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Binggeli

Star Formation in the Local Group. Binggeli. Eva K. Grebel Astronomical Institute University of Basel. 2. Why the Local Group?. Proximity Resolution (individual stars) Depth (faintest absolute luminosities) Measurements of: Lowest stellar masses Oldest stellar ages

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Binggeli

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  1. Star Formation in the Local Group Binggeli • Eva K. Grebel • Astronomical Institute • University of Basel

  2. 2 Why the Local Group? • Proximity • Resolution(individual stars) • Depth(faintest absolute luminosities) • Measurements of: • Lowest stellar masses • Oldest stellar ages • Metallicities, element abundances • Detailed stellar and gas kinematics • Highest level of detail and accuracy • Variety(of galaxy types) • Range of masses, ages, metallicities • Range of morphological types • Range of environments • Tests of galaxy evolution theories • Understanding distant, unresolved galaxies Ultra Deep Field

  3. 3 Grebel 1999

  4. 4 Grebel 1999 dSphs dEs dSph/dIrrs dIrrs The Local Group

  5. 5 Morphological Segregation Gas-poor, low-mass dwarfs Grebel 2000 Gas-rich, higher-mass dwarfs

  6. 6 1. The Earliest Epoch of Star Formation • Cold dark matter models predict: • Low-mass systems: • first sites of star formation (z ~ 30) • Larger systems form through hierarchical merging of smaller systems • Re-ionization may Kravtsov & Klypin (CfCP & NCSA) • squelch star formation in low-mass substructures • Galaxies less massive than 109 M lose star-forming material during re-ionization

  7. 7 1. The Earliest Epoch of Star Formation • Consequences: • Low-mass galaxies must form stars prior to re-ionization; must contain ancient populations • Sharp drop / cessation of star formation activity after re-ionization, may resume only much later • High-mass galaxies’ oldest populations must be as old as low-mass galaxies’ populations or younger Testable predictions! • Redshifts of 20 - 30 not (yet?) accessible • Dwarf galaxies at those redshifts would be extremely difficult targets anyway • Exploit fossil record in nearby Universe instead • Local Group ideal target since oldest populations resolved and accessible with HST

  8. 8 1. The Earliest Epoch of Star Formation Age-dating old populations: • Most accurate ages for resolved stellar populations • Most accurate ages from main-sequence turn-offs • Absolute ages model-dependent (isochrones) • Relative ages with internal accuracies of fractions of a Gyr; typically compared against ancient Galactic globular clusters of the same metallicity and [/Fe](differential age dating) • Requires at least 2 mag below MSTO • High resolution (crowding) • Depth (e.g., at M31 distance MSTO > 29 mag) • HST for anything but closest Milky Way satellites

  9. 9 Buonanno et al. 1998

  10. 10 Luminosity function of Ursa Minor: Indistinguishable from Galactic globulars Feltzing et al. 1998; Wyse et al. 2002

  11. 10 1. The Earliest Epoch of Star Formation Results (largely based on HST): • Old populations ubiquitous but fractions vary • Evidence for a common epoch of star formation • Globular clusters with main-sequence photometry (Galactic halo & bulge,Sgr, LMC,For) • Field populations with main-sequence photometry (Sgr,LMC,Dra,UMi,Scl,Car,For,LeoII) • Inferred from globular clusters (e.g., BHBs, spectra): M31, WLM, NGC 6822) • Inferred from BHBs in field populations: Leo I, Phe, And I, II, III, V, VI, VII, Cet, Tuc • Possible evidence for delayed formation? • Inferred from GC MS: SMC’s NGC 121 (2-3 Gyr). (However, lack of ancient globulars does not imply absence of ancient field population.)

  12. 11 1. The Earliest Epoch of Star Formation • Limitations: • Deep data for direct (MSTO) age measurements lack in dwarfs beyond ~ 300 kpc. • True fraction of old stars still poorly known (incomplete area coverage & unknown tidal loss) • No data on Population III stars and their ages • Confirmed: • Ancient Population II in Milky Way, LMC, and dwarf spheroidal galaxies ~ coeval (± 1 Gyr) • Consistent with building block scenario • All galaxies studied in sufficient detail so far contain ancient populations • In contrast to CDM predictions: • No cessation of star formation activity in low-mass galaxies during re-ionization • Considerable enrichment: Episodes of several Gyr Grebel & Gallagher 2004

  13. 12 Star formation activity in low-mass galaxies (~107 M) Grebel & Gallagher 2004 Cosmology: flat, m = 0.27, H0 = 71 km/s/Mpc

  14. 13 2. Global star formation histories Age structure in a synthetic color-magnitude diagram Gallart et al. 1999 Shown: Constant star formation rate from 15 Gyr to the present, no photom. errors.

  15. 14 105 Star CMDs from WFPC2: LMC Star Formation Histories Disk Bar Smecker-Hane, Gallagher, Cole, Stetson, 2002, ApJ, 566, 239

  16. 15 Population box Star formation rate Metallicity [Fe/H] Lookback time Age 2. Global star formation histories Requires: Ages and SFR(t)  photometry + metallicity (t)  spectroscopy + abundance ratios (t)  spectroscopy

  17. 16 Correlation between SFH and distance

  18. 17 Star formation history - distance correlation • Faint (MV > -14) Milky Way companions: • Increasingly higher intermediate-age population fractions with increasing distance from the MW • Environmental influence of Milky Way? Star-forming material might have been removed earlier on from closer companions via • ram-pressure stripping • SN-driven winds from Milky Way • high UV flux from proto-Milky Way • tidal stripping(van den Bergh 1994) If environment is primarily responsible for gas-poor dSphs, then existence of isolated Cetus & Tucana is difficult to understand. Caveat: Argument considers only present-day distances; orbits still poorly known / unknown.

  19. 18

  20. 19 If the apparent trend of low-mass galaxy properties with distance from the primary generally holds, we should also find it for M31’s low-mass companions…

  21. 20 Harbeck, Gallagher, & Grebel 2004 More luminous dwarf No obvious distance correlation for M31 dSphs

  22. 21 3. Harrassment and Accretion • Can we find evidence for this • in the surroundings of massive galaxies in the Local Group? • in the massive galaxies of the Local Group themselves? • Structural properties of nearby galaxies • Stellar content and population properties of nearby galaxies (including abundance patterns) • Streams around and within massive galaxies Dwarf galaxies might be considered the few survivors of a once more numerous dark matter “building block” galaxy population.

  23. 22 • Hierarchical structure formation: • Numerous mergers leave imprint on halo (and disk) • Thus expected: • Overdensities • Lots of streams • Identification photometrically / kinematically 2MASS + Johnston streams

  24. 23 3. Dwarf galaxy accretion: Sagittarius’ tidal stream within the Milky Way Majewski et al. 2003 2MASS: Detection of Sgr’s tidal stream across the entire sky (area coverage advantage of shallow of all-sky survey). Recent detection of second dSph in state of advanced accretion: Monoceros (SDSS, Newberg et al. 2002); “CMa dSph”.

  25. 24 3. Dwarf galaxy accretion: Sagittarius’ tidal stream around & within the Milky Way Majewski et al.

  26. 25 Ibata et al. 2001, Ferguson et al. 2002 + ongoing HST follow-up Zucker et al. 2004

  27. 26 Extremely deep HST imaging of M31’s halo Brown et al. 2003 Old populations present, but intermediate-age, metal-rich populations dominate.

  28. 27 4. Are dwarf galaxy abundance patterns consistent with the building block scenario? • Old populations in dSphs and dIrrs are metal-poor. • The mean metallicity decreases with decreasing parent galaxy luminosity(see Figure). • Star formation history details vary widely, and all dwarfs show considerable abundance spreads. • In terms of mean overall metallicity, • consistency for Milky Way halo • inconsistency for M31 halo (too metal-rich and dominated by 6 - 8 Gyr populations; Brown et al. 2003)

  29. 28 The metallicity - luminosity relation for different types of dwarf galaxies

  30. 29 4. Are dwarf galaxy abundance patterns consistent with the building block scenario? Type II SNe: M ≥ 10 M Mainly -elements (O, Ne, Mg, Si, S, Ca) Timescale < ~ 3·107 yr Type Ia SNe: white dwarfs accreting mass Mainly Fe peak elements Timescale ~ 3·107 yr to 15 Gyr [/Fe] vs. [Fe/H]: mainly determined by time delay between SNe II and Ia and SFH (IMF, nucleosynth.) If dSphs were dominant contributors to the build-up of the Galactic halo, then their abundance patterns should match those observed in the halo. Matteucci 2002

  31. 30 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 After Matteucci 2002 [/Fe]  0.0 -1.0 -2.0 -3.0 -4.0 [Fe/H] High star formation rates (bulges, ellipticals): Larger plateau for [/Fe], more SN II () contribution. Low star formation rates (bursty or continuous; disks, Irrs): Short plateau in [/Fe] at low metallicities. Slow star formation rates (dwarfs): SNe Ia contribute large amounts of Fe sooner and already at very low metallicities, so that solar [/Fe] reached sooner.

  32. 31 Tolstoy & Venn 2004 Blue, black: Galactic disk and halo stars Other colors: Galactic dSphs • Lower [/Fe] @ [Fe/H] in dSphs than in Galactic halo: • Low SFRs (little contribution from massive SNe II ()), or • Loss of metals and SN ejecta, or • Larger contribution from SNe Ia (Fe enhanced over ) • Present-day dSphs cannot have been dominant contributors to the build-up of the Galactic halo Shetrone, Côté, & Sargent 2001

  33. 32 • Essential science:The Local Group • as a test case for galaxy evolution theories • What we know now: • All nearby galaxies contain ancient populations; fractions vary; ~ coeval Population II. • No two galaxies alike in star formation histories, population fractions, mean metallicities and abundance spreads. • But: global correlations (e.g., mass-metallicity) • Environmental impact and CDM building blocks: • Morphology-density • Distance - HI content • Accretion events • Coeval ancient SF • But: • Tucana, Cetus • Uncertain distance - SFH • Number and [ / Fe] • Extended SF in low-mass galaxies (vs. reionization)

  34. 33 • Essential science:The Local Group • as a test case for galaxy evolution • Essential and unique HST science for the future: • Not possible from the ground • Not possible with JWST or • Prepares the ground for JWST and others • HST uniqueness:resolution (crowding) • sensitivity (sky background) • wavelength coverage • (Optical: highest age and metallicity resolution) • SFHs and oldest ages of M31 subsystem + beyond • (I)MFs in cluster & field populations in nearby galaxies; variations, dissolution times, dependencies • Constraints on orbits via parallaxes prior to SIM • Exploit synergy with ground-based spectroscopic capabilities for abundances and kinematics!

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