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Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia).

Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

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Page 1: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback.

Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia).

Page 2: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Today’s topics

• Stripping of galactic halo gas in different environments.

• Galaxy interaction.• Tidal fields of groups/clusters.• Galaxy mergers in small/compact group.• Time-changing cluster tidal fields and IGM

during the growth of groups/clusters via hierarchical merging.

Page 3: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Structure of the talk

• Simulations of environmental effects (with animations).

• Implication of the results (which would help observers to interpret their results).

Simulations

ObservationsComparison

(Hickson compact group 40)[Subaru image]

Page 4: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

(I) Halo gas stripping.

• The stripping of galactic halo gas due to hydro-dynamical interaction between galactic gaseous halos and IGM of their host environments (e.g., Larson et al. 1980).

Halo gas

Gas disk

A cluster of galaxies IGM

Page 5: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Ram pressure (Pram) vs restoring force of halo and disk gas (Fhalo and Fdisk)

(Bekki 2009)

Mcl=1014Msunr

s=260kpc (NFW),Fb=0.14.

Cluster-centric distance (kpc)

Pram=IGM*v2

(sim. units)

Time

Fdisk

FhaloFor MW-type disk galaxy

200kpc

50kpc

Page 6: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Simulating halo gas stripping.

Hot gasDisk gas

Halo gas

V=500 km/s T=107 K (Mcl=1014 Msun)Md=6*1010Msun,vc=220 km/s,B/D=0.2

(DM halo + bulge + disk stars/gas + halo gas+SF)

(Bekki 2009)

Animation

Page 7: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

GRAPE7-SPH simulation: Halo gas stripping (Bekki et al 2002; 2009).

Page 8: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Efficiency of gas stripping in different environments.

(V=500 km/s, IGM=4*10-3 atoms/cm3,T=107 K [Mcl=1014 Msun ],R~200kpc)

(Bekki 2009)

Fstrip=0.65 (Halo)

Mg

Time

Page 9: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

(V=500 km/s, T=107 K [Mcl=1014 Msun ])

(Bekki 2009)

Cluster: Fstrip=0.65 (Halo)

Group: Fstrip=0.38 (Halo) (V=200 km/s, T=3*106 K [Mcl=1013 Msun ])

Page 10: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Summary of results from this and other works.

• More efficient stripping in more massive groups/clusters (Fstrip depends on Mcl, V, T etc; Bekki et al. 2002; Bekki 2009).

• Typically 70% of gas can be removed from galaxy halos (McCarthy et al. 2008).

• Stripping of halo gas is quite efficient in less luminous galaxies (Vc~150 km/s) in small groups (Kawata & Mulchaey 2008).

Page 11: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Halo vs disk gas stripping.

• The required Vrel and IGM for halo gas stripping are significantly lower than those for disk one (~ 2000 km/s and ~ 3*10-3 atoms cm-3 ;Abadi et al. 1999; Quills et al. 2000; Vollmer et al. 2006; Tonnesen & Bryan 2008).

(Quills et al. 2000)

Page 12: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Simulating galaxy evolution after halo gas stripping.

• Decrease of gas infall rate disappearance of spiral arms in disk galaxies S0 formation ?

• Evolution from blue to red spirals with ``k’’-type spectra ?

Page 13: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Simulating the post-stripping evolution.

Revisiting the Sellwood & Carlberg (1984) model by using a more realist modele.g., with NFW DM halo, exponential disk/bulge etc (Bekki 2009).

T=0 Gyr T~ 3 Gyr

Slow accretion

Morphological evolution of disks with slow vs rapid gas accretion from halos.

Rapid accretion Slow accretion Rapid accretion

Md=2*1010Msun

Page 14: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Slow (dM/dt=0.7 Msun/yr) Rapid (dM/dt=7 Msun/yr)

Page 15: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Simulating the post-stripping evolution.

Revisiting the Sellwood & Carlberg (1984) model by using a more realist modele.g., with NFW DM halo, exponential disk/bulge etc (Bekki 2009).

Without accretion

Bar formation in growing disks via halo gas infall.

With accretion Without With accretion

T~ 3 GyrT~ 0 Gyr

Md=5*1010Msun

Page 16: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Without ``gas accretion’’ With ``gas accretion’’

Page 17: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Implications of the results.• Gradual transformation of spirals into S0s and

passive spirals due to halo gas stripping in groups/clusters (e.g., Larson et al.1980; Bekki et al. 2002).

• Suppression of star formation due to high Q and low gas mass fraction Strangulation (e.g., Balogh et al. 2000).

• A smaller fraction of barred galaxies among S0s (fraction of bars is 46% in S0s and 70% in spirals: Laurikainen et al. 2009).

• Evolution from satellite galaxies into the red sequence through SF suppression (e.g., van den Bosch et al. 2008).

Page 18: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

(II) Galaxy interaction• Two major roles: Morphological

transformation (e.g., SpSB) and triggering starbursts (e.g. Noguchi 1987; Noguchi & Ishibashi 1987 and many others).

Bar formation during tidal interaction(Noguchi 1987).

Page 19: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Timescale of galaxy interaction/merging.

For a cluster with Mcl=1014 Msun (NFW), and a MW-type galaxy

Galaxy interaction

Major merging of MW-type galaxy

Formula by Makino & Hut (1997)

<tH

>tH

Page 20: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Galaxy interaction in different environments.

• Three basic parameters: Peri-center distance (Rp), relative velocity (Vrel), and mass ratio (m2), which depend strongly on environments.

• Dependence of interaction physics on the Hubble types and gas fraction.

m2

Vrel

Rp

e.g., Vrel ~ F(Mclust)

Interaction strength dependent on three parameters.

(Byrd et al. 1990; Berentzen et al. 1999 Perez et al. 2006 etc.)

Page 21: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Formation of bars and starbursts in fast galaxy encounters with vrel=1000 km/s.

m2=1 m2=5 (Bekki 2009)

(Same Rp=35 kpc,Bulge-less spirals,MW-class disks).

Stars

New stars

Companiongalaxy

Page 22: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)
Page 23: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Star formation histories during fast encounters (Vrel~ 1000 km/s).

SFR

Galaxy interaction in clusters of galaxies

Peri-center passageMB/MB+Md=0.0

Page 24: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Star formation histories during slow encounters (Vrel ~ 300 km/s).

SFR

Galaxy interaction in groupsPeri-center passage

MB/MB+Md=0.4

m2=1.0

Page 25: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Implications

• More dramatic changes in SF histories of low-luminosity systems in clusters (The BO effect can be for less luminous systems ?).

• Early-type spirals are unlikely to show enhanced SF activities (e.g., e(c) and e(b) spectral types) irrespective of environments.

• Starburst spectra only in the inner regions.

Page 26: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

(III) Cluster/group tides

• Morphological transformation (e.g., S0 formation; Byrd & Valtonen 1990), triggering starbursts, and tidal truncation of gaseous halos.

• Formation of dEs from galaxy harassment (i.e., combination of cluster tide and high-speed multiple galaxy interaction; Moore et al. 1996).

Page 27: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Morphological transformation.(I) From early-type spirals to S0s

(III) From dE,Ns to UCDs

(II) From bulge-less, less luminous spirals to dEs.

(Cluster tide)

(Harassment)

(Threshing)

(Byrd & Valtonen1990).

(Moore et al. 1996)

(Bekki et al. 2001)

Page 28: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Tidal effects of the Fornax cluster on a nucleated dwarf with MV=-16 mag.

Page 29: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Orbit-dependent galaxy evolution.Cluster-centric distance (kpc)

SFR (Msun/yr)

Time

Starburst

(Bekki 2009)

Rs (NFW)

Mcl=1014 Msun (NFW)

Page 30: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Implications

• A higher fraction of starburst galaxies in cores of clusters/groups ?

• BO blue galaxies would be less luminous disks with small bulges (if cluster tide is responsible for the BO effect).

Page 31: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

(IV) Mergers in small/compact groups.

• Evolution of compact groups into giant elliptical galaxies through multiple mergers (e.g., Barnes 1989).

• Formation and evolution of ``fossil groups’’ (e.g., Ponman et al. 1994; Mendes de Oliveira et al. 2007).

• Chance projection (Mamon 1986) and 30% of true compact groups (Brasseur et al. 2009) ?

HCG90

[HST imageBy R. Sharples]

Page 32: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Galaxy evolution dependent on galaxy density/kinematics and gas content.

fg

Trot

gal

Properties of merger remnants dependent on three parameters.

(A)Uniform or King distribution ?(B)Trot/T=1 or 0.(C)Gas mass fraction (fg)=0 or 0.5.

(2T/|W|=1 i.e., in vrial equilibrium)

(Bekki 2009)

Page 33: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Multiple mergers and elliptical galaxy formation.

(Bekki 2009)

Page 34: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Multiple mergers and formation of a binary galaxy (E-E).

(Bekki 2009; See also Wiren et al. 1996)

Page 35: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Formation of a ``fossil group’’.350 kpc

A factor of 10 (~2.5 mag)luminosity differencebetween the 1st and 2nd largest galaxies.

Schechter LF function(=-1 for 20 galaxies)

1st

2nd

Page 36: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Evolution of gas-rich disks in small/compact groups.

Gaseous evolution

Intra-group HI gas/rings Giant gas disk around a spheroid(Bekki 2009)

Final

Page 37: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Formation of starburst and post-starburst galaxies.

(Bekki 2009)

Post-starburst

Starburst

Star-forming

SFR

Time

ULIRG/QSO phase

Page 38: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Implications.

• Binary galaxy formation (e.g., E-E pair) from small/compact groups ?

• Origin of ``E+A’’s with companions (e.g. Goto 2001; 2008): Transition phase of small/compact groups ?

(SDSS image of E+As Yamauchi et al. 2008)

(A pair galaxy: Hernandez-Toledo et al. 2006)

Page 39: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

(V) Galaxy evolution during environmental changes.

• Observational evidences of merging clusters/groups, e.g., substructures and cold-fronts (e.g. Forman & Jones 1990 Owen et al. 2008).

• The growth of groups/clusters via accretion of smaller groups in hierarchical clustering scenarios (12-30%, Li & Helmi 2008; Berrier et al. 2009).

X-ray iso-intensity contour (Forman & Jones 1990)

Page 40: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Effects of time-changing tides and IGM in merging groups/clusters.

• Morphological transformation from spirals into S0s due to strong tidal fields (Bekki 1999; Gnedin 2003).

• Enhancement of star formation by high IGM pressure (Evrard 1991) or suppression of SF by gas stripping (Fujita et al. 1999) ?

Page 41: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Simulating IGM effects on galaxies: triggering starbursts ?

• Time evolution of gas pressure of IGM around galaxies in merging clusters.

• Mclust ~1014 Msun, Rvir ~ 1 Mpc, Vrel~ 600 km/s. 100 galaxy particles

IGMMerging clusters

(Bekki 2009)

Pressure ?

Page 42: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)
Page 43: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Dramatic increase of IGM pressure around galaxies during group/cluster merging.

Pressure ( x 105 kB K cm-3)

Time (Gyr)

Internal pressure of GMCs.

Ram-pressure-induced Starbursts: Bekki & Couch (2003),Kronberger etr al. (2008)

Page 44: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Synchronized global starbursts ?

Pmax,mer

Pmax,iso

The mean Pmax,mer/Pmax,iso=5.9

T=2 Gyr

(Galaxy passage of high-pressureIGM of merging clusters)

Pmax,iso=Pmax,mer

Page 45: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Substructures of galaxies experiencing high-pressure/density IGM.

(Bekki 2009)

Rvir

Galaxy particles

M2/M1=0.25

Page 46: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Implications

• A higher fraction of starburst/post-starburst galaxies in merging clusters (e.g., Miller et al. 2003; Owen et al 2005 for Abel 2255 and 2125, respectively) ?

(HST imageOf A2125).

(0.5-2 kev Chandra image with radio sources)

Page 47: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Implications

• A clue to the origin of post-starburst galaxies in the substructure of the Coma cluster (e.g., Poggianti et al. 2004).

• Stronger BO effects in clusters with substructures ?

Page 48: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Conclusions

• Efficient halo gas stripping in groups/clusters Suppression of star formation and gradual morphological transformation.

• Cluster/galaxy tide Dramatic changes in star-forming regions and rapid morphological transformation.

• Synchronized formation of starbursts during group/cluster merging Differences in galaxy properties between clusters with/without substructures.

Page 49: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Spectrophotometric evolution of disks after gas stripping.

Rapid truncation

Slow

No truncation

Rapid Slow

No

(Shioya et al. 2002, 2004).

Spectral evolution: e(b)e(a)a+kk+a k.

Page 50: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Spectral types dependent on galactic morphological types.

• Number fraction of Sa and Sc with e(a), e(b), and e(c) is 0.1 and 0.48, respectively (Poggianti et al. 1999) Selective influence of galaxy interaction ?

(Poggianti et al. 2008)

Early Late

e(a)

e(b)

e(c)

Sa ScNumber

Page 51: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Conclusion (I) Effects of halo/disk gas stripping on galaxy evoluion in groups/clusters

• Morphological: Gradual disappearance of spiral arms, non-development of strong bars, and disk heating S0 formation.

• Star formation: Severe suppression of SF due to low gas fraction and high Q.

• Photometric: Red passive spiral formation.

Page 52: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Conclusion (II) Effects of tidal interaction on galaxy

evolution in groups/clusters

• Morphological: Transformation into S0, dE, SBa/b, cE, UCD etc depending on progenitor masses, Hubble-types, and interaction strength.

• Star formation: Strong starbursts and subsequent truncation.

• Photometric: Blue E+As red sequence.

Page 53: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Conclusion (III) Effects of group/cluster tide on galaxy

evolution

• Morphological: Transformation into S0, dE, SBa/b, cE, UCD etc depending on progenitor masses, Hubble-types, and interaction strength.

• Star formation: Strong starbursts and subsequent truncation.

• Photometric: Blue E+As red sequence.

Page 54: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Conclusion (IV) Effects of merging on galaxy evolution in

compact groups

• Morphological: Transformation into giant Es, early-type spirals with extended halo/HI disks, binary galaxies depending on progenitor types and galaxy number densities.

• Star formation: Multiple starbursts and subsequent truncation.

• Photometric: Formation of E+As with companions during group evolution.

Page 55: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Conclusion (V) Effects of changing environments

(merging clusters) on galaxy evolution.

• Morphological: S0 formation from time-changing tidal fields and from gas stripping by IGM.

• Star formation: Synchronized starbursts and subsequent rapid truncation.

• Photometric: Substructures of post-starburst galaxies.

Page 56: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Effects of halo gas stripping on recycling processes in galaxies.

Animation

(Bekki 2009)

Disk

Halo gas

Bulge

Gas ejection

Interaction between halo and ejecta

(g=10-5 cm-3, Mejecta=108 Msun,Vejecta=1000 km/s)

Page 57: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Trapping of starburst ejecta due to halo-ejecta hydrodynamical interaction (Bekki et al. 2009).

Page 58: Simulating environmental effects: Stripping, interaction, & feedback. Kenji Bekki (University of New South Wales, Australia)

(III) Cluster/group tides

A less luminous disk in a cluster with Mcl=1014Msun (Bekki 2009)