Douglas (Bristol)
The Evolution of X-ray Luminous Groups Tesla Jeltema Carnegie Observatories J. Mulchaey, L. Lubin, C. Fassnacht, P. Rosati, and H. Böhringer.
Evolution of Galaxy groups Michael Balogh Department of Physics University of Waterloo.
Populations of Galaxies and their Formation at z < 7 Christopher J. Conselice (Caltech) Austin, October 18, 2003 Facing the Future: A Festival for Frank.
Star formation activity as a function of z and environment DISTANT CLUSTERS OF GALAXIES Ringberg, October 2005 Bianca Maria Poggianti INAF – Osservatorio.
P.I. S. White ( MPA-Garching, D ) A. Aragón-Salamanca ( Nottingham, UK ) R. Bender ( Munich, D ) P. Best ( ROE, Scotland ) M. Bremer ( Bristol, UK ) S.
Dynamical state and star formation properties of the merging galaxy cluster Abell 3921 C. Ferrari 1,2, C. Benoist 1, S. Maurogordato 1, A. Cappi 3, E.
Optical Spectroscopy of Distant Red Galaxies Stijn Wuyts 1, Pieter van Dokkum 2 and Marijn Franx 1 1 Leiden Observatory, P.O. Box 9513, 2300RA Leiden,
FMOS Workshop, Jan The Decline in Cosmic Star Formation: is Environment to blame? or Mapping the interaction of galaxies with their environment as.
How to start an AGN: the role of host galaxy environment Rachel Gilmour (ESO Chile & IfA, Edinburgh) Philip Best (Edinburgh), Omar Almaini & Meghan Gray.
Luminosity and Mass functions in spectroscopically-selected groups at z~0.5 George Hau, Durham University Dave Wilman (MPE) Mike Balogh (Waterloo) Richard.
Renzini Ringberg The cosmic star formation rate from the FDF and the Goods-S Fields R.P. Saglia – MPE reporting work of/with R. Bender, N.
Culling K-band Luminous, Massive Star Forming Galaxies at z>2 X.Kong, M.Onodera, C.Ikuta (NAOJ),K.Ohta (Kyoto), N.Tamura (Durham),A.Renzini, E.Daddi (ESO),
Conference “Summary” Alice Shapley (Princeton). Overview Multitude of new observational, multi-wavelength results on massive galaxies from z~0 to z>5:
The Evolution of Galaxy Morphologies in Clusters “ Distant Clusters of Galaxies” Ringberg, October 2005 Marc Postman with lots of help from: Marc Postman.
Galaxy Growth: The role of environment Simone Weinmann (MPA Garching) Collaborators: Guinevere Kauffmann, Frank van den Bosch, Anna Pasquali, Dan McIntosh,
The coordinated growth of stars, haloes and large-scale structure since z=1 Michael Balogh Department of Physics and Astronomy University of Waterloo.
The Evolution of Groups and Clusters " Richard Bower, ICC, Durham " With thanks to the collaborators that have shaped my views Mike Balogh, Dave Wilman,
The Environmental Effect on the UV Color-Magnitude Relation of Early-type Galaxies Hwihyun Kim Journal Club 10/24/2008 Schawinski et al. 2007, ApJS 173,
Starbursts in clusters of galaxies When starbursts meet clusters of galaxies… La Thuile, March 2005Rencontres de Moriond, “When UV meets IR” Pierre-Alain.
The epochs of early-type galaxy formation in clusters and in the field D. Thomas, C. Maraston, R. Bender, C. Mendes de Oliveira Max-Planck-Institut für.
Gas stripping and its Effect on the Stellar Populations of Virgo Cluster Galaxies Hugh H. Crowl UMass with Jeff Kenney (Yale)‏ Jacqueline van Gorkom (Columbia),
Naoyuki Tamura (University of Durham) The Universe at Redshifts from 1 to 2 for Early-Type Galaxies ~ Unveiling “Build-up Era” with FMOS ~
A wide field multi-wavelength survey of two clusters at z~0.5 Tommaso Treu (UCSB)
Formation and Evolution of Early-Type Galaxies in clusters Yara Jaffé 1,2 Alfonso Arag Ó n-Salamanca 1 1. The University of Nottingham 2. European Southern.
The Star Formation Histories of Red Sequence Galaxies Mike Hudson U. Waterloo / IAP Steve Allanson (Waterloo) Allanson, MH et al 09, ApJ 702, 1275 Russell.
すばるが見た遠方銀河団 distant clusters of galaxies: take a closer look Masayuki Tanaka (University of Tokyo) Tadayuki Kodama (NAOJ) + PISCES team picture credits:
Driving Downsizing with groups of galaxies Michael Balogh Department of Physics and Astronomy University of Waterloo.
Major dry-merger rate and extremely massive major dry-mergers of BCGs Deng Zugan June 31st Taiwan.
Thessaloniki, Oct 3rd 2009 Cool dusty galaxies: the impact of the Herschel mission Michael Rowan-Robinson Imperial College London.
THE BUILD-UP OF THE COLOUR- MAGNITUDE RELATION IN LOW-Z GALAXY CLUSTERS Bertinoro School 23 th -29 th May 2009 Diego Capozzi 1,2, Chris A. Collins 1, John.
The origin of E+A galaxies
Models & Observations galaxy clusters Gabriella De Lucia Max-Planck Institut für Astrophysik Ringberg - October 28, 2005.
The relation between the galaxy stellar mass distribution and the mass of its hosting halo BENEDETTA VULCANI KAVLI IPMU What Regulates Galaxy Evolution?
The Star Formation- Density Relation …and the Cluster Abell 901/2 in COMBO-17 Christian Wolf (Oxford) Eric Bell, Anna Gallazzi, Klaus Meisenheimer (MPIA.
RDCS1252 (z = 1.24) C-M Relation with HST/ACS and VLT/ISAAC (Blakeslee et al. 03; Lidman et al. 03; Rosati et al. 04) Coma at z=1.24 E S0 Late HST/ACS.
Multiwavelength Properties of the SDSS Galaxies in Various Classes Feb 19, 2008 Joon Hyeop Lee 1, Myung Gyoon Lee 1, Changbom Park 2, Yun-Young Choi 2.
The evolution of galaxy sizes since z=3 Ignacio Trujillo (MPIA) & the FIRES team (Trujillo et al. 2004, ApJ, 604, 521) (Trujillo et al. 2005, ApJ, submitted,
Evidence for a Population of Massive Evolved Galaxies at z > 6.5 Bahram Mobasher M.Dickinson NOAO H. Ferguson STScI M. Giavalisco, M. Stiavelli STScI Alvio.
Red-Sequence Galaxies with young stars and dust The cluster A901/902 seen with COMBO-17 Christian Wolf (Oxford) Meghan E. Gray (Nottingham) Klaus Meisenheimer.
Panoramic Imaging and Spectroscopy of Cluster Evolution with Subaru (PISCES) FMOS meeting (Kyoto, 13-14/01/04) PI: Taddy Kodama (NAOJ) Arimoto, Futamase,
Tracing the “cosmic” evolution does not tell us how single galaxies evolve….. (ARAA again)
Speaker: Dave Wilman (MPE) Collaborators: Mike Balogh (Waterloo), George Hau, Richard Bower (Durham); John Mulchaey, Gus Oemler (Carnegie); Ray Carlberg.
The GOOD NICMOS Survey (GNS): Observing Massive Galaxies at z > 2 Christopher J. Conselice (University of Nottingham) with Asa Bluck, Ruth Gruethbacher,
ZCOSMOS 10k: The role of group environment on the morphological transformation of galaxies Katarina Kovač 1 and the zCOSMOS team* *The zCOSMOS team comprises.
Galaxy mass-to-light ratios at z> 1 from the Fundamental Plane: measuring the star formation epoch and mass evolution of galaxies van der Wel, Rix, Franx,
9 Gyr of massive galaxy evolution Bell (MPIA), Wolf (Oxford), Papovich (Arizona), McIntosh (UMass), and the COMBO-17, GEMS and MIPS teams Baltimore 27.
The Genesis and Star Formation Histories of Massive Galaxies Sept 27, 2004 P. J. McCarthy MGCT Carnegie Observatories.
GALAXY MASSES…AND BACK TO DOWNSIZING!. Motivation Great progress in tracking star formation history but: - SF density averages over different physical.
Lightcones for Munich Galaxies Bruno Henriques. Outline 1. Model to data - stellar populations and photometry 2. Model to data - from snapshots to lightcones.
盘状星系的颜色和颜色梯度 常 瑞 香 (上海天文台 ) 合作者:沈世银 刘成则 侯金良 邵正义 颜色 - 星等关系 颜色梯度 盘状星系的演化模型.
Galaxy Populations in the Most Distant Clusters
Young bulges and old ellipticals
Presentation transcript:

What did today’s passive galaxies do in the past Bianca Poggianti INAF – Osservatorio Astronomico Padova

Post-starburst galaxies and the intracluster medium in the Coma cluster T. Bridges D. Carter N. Kashikawa Y. Komiyama B. Mobasher S. Okamura B.M. Poggianti M. Yagi

B and R with Japanese mosaic CCD camera on WHT Spectra for 300 members with WYFFOS/WHT, 6- 9 A res., A

EW(Hdelta) > 3 A

Faint k+a in Coma Poggianti et al. 2004

Red and blue

Poggianti,Bridges,Komiyama et al X-ray from Neumann et al. 2003

all dwarfs strong, young k+a’s weak, older k+a’s

K+a galaxies and substructure in Coma 1.The position of faint post-starburst galaxies in Coma relative to X-ray substructure strongly suggestive: The recent infall of these galaxies onto the cluster and the consequent interaction with the hot ICM were the cause for the abrupt change in their star formation histories “CAUGHT IN THE ACT” 2. k+a spectrum (=truncation of SF) related to cluster 3. The impact with the ICM can have a strong effect on the SFH of a galaxy. The effect is FAST. (Vollmer et al. 99,00,01, Quilis et al. 00, Abadi et al. 99) 4. It isn’t easy to pinpoint relation between gal. evol. and substructure, ‘cause it is not easy to identify substructure, i.e. reconstruct the infall history of a cluster

Dressler et al. 1999, Poggianti et al. 1999, Dressler et al Post-starburst/post-starforming (k+a) galaxies in the MORPHS sample of 10 clusters at z=

Observing late star-forming faint galaxies becoming “dwarf ellipticals” About 10% of the dwarf cluster population Caldwell et al.’s works Tran et al. 2003

Comparison Coma - clusters at z= Downsizing effect: k+a’s: a luminous phenomenon at z=0.5 and a faint one at z=0? probably reflecting a change in the SF properties of the infalling galaxies evolution of the MAXIMUM LUMINOSITY of k+a galaxies in clusters – another evidence for downsizing going to lower redshifts, the maximum luminosity/mass of galaxies with significant SF activity progressively decreases – active star formation in low mass galaxies seems to be (on average) more protracted than in massive galaxies

Well-known dependence on galaxy mass/luminosity: the more massive, the oldest both in clusters – Smail et al Bower et al Halliday 1999 Kajisawa et al Nakata et al Kodama & Bower 2001 Poggianti et al. 2001a,b (ages and metallicities as a fn. of the galaxy luminosity) De Propris et al De Lucia et al Kodama et al and in the field – Cowie et al. 1996, Kauffmann et al. 2003, Bell et al. 2003

The questions 1.Was the SB induced by the impact with the ICM? 2. Could it be strangulation? 5. k+a’s in the field at low z are dwarf galaxies too? 6. Is this inconsistent with hierarchical modeling+semi- analytics? 7. What is the origin of the downsizing effect? Possibly No SF in low mass galaxies more protracted on average than in massive galaxies: most likely “intrinsic”, not environmental It depends on SFE assumptions Giant galaxies known 3. Is the origin of k+a galaxies in distant clusters the same as of k+a’s in Coma? ? 4. Are there k+a dwarf galaxies in distant clusters? ? Ongoing VLT project

S. White ( MPA-Garching, D ) A. Aragón-Salamanca ( Nottingham, UK ) R. Bender ( Munich, D ) P. Best ( ROE, Scotland ) M. Bremer ( Bristol, UK ) S. Charlot ( MPA, D & IAP, F ) D. Clowe ( Bonn, D) J. Dalcanton ( U.Washington, USA ) B. Fort ( IAP, F ) P. Jablonka ( OPM, F ) G. Kauffmann ( MPA, D ) Y. Mellier ( IAP, F ) R. Pello ( OMP, F ) B. Poggianti ( Padova, I ) H. Rottgering ( Leiden, NL ) P. Schneider ( Bonn, D ) D. Zaritsky ( U. Arizona, USA ) M. Dantel ( OPM, F ) G. De Lucia ( MPA, D ) V. Desai ( U. Washington, USA ) C. Halliday ( Padova, I ) B. Milvang-Jensen ( MPE, D ) S. Poirier ( OPM, F ) G. Rudnick ( MPA, D ) R. Saglia ( Munich, D ) L. Simard ( U. Victoria, C ) The ESO Distant Cluster Survey Study evolution of clusters and cluster galaxies in a uniform imaging and spectroscopic database over ½ of the Hubble time

EDisCS – ESO Distant Cluster Survey cluster fields selected from the Las Campanas Distant Cluster Survey (Gonzales et al. 2001): Deep imaging: VRIJK at z~0.8, BVIK at z~0.5 (11n FORS2 + 20n SOFI) Spectroscopy: at least 4 FORS2 masks at long exposure to get spectra to I~23 (z~0.8) or 22 (z~0.5) (22n FORS2) HST/ACS imaging for 10 most distant clusters (80 orbits) WFI 3-color imaging for all 20 fields (84hr WFI) ESO LP allocation: 36n VLT/FORS2 + 20n NTT/SOFI

CL z=0.42 EDisCS Imaging 10 “high-z” fields in VRIJK, 10 “low-z” fields in BVIK CL z=0.54 CL z=0.58 CL z=0.75 CL z=0.76

EDisCS – ESO Distant Cluster Survey cluster fields selected from the Las Campanas Distant Cluster Survey (Gonzales et al. 2001): Deep imaging: VRIJK at z~0.8, BVIK at z~0.5 (11n FORS2 + 20n SOFI) Spectroscopy: at least 4 FORS2 masks at long exposure to get spectra to I~23 (z~0.8) or 22 (z~0.5) (22n FORS2) HST/ACS imaging for 10 most distant clusters (80 orbits) WFI 3-color imaging for all 20 fields (84hr WFI) ESO LP allocation: 36n VLT/FORS2 + 20n NTT/SOFI

Morphology  HST CL z=0.58 CL z=0.79

EDisCS – ESO Distant Cluster Survey cluster fields selected from the Las Campanas Distant Cluster Survey (Gonzales et al. 2001): Deep imaging: VRIJK at z~0.8, BVIK at z~0.5 (11n FORS2 + 20n SOFI) Spectroscopy: at least 4 FORS2 masks at long exposure to get spectra to I~23 (z~0.8) or 22 (z~0.5) (22n FORS2) HST/ACS imaging for 10 most distant clusters (80 orbits) WFI 3-color imaging for all 20 fields (84hr WFI) ESO LP allocation: 36n VLT/FORS2 + 20n NTT/SOFI

Halliday et al A&A in press (astro-ph )

Halliday et al cl1216 at z=0.8

Halliday et al (astro-ph )

De Lucia et al. 2004, ApJL 610, L77

De Lucia et al ApJ Letter Data from Terlevich et al. (2001) Smail et al. 1998; Kajisawa et al. 2000, Nakata et al. 2001, Kodama et al. 2004

De Lucia et al ApJL -- Defining as “faint” galaxies 0.4 < L/L* < 0.1 (5σ detection limit), the luminous-to-faint ratio on the red sequence is 0.34±0.06 in Coma and 0.81±0.18 in EDisCS -- The effect is seen also in the single-cluster distributions, despite of the variety of cluster properties: such a deficit may be a universal phenomenon in clusters at these redshifts A deficiency of red galaxies at faint magnitudes compared to Coma -- A synchronous formation of stars in all red sequence galaxies is ruled out, and the comparison with Coma quantifies the effect as a function of galaxy magnitude -- A large fraction of the red faint galaxies has moved onto the red sequence relatively recently, having their SF presumably ended at z<0.8

Stay tuned on EDisCS…….. Stellar population analysis of cluster galaxy spectra (see Halliday’s poster) Tully-Fisher relation of cluster and field galaxies up to z~0.8 (see Milvang-Jensen’s poster) Metallicity-luminosity relation of star-forming galaxies (see Moustakas’s poster)

Stay tuned on EDisCS…soon to come Evolution of galaxy masses and IR phot. (Aragon-Salamanca et al.) Weak lensing mass reconstructions (Clowe et al.) HST galaxy morphologies in clusters at 0.8 – Evolution of galaxy Hubble types, of merger rates and properties, and of the morphology-density relation (Desai et al.) Differences between group and cluster galaxies up to z~0.8 (Halliday et al.) The spectroscopy of the remaining 14 clusters (Milvang-Jensen et al.) Star formation and evolutionary histories in clusters from z=0.8 (Poggianti et al.) The Fundamental-Plane of early-type galaxies (Saglia et al.) Bulge-to-disk decompositions and early-type galaxy fractions (Simard et al.) Presentation of the survey and of the optical photometry (White et al.)………………………

Halliday et al. 2004

Tran et al (see Tran’s talk)

EDisCS is an international project involving 26 astronomers from 7 countries. The original proposal was submitted by the following group of co-investigators : S. WhiteS. White ( MPA-Garching, D ) - Principal Investigator - A. Aragón-SalamancaA. Aragón-Salamanca ( Nottingham, UK ) R. BenderR. Bender ( Munich, D ) P. BestP. Best ( ROE, UK ) M. BremerM. Bremer ( Bristol, UK ) S. CharlotS. Charlot ( MPA, D & IAP, F ) D. CloweD. Clowe ( Bonn, D) J. DalcantonJ. Dalcanton ( U.Washington, USA ) B. FortB. Fort ( IAP, F ) P. JablonkaP. Jablonka ( OPM, F ) G. KauffmannG. Kauffmann ( MPA, D ) Y. MellierY. Mellier ( IAP, F ) R. PelloR. Pello ( OMP, F ) B. PoggiantiB. Poggianti ( Padova, I ) H. RottgeringH. Rottgering ( Leiden, NL ) P. SchneiderP. Schneider ( Bonn, D ) D. ZaritskyD. Zaritsky ( U. Arizona, USA ) Others actively involved in the project currently include: M. DantelM. Dantel ( OPM, F ) G. De LuciaG. De Lucia ( MPA, D ) V. DesaiV. Desai ( U. Washington, USA ) C. HallidayC. Halliday ( Padova, I ) B. Milvang-JensenB. Milvang-Jensen ( MPE, D ) S. PoirierS. Poirier ( OPM, F ) G. RudnickG. Rudnick ( MPA, D ) R. SagliaR. Saglia ( Munich, D ) L. SimardL. Simard ( U. Victoria, C )

cl z=0.70 EDISCS - Desai et al. in preparation

Ground based and HST images Cl Cl Desai et al. in prep.