BREATHING FIRE: HOW STELLAR FEEDBACK DRIVES RADIAL MIGRATION, RAPID SIZE FLUCTUATIONS, AND POPULATION GRADIENTS IN LOW-MASS GALAXIES

被引:209
|
作者
El-Badry, Kareem [1 ,2 ]
Wetzel, Andrew [2 ,3 ]
Geha, Marla [1 ]
Hopkins, Philip F. [2 ]
Keres, Dusan [4 ]
Chan, T. K. [4 ]
Faucher-Giguere, Claude-Andre [5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Yale Univ, Dept Astron, New Haven, CT 06511 USA
[2] CALTECH, TAPIR, Pasadena, CA 91125 USA
[3] Carnegie Observ, Pasadena, CA USA
[4] Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Phys, Ctr Astrophys & Space Sci, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA
[5] Northwestern Univ, Dept Phys & Astron, Evanston, IL USA
[6] Northwestern Univ, CIERA, Evanston, IL USA
来源
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL | 2016年 / 820卷 / 02期
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
galaxies: dwarf; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: kinematics and dynamics; galaxies: star formation; STAR-FORMATION HISTORY; DWARF IRREGULAR GALAXIES; COLD DARK-MATTER; COSMOLOGICAL SIMULATIONS; LOCAL GROUP; METALLICITY DISTRIBUTION; SATELLITE GALAXIES; SPHEROIDAL GALAXY; GALACTIC WINDS; TOO BIG;
D O I
10.3847/0004-637X/820/2/131
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
We examine the effects of stellar feedback and bursty star formation on low-mass galaxies (M-star = 2 x 10(6) - 5 x 10(10) M-circle dot) using the Feedback in Realistic Environments (FIRE) simulations. While previous studies emphasized the impact of feedback on dark matter profiles, we investigate the impact on the stellar component: kinematics, radial migration, size evolution, and population gradients. Feedback-driven outflows/inflows drive significant radial stellar migration over both short and long timescales via two processes: (1) outflowing/infalling gas can remain star-forming, producing young stars that migrate similar to 1 kpc within their first 100 Myr, and (2) gas outflows/inflows drive strong fluctuations in the global potential, transferring energy to all stars. These processes produce several dramatic effects. First, galaxies' effective radii can fluctuate by factors of >2 over similar to 200 Myr, and these rapid size fluctuations can account for much of the observed scatter in the radius at fixed M-star. Second, the cumulative effects of many outflow/infall episodes steadily heat stellar orbits, causing old stars to migrate outward most strongly. This age-dependent radial migration mixes-and even inverts-intrinsic age and metallicity gradients. Thus, the galactic-archaeology approach of calculating radial star formation histories from stellar populations at z = 0 can be severely biased. These effects are strongest at M-star approximate to 10(7-9.6) M-circle dot, the same regime where feedback most efficiently cores galaxies. Thus, detailed measurements of stellar kinematics in low-mass galaxies can strongly constrain feedback models and test baryonic solutions to small-scale problems in Lambda CDM.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 8 条
  • [1] When the Jeans Do Not Fit: How Stellar Feedback Drives Stellar Kinematics and Complicates Dynamical Modeling in Low-mass Galaxies
    El-Badry, Kareem
    Wetzel, Andrew R.
    Geha, Marla
    Quataert, Eliot
    Hopkins, Philip F.
    Keres, Dusan
    Chan, T. K.
    Faucher-Giguere, Claude-Andre
    ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2017, 835 (02):
  • [2] The galaxy-halo size relation of low-mass galaxies in FIRE
    Rohr, Eric
    Feldmann, Robert
    Bullock, James S.
    Catmabacak, Onur
    Boylan-Kolchin, Michael
    Faucher-Giguere, Claude-Andre
    Keres, Dusan
    Liang, Lichen
    Moreno, Jorge
    Wetzel, Andrew
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2022, 510 (03) : 3967 - 3985
  • [3] GALAXY STELLAR MASS FUNCTIONS FROM ZFOURGE/CANDELS: AN EXCESS OF LOW-MASS GALAXIES SINCE z=2 AND THE RAPID BUILDUP OF QUIESCENT GALAXIES
    Tomczak, Adam R.
    Quadri, Ryan F.
    Tran, Kim-Vy H.
    Labbe, Ivo
    Straatman, Caroline M. S.
    Papovich, Casey
    Glazebrook, Karl
    Allen, Rebecca
    Brammer, Gabriel B.
    Kacprzak, Glenn G.
    Kawinwanichakij, Lalitwadee
    Kelson, Daniel D.
    McCarthy, Patrick J.
    Mehrtens, Nicola
    Monson, Andrew J.
    Persson, S. Eric
    Spitler, Lee R.
    Tilvi, Vithal
    van Dokkum, Pieter
    ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2014, 783 (02):
  • [4] How similar is the stellar structure of low-mass late-type galaxies to that of early-type dwarfs?
    Janz, J.
    Laurikainen, E.
    Laine, J.
    Salo, H.
    Lisker, T.
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2016, 461 (01) : L82 - L86
  • [5] THE LOW-MASS STELLAR CONTENT OF GALAXIES - CONSTRAINTS THROUGH HYBRID POPULATION SYNTHESIS NEAR-1 MICRON
    COUTURE, J
    HARDY, E
    ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 1993, 406 (01): : 142 - 157
  • [6] The OSIRIS Lens-amplified Survey (OLAS). I. Dynamical Effects of Stellar Feedback in Low-mass Galaxies at z ∼ 2
    Hirtenstein, Jessie
    Jones, Tucker
    Wang, Xin
    Wetzel, Andrew
    El-Badry, Kareem
    Hoag, Austin
    Treu, Tommaso
    Bradac, Marusa
    Morishita, Takahiro
    ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2019, 880 (01):
  • [7] SDSS-IV MaNGA: global stellar population and gradients for about 2000 early-type and spiral galaxies on the mass-size plane
    Li, Hongyu
    Mao, Shude
    Cappellari, Michele
    Ge, Junqiang
    Long, R. J.
    Li, Ran
    Mo, H. J.
    Li, Cheng
    Zheng, Zheng
    Bundy, Kevin
    Thomas, Daniel
    Brownstein, Joel R.
    Roman Lopes, Alexandre
    Law, David R.
    Drory, Niv
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2018, 476 (02) : 1765 - 1775
  • [8] How robustly can we constrain the low-mass end of the z ∼ 6-7 stellar mass function? The limits of lensing models and stellar population assumptions in the Hubble Frontier Fields
    Furtak, Lukas J.
    Atek, Hakim
    Lehnert, Matthew D.
    Chevallard, Jacopo
    Charlot, Stephane
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2021, 501 (02) : 1568 - 1590