Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

48
Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors Pieter van Dokkum (Yale)

description

Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors. Pieter van Dokkum (Yale). General properties of cluster galaxies. Morphology-density relation In core approx. 80% are E and S0 galaxies. (Dressler 1980). General properties of cluster galaxies. Cluster galaxies follow tight scaling relations: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Page 1: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Pieter van Dokkum (Yale)

Page 2: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

General properties of cluster galaxies

• Morphology-density relation• In core approx. 80% are E and S0 galaxies

(Dressler 1980)

Page 3: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

General properties of cluster galaxies

• Cluster galaxies follow tight scaling relations:

– Color-magnitude relation

– Fundamental Plane (Djorgovski & Davis 1987, Dressler et al 1987)

– relation (Faber 1973)

bMg

(e.g., Bower, Lucey, Ellis 1992)

Terlevich, Caldwell,Bower 2001

Page 4: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Motivation for studying cluster galaxies

• Early-type galaxies are massive and old:

Constrain galaxy formation theories

or ?

Page 5: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Motivation for studying cluster galaxies

• Descendants Ly-break galaxies?– Ly-break galaxies already clustered (Giavalisco et al

1998)

– In hierarchical models end up in groups and clusters

Baugh et al. 1998

Ly-break descendants

Page 6: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

• Study the evolution of galaxies in the densest environments– Determine when/how galaxies and LSS formed– Test predictions from CDM models

• Such programs require the resolution of HST and collecting area of large ground-based telescopes

Observational programs

Meza etal. 2003

Page 7: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Observational programs

• Several 100 clusters known at 0.2<z<1.0(best selected by SZ-effect, lensing, or X-rays)

Stanford etal. 2001

Page 8: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Observational programs

• Several 100 clusters known at 0.2<z<1.5(best selected by SZ-effect, lensing, or X-rays)

(Lensing NOT effective method beyond z~0.7)

Page 9: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Observational programs

• Several 100 clusters known at 0.2<z<1.0(best selected by SZ-effect, lensing, or X-rays)

• Many (50+) observed with HST (eg ACS GTO team)

Abell 2218 (z=0.18; Ellis et al 04) RX0848 (z=1.27; van D & Stanford 03)

Page 10: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Observational programs

• Several 100 clusters known at 0.2<z<1.0(best selected by SZ-effect, lensing, or X-rays)

• Many (50+) observed with HST (eg ACS GTO team)

• … but only handful outside the inner Mpc

CL1358+62 MS2053-04 MS1054-03 (z=0.33) (z=0.58) (z=0.83)

Page 11: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

What have we learned ?

• Early-type galaxies appear to evolve slowly and gradually -> stars formed at high redshift

z=10

z=3z=1.5

Fundamental Plane:van Dokkum/Franx/Kelson/Illingworth/Stanford/vdMarel 96-04

Studies of colors, line strengths, etc:Ellis et al. 1997, Bernardi et al 98,Stanford et al 95/98, vD et al 98,00,Treu et al 99,02, Poggianti et al 03,Blakeslee et al 03, Kodama et al 04

Page 12: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

What have we learned ?

RDCS1252 (z=1.24; Blakeslee et al 03; Lidman et al 03)

Page 13: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

What have we learned ?

• At the same time, morphological mix evolves

Andreon et al. 1997 Fabricant et al 98Dressler et al. 1997 van D et al 00,01Lubin et al. 1998

Smith et al 04

Page 14: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

What have we learned ?

• At the same time, morphological mix evolves• This may affect age estimates of early-type

galaxies (“progenitor bias”; vDF01)• Current idea: evolution driven by infall from the

field

Kodama et al 01(z=0.41; Subaru)

Page 15: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Field spirals andgroups fall in

Page 16: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

MORPHS

- Interaction hot gas: “ram pressure stripping” spiral -> S0 galaxy (Gunn & Gott 1972)

- Encounters: “galaxy harassment” spiral -> early-type (Moore et al 98)

Kenney

Page 17: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

- Mergers may take place in infalling groups groups -> ellipticals (van Dokkum et al 1999)

Page 18: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Cluster evolution at 0.5<z<1.5

• Need to sample to the virial radius: R~10’• Very inefficient with HST (even with ACS/WF3)

CL0024 at z=0.39Treu et al. 2003 30 arcmin

Page 19: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Surveying clusters at 0.5<z<1.5

• Need to sample to the virial radius: R~10’• Very inefficient with HST (even with ACS/WF3)• Requirements:

– Field of 20-30 arcmin– Near-IR capability to study clusters beyond z=1

• Good match to SNAPlike mission (expect 10-20 clusters in 15 sq degrees of deep survey areas!)

Page 20: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Progenitors at z>2

• Overdensities of young objects found out to z~5

Venemans et al 02; also: Francis et al 97, Steidel et al 00, …

Page 21: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Progenitors at z>2

• Overdensities of young objects found out to z~4• However, rest-UV selection may give biased view

Optical: Palomar digital sky survey UV: GALEX

Page 22: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

• L* Sb/c galaxy at z=3: K 23, R 28• Would not be selected by any current method!

Typical Lyman-break galaxyand typical nearby spiral

Page 23: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Selecting “mature” galaxies at z>2

• Use redshifted Balmer- or 4000Å-break

• Adopted criterion: J – K > 2.3 (restframe U – V > 0)

Page 24: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

MUSYC Deep(Ryan Quadri)

FIRES Wide(NataschaForster Schreiber)

FIRES Deep(Ivo Labbe)

10 arcmin

Page 25: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Red galaxies at z>2

• Substantial surface density:~ 0.6/arcmin to K=21 (from FIRES/MUSYC)~ 2/arcmin to K=22 (from FIRES)~ 3/arcmin to K=23 (from FIRES)

2

2

2

2

Page 26: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Red galaxies at z>2

• Substantial surface density: ~ 0.6/arcmin to K=21 (from FIRES/MUSYC)~ 2/arcmin to K=22 (from FIRES)~ 3/arcmin to K=23 (from FIRES)

• SEDs very different from Lyman breaks

2

2

2

Page 27: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Förster Schreiber et al., ApJ, submitted

Page 28: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Red galaxies at z>2

• Substantial surface density: ~ 0.8/arcmin to K=21 (from both fields)~ 2/arcmin to K=22 (from HDF-S)~ 3/arcmin to K=23 (from HDF-S)

• SEDs very different from Lyman breaks• Rest-frame optical spectroscopy + SED fits:

massive, dusty, star-forming galaxies

2

2

2

vD et al, ApJ, in press; Foerster Schreiber et al, ApJ, subm.

Page 29: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Red galaxy at z=2.43

Keck/NIRSPEC, 1½ hrsvD et al, ApJ, in press (astro-ph/0404471)

Page 30: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

• Best constrained parameter: stellar (and dyn) mass

vD et al, ApJ, in press(astro-ph/0404471)

Page 31: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Correlations with linewidth

• Combining z=3 LBGs and z=2.6 DRGs: linewidth correlates with color and stellar mass

astro-ph/0404471

Page 32: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Evolution of massive galaxies

astro-ph/0404471

Page 33: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Evolution of massive galaxies

?

ERO

Early-type

DRG?

Spiral

LBG

Page 34: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Evolution of massive galaxies

ERO

Early-type

DRG

Spiral

LBG

Page 35: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Mapping matter at z=2-3

• Galaxies highly clustered -> need large fields– Map stellar mass using near-IR selected

galaxies– Map halo mass using Tully-Fisher type

correlations and clustering

Page 36: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

HDF-South10’x10’RJK composite

K<21.5, J-K>2.3

MUSYC project(Ryan Quadri)

Page 37: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

30’x30’ field(1/60 of SNAPdeep survey!)

Page 38: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Mapping matter at z=2-3

• Galaxies highly clustered -> need large fields– Map stellar mass using near-IR selected

galaxies– Map halo mass using Tully-Fisher type

correlations and clustering• Morphologies

– Fully formed galaxies or mergers?– Sizes: bulges or ellipticals?– Star formation in disks or clumps?– Density? Central point sources?

Page 39: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors
Page 40: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Red galaxy in Ultra Deep Field:ACS B,V,I,z + NICMOS J,H

Page 41: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

B V I z J H

In near-IR, JDEM could be >1000 x more efficient than HST!

Page 42: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Mapping matter at z=2-3

• Galaxies highly clustered -> need large fields– Map stellar mass using near-IR selected

galaxies– Map halo mass using Tully-Fisher type

correlations and clustering• Morphologies

– Sizes / densities– Star formation in disks or clumps?

• How far to the red ?– Current selection: J–K -> z=2-4– In practice: break almost always between J and

H

Page 43: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Quadri etal., in prep

Page 44: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Mapping matter at z=2-3

• Galaxies highly clustered -> need large fields– Map stellar mass using near-IR selected galaxies– Map halo mass using Tully-Fisher type correlations

and clustering• Morphologies

– Sizes / densities– Star formation in disks or clumps?

• How far to the red ?– Current selection: J–K -> z=2-4– In practice: break almost always between J and H– Cutoff at 1.7 micron OK for z=2-3 (need filter!)

Page 45: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

• There are exceptions:

• Overlap with ground-based K or IRAC needed to select red z>3 galaxies, and to fit the SEDs

K = 20.1phot z = 3.7

Page 46: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Mapping matter at z=2-3

• Galaxies highly clustered -> need large fields– Map stellar mass using near-IR selected galaxies– Map halo mass using Tully-Fisher type correlations

and clustering• Morphologies

– Sizes / densities– Star formation in disks or clumps?

• How far to the red ?– Current selection: J–K -> z=2-4– In practice: break almost always between J and H– Cutoff at 1.7 micron OK for z=2-3 (need filter!)

Page 47: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Blue: data for K-bright LBGs(Shapley et al; astro-ph/0405187)

Page 48: Galaxies in clusters and their progenitors

Comparison to other star forming galaxies