Bibcode
Zhu, L.; van de Ven, Glenn; Bosch, Remco van den; Rix, Hans-Walter; Lyubenova, Mariya; Falcón-Barroso, J.; Martig, Marie; Mao, Shude; Xu, Dandan; Jin, Yunpeng; Obreja, Aura; Grand, Robert J. J.; Dutton, Aaron A.; Macciò, Andrea V.; Gómez, Facundo A.; Walcher, Jakob C.; García-Benito, Rubén; Zibetti, Stefano; Sánchez, Sebastian F.
Referencia bibliográfica
Nature Astronomy, Volume 2, p. 233-238
Fecha de publicación:
3
2018
Número de citas
68
Número de citas referidas
66
Descripción
Galaxy formation entails the hierarchical assembly of mass, along with
the condensation of baryons and the ensuing, self-regulating star
formation1,2. The stars form a collisionless system whose
orbit distribution retains dynamical memory that can constrain a
galaxy's formation history3. The orbits dominated by ordered
rotation, with near-maximum circularity λz ≈ 1, are
called kinematically cold, and the orbits dominated by random motion,
with low circularity λz ≈ 0, are kinematically hot.
The fraction of stars on `cold' orbits, compared with the fraction on
`hot' orbits, speaks directly to the quiescence or violence of the
galaxies' formation histories4,5. Here we present such orbit
distributions, derived from stellar kinematic maps through orbit-based
modelling for a well-defined, large sample of 300 nearby galaxies. The
sample, drawn from the CALIFA survey6, includes the main
morphological galaxy types and spans a total stellar mass range from
108.7 to 1011.9 solar masses. Our analysis derives
the orbit-circularity distribution as a function of galaxy mass and its
volume-averaged total distribution. 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 ≤ λz ≤
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.
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