Gaia ITNG2013 School, Tenerife Ken Freeman, Lecture 2: the thin disk September 2013 The Thick Disk Thick disk Most spirals (including our Galaxy) have a second thicker disk component The thick disk and halo of NGC 891 (Mouhcine et al 2010): thick disk has scale height ~ 1.4 kpc and scalelength 4.8 kpc, roughly like our Galaxy. The thin and thick disks near the sun Thick disks are very common in disk galaxies. In large galaxies like the MW, the thick disk is about 10% of the luminosity of the thin disk. The thick disk near the sun was identified in 1983 from star counts by Gilmore & Reid towards the S. Galactic pole. Two superimposed exponential distributions were seen : one with scale height ~ 300 pc and the other with ~ 1000 pc. As expected from the different scale heights, the vertical velocity dispersion of the thick disk is larger (~ 40 km/s) than the dispersion of the old thin disk (~ 20 km/s) Gilmore & Reid 1983 rapidly rotating disk & thick disk slowly rotating halo |Zmax| < 2 kpc Rotational velocity of nearby stars relative to the sun vs [m/H] (V = -232 km/s corresponds to zero angular momentum) (Carney et al 1990) Selecting thin and thick disk stars kinematically. Although the thin and thick disks are dynamically different, this approach has obvious problems Nissen 2003 Further work indicated that • the thin disk has a large age range (long known) and an abundance range [Fe/H] from about -0.5 to +0.5 • the thick disk stars are all old (> 10 Gyr) and have abundances between about -0.3 to -1.2, with a metal-weak tail extending down to about -2.0. • the thick disk stars form an -enhanced sequence in the [ /Fe] vs [Fe/H]. Because of operational difficulties in assigning individual stars kinematically to the thin or thick stars, the assignment is now usually made according to the location in the [ /Fe] - [Fe/H] plane. (-enhancement indicates that the chemical evolution of the gas from which these stars formed was quick, driven mainly by the -producing core collapse SNII. The time-scale was short compared to the ~ Gyr timescale for the Fe-producing SNIa) thick disk what is this ? thin disk [/Fe] vs [Fe/H] for thin and thick disks near the sun The thick and thin disks appear chemically distinct. Haywood et al argue that thick disk is more extended now in age and metallicity Is there an age spread and age-metallicity relation within the thick disk ? Haywood et al 2013 Our Galaxy has a significant thick disk • its scaleheight is about 1000 pc, compared to 300 pc for the thin disk and its velocity dispersion is about 40 km/s compared to 20 km/s for the thin disk near the sun • its surface brightness is about 10% of the thin disk’s. • it rotates almost as rapidly as the thin disk • its stars are older than 10 Gyr, and are • alpha-enriched so its star formation was rapid From its kinematics and chemical properties, the thick disk appears to be a discrete component, distinct from the thin disk. (Some disagreement about this) The old thick disk is a very significant component for studying Galaxy formation, because it presents a kinematically and chemically recognizable relic of the early Galactic disk. Disk Kinematics 17000 Segue stars Velocity dispersion components decrease with increasing [ / Fe], from thin disk on L to thick disk on R. For the thin disk near sun, = (40, 25, 20) km/s For the thick disk = (60, 40, 40) km/s 0.0 Lee et al 2011 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 Lag as function of [Fe/H]: thin and thick disk separated by [/Fe]. Note the opposite trends with [Fe/H]. The metal-richer thin disk stars have a larger lag (i.e. lower angular momentum and therefore smaller guiding center radii). Lee et al 2011 Considering the changing lag in terms of an equilibrium disk, the asymmetric drift in an equilibrium system depends on the R-component of the velocity dispersion and the term in [ ] below For disk stars the last term in [ ] is not free - it is a fixed ratio, depending on the Oort constants. Usually there is a positive relation between lag and velocity dispersion, driven by the velocity dispersion. The term in [ ] does not change much from one sample of thin disk stars to another. From the SEGUE data, the U, V dispersion components of the thin disk don’t change much with abundance, so the increase in lag with increasing [Fe/H] must be due mainly to the first [ ] term via the radial density gradient. The density gradient of the more metal rich thin disk stars must be steeper. Lag in mean rotation vs |(height above the plane)| Lee et al 2011 How old are the oldest nearby thin disk stars ? i.e. when did the thin disk start to form ? About 8-10 Gyr, from • the age of stars at the change of kinematics from thin disk to thick disk (~ 10 Gyr : Edvardsson et al 1993) • the oldest subgiants in the nearby disk (~ 8 Gyr : Sandage et al 2003) and the ages of oldest individual disk stars (9.7 ± 0.6 Gyr : Liu & Chaboyer 2000:) • the white dwarf luminosity function (~ 8 Gyr : e.g. Leggett et al 1998) old disk Velocity dispersions of nearby F stars thick disk appears at age ~ 10 Gyr Freeman 1991; Edvardsson et al 1993; Quillen & Garnett 2000 Hipparcos stars with accurate parallaxes, plus CMD for M67 (age 4 Gyr) and NGC 6791 (age 8 Gyr). Subgiants in NGC 6791 are at the faint limit of the field subgiants. Sandage et al 2003 White Dwarf Luminosity Function (Leggett et al 1998) Curves show expected WDLF from cooling theory for disk ages 7,8,9 Gyr 9 7 Leggett et al 1998 Disk Heating (the secular increase in stellar velocity dispersion with time through interaction of disk stars with spiral waves, giant molecular clouds … ) Solar neighborhood kinematics: Several possible mechanisms for heating disk stars: eg transient spiral arms, GMC scattering accretion of satellites radial migration from inner Galaxy can also contribute Expect heating by spiral arm/ GMC scattering to saturate after a few Gyr, as the stars spend more time away from the galactic plane What do the observations show ? What is the observed form of the heating with time ? The facts are not yet clear ... • One view is that stellar velocity dispersion ~ t 0.2-0.5 eg Wielen 1977, Dehnen & Binney 1998, Binney et al 2000. velocity dispersion (km/s) W is in the vertical (z) direction total W = 0.4total stellar age (McCormick dwarfs, CaII emission ages) Wielen 1977 • Another view is that heating occurs for the first ~ 2 Gyr, then saturates. Edvardsson et al (1993) measured accurate individual velocities and ages for ~ 200 subgiants near the sun. Edvardsson et al data indicate heating for the first ~ 2 Gyr, with no significant subsequent heating. Disk heating in the solar neighborhood appears to saturate when z ~ 20 km/s. old disk Velocity dispersions of nearby F stars thick disk appears at age ~ 10 Gyr Disk heating saturates at 2-3 Gyr Freeman 1991; Edvardsson et al 1993; Quillen & Garnett 2000 W Soubiran et al (2008) agree, using distant clump giants and isochrone ages age (Holmberg 08) The age-velocity dispersion relation is still not observationally secure. Measuring accurate stellar ages is difficult. (These are two independent sets of isochrone ages: one from high resolution spectroscopic parameters and one using Hipparcos parallaxes and photometric temperatures and [Fe/H]. ) s = sqrt (U2 + V2 + W2 ) Age-velocity relation for GCS stars Casagrande et al 2011 AVR for our subgiant sample, drawn from the GCS The GCS : magnitude-limited and kinematically unbiased sample of 13,500 FGK HD-stars, with Strömgren photometry and accurate (< 1 km/s) radial velocities. Most stars have Mv between 0 and +7. GCS provides estimates of Te, MV, [Fe/H]: we used them to select the subgiants. Kinematics are not used in selection. Our data: echelle spectra from about 420 to 680 nm, resolution 25,000, SN ~ 50 per resolution element. Derive spectroscopic log g, Te, [M/H] (will soon have detailed abundances for many elements) and isochrone ages via direct and Bayesian techniques. Removed some double-lined binaries. The age-velocity relation: old disk has ~ constant W = 24 km s-1 for age = 4 to 9 Gyr For age > 10 Gyr, thick disk has W = 37 km s-1 Wylie de Boer and KCF 2013 Summary from the GCS subgiants The old thin disk is consistent with a roughly constant W = 24 km s-1 for age = 4 to 9 Gyr The heating appears to saturates rather than continuing to rise like W ~ t 0.2-0.5 For the older (thick disk stars), W = 37 km s-1 Need to resolve this issue We need to know whether continuing internal secular dynamical heating is important for the evolution of the disk: it provides a baseline for understanding the dynamical evolution of the disk, including the effect on the disk of interactions with subhalos Age uncertainties are still a big problem (see Soderblom (Ann Rev 2010). Hope that accurate distances from Gaia and asteroseismology ages will help to improve stellar ages. The total density and surface density of the disk near the sun This is called the Oort limit (see Oort 1960 for a more recent reference). The idea is to use the vertical density distribution (z) and vertical velocity distribution f(W) of a tracer sample of stars to derive dynamically the total (luminous + dark) density and surface density of the disk, e.g. via Jeans equation. Is there more matter in the disk that we can account for from census of visible objects ? The tracer sample must be in equilibrium so the stars need to be older than a few Gyr. The last few estimates have used K dwarfs and K giants - probably OK but they do include stars of all ages, some of which may not yet be phase-mixed. Data so far is for the solar neighborhood, but Gaia will enable estimates of the disk density and surface density away from the sun. Kuijken & Gilmore (1989, 1991) For a flat rotation curve and at small z, the Jeans equation + Poisson’s equation are The density of matter near the sun is about 0.10 M pc-3, all of which can be accounted for. The surface density for |z| < 1.1 kpc is 71 ± 6 M pc-3, of which about 48 ± 9 M pc-3 is due to the stellar component and the rest is probably due to the dark halo. Zhang et al (2013) - SEGUE K dwarfs Jeans analysis: results are consistent with Kuijken & Gilmore. They find the surface density for |z| < 1.0 kpc is 67 ± 6 M pc-2, of which the stars provide 42 ± 5 M pc-2 and the cold gas provides about 13 M pc-2. The rest comes from the dark halo. The halo density near the sun is about 0.0065 M pc-3. The Chemical Evolution of the Disk The abundance gradient in the disk (eg galactic cepheids: Luck & Lambert 2011) Gradient is about -0.06 dex kpc -1 Age Metallicity Relation near sun Haywood 2008 Note the large spread in abundance for the thin disk stars with 3 < age < 10 Gyr. Radial migration ? The mean abundance of the oldest thin disk stars is about -0.2 Gently declining AMR with spread of about 0.8 dex in [M/H] for 3 < age < 10 Gyr (scatter includes the [M/H] external error of ~ 0.07) Wylie de Boer & KCF 2012 (GCS subgiants) The [/Fe] - [Fe/H] distribution for giants in inner and outer Galaxy and near sun In the inner Galaxy, most stars are in the -enhanced sequence In the outer Galaxy, few stars are in this sequence Suggests thick disk does not extend much beyond the solar radius Bensby et al 2011 The abundance gradient in the outer Galaxy from clusters and giants - gradient flattens at [Fe/H] ~ -0.4 for RGC > 15 kpc No significant dependence of gradient on cluster age, though gradient for the clusters older that 2.5 Gyr is a bit steeper than for the cepheids. Consistent with inside-out disk formation. The -enhancement of outer clusters similar to that for outer stars (i.e. like thin disk sequence). Yong et al 2012 NGC 300: a pure disk galaxy Diversion to radial migration (Sellwood & Binney 2002) Stars in disk galaxies can migrate in radius under the torque of a passing transient spiral wave. Stars moving at similar angular velocity to the spiral are flipped from one near-circular orbit to another: inwards or outwards. The spiral wave must be transient, not steady - otherwise the stars conserve their stellar Jacobi integrals, and can only move along a line in the Lindblad (E - Lz ) diagram. (The Jacobi integral is EJ = E - Lz ) So far, radial migration is a theoretical concept: we do not know how important it is in reality. It could move metal-rich stars from the inner galaxy out to the outer galaxy, and invert the abundance gradient. z constant EJ break Simulation of star formation in a disk galaxy, starting with gas settling in a dark halo. See how stars are radially redistributed via spiral arm interaction into outer (break) region of truncated disk. Stars that form within R = 10 kpc end up at R = 10-14 kpc, but can also end up at R < 10 kpc. The stars are affected by spiral waves that have a similar angular velocity to the stars themselves. Roskar et al (2008) Vlajic et al 2008 Reversal of abundance gradient in NGC 300 Roskar et al 2008 NGC 300 Is this reversal related to the radial migration phenomenon ? Is it, and the lack of truncation of the disk, due to strong radial mixing of stars from the inner disk ? Star Formation and the Galactic Gas Supply in Disk Galaxies extended gas envelopes gas depletion times need for continuing gas supply radial gas flows formation of pure disk galaxies Extended HI envelopes of disk galaxies are common e.g. NGC 2903 Irwin et al (2009) Outer contour 3.1017 cm-2 Vc = 190 km s-1 M83 outer HI (Bigiel et al 2010a) Some star formation, but depletion time ~ 100 Gyr in outer regions: outer HI is available as reservoir for star formation in inner regions. HI UV, HI M83 outer HI Bigiel et al 2010a Long HI depletion time in outer disk Entraining of hot halo material by galactic fountain: SN-driven accretion NGC 891 Much evidence now for hot halos of gas around spirals, from COS absorption spectra of QSOs with sightlines through galaxies. Fraternali et al (2001 ff) : very deep HI observations found halo HI in NGC 2403, 891, 4559, 6946 lagging rotation of the disk. In NGC 891, halo HI is detected to z = 22 kpc from the galactic plane. Lag in rotation relative to disk suggests that fountain gas loses angular momentum to the hot halo. Binney, Fraternali, Marinacci et al (2006 ff) propose that SN-driven fountain gas entrains hot halo material which returns to the disk. Star formation sustains itself from the hot halo, with accretion rate ~ 2 M yr-1 in the Milky Way. (Deposition rate is smaller than the overall rate of interchange of mass between disk and halo). Cool clouds are ejected from the disk into halo : Kelvin-Helmholtz instability strips gas from the clouds, and coronal gas condenses in their wake and returns to the disk. Fountain gas loses angular momentum to the halo and spins up the halo, which still lags the cold disk by ~ 100 km s-1. Radial Flows and chemical evolution Expect slow (~ 1 km/s) radial inflow in disk as consequence of infall of matter with angular momentum < that of local circular velocity (eg Lacey & Fall 1985). Could also be driven by bar, spirals, viscosity. Not possible to detect observationally (Wong et al 2004: NGC 5055; Elson et al 2011: NGC 2915): intrinsic asymmetries and warps in HI disks mask radial flows < 5-10 km/s. Spitoni & Matteucci (2011) looked at chemical evolution of disk with inflow. Goal is to reproduce an exponential stellar disk and this observed abundance gradient in the gas. Succeed with infall velocity increasing with radius and radially dependent infall rate decay time (~ 8 Gyr at sun). Not unique: other ways to get there without radial flow. Related study by Schoenrich & Binney (2009) invoked radial gas flow and radial stellar migration and stellar heating prescription. Reproduced abundance gradient, solar n’hood stellar MDF, bimodal alpha-Fe relation from migration rather than SFH, (Black points are mean of HII & PN) Starburst- and AGN-driven winds Metal ejection from star-forming disk, enriches halo, returns gas to disk (maybe with extra entrained gas from halo). Believed to be essential part of understanding the massmetallicity relation enrichment of IGM … Recent observational work on winds driven by starbursts and AGNs at low-z (Sharp & Bland-Hawthorn 2010). See large-scale wind cone of enriched material with velocities of 100-200 km/s, accelerating to increasing heights above plane, originating from the region of active star formation. The material seen in the winds is not the winds themselves which are believed to be hot - we see the cooler material that is entrained in the wind. M82 wind: red is H From Veilleux et al 2005 The difficulty of forming large disk galaxies with small bulges (recall Abadi et al 2003) led to current ideas on importance of suppressing early star formation, removing baryons from forming galaxy via massive winds and returning them slowly (Binney Gerhard Silk 2001, Governato, Gibson ….) UGC7321 Matthews et al (1999) The mass loss avoids loss of baryonic angular momentum to the assembling lumpy DM halo which leads to disks that are too small and violate the TF law. It also suppresses the steep DM cusps which are ubiquitous in CDM simulations but are not observed in galaxies. In the current generation of simulations, galaxies start with more low-J material than they end up with. The surplus is ejected as wind. The halo absorbs some of the angular momentum and expands. Disk forms later from higher-J material which falls in: this suppresses the formation of large bulges which always occurred in earlier simulations (e.g. Abadi et al 2003). How much of this is true - what are the details ? Simulations are now showing these effects (eg Brook et al 2011) in context of earlier discussion of winds, hot halo. Brook et al (2011) on the formation of bulgeless galaxies. High resolution cosmological SPH simulations, enough resolution to resolve star forming regions. Adopt a high threshold density for SF: increases energy released into gas affected by SN feedback. In summary • low-J material accreted and rapidly expelled early. Later accreted material has higher-J and forms disk • reservoir of high-J material exists beyond star forming region • outflows occur perpendicular to disk. • Material that builds disk is accreted from outer regions near the galactic plane • mergers which cause gas to lose angular momentum trigger starbursts which expel much of the low-J gas. (May also expel gas which has lost angular momentum through secular processes) Loss of low-J material suppresses bulge formation gas blown out HI Angular momentum distributions of gas and stars within rvir at z = 0 Blown-out gas has low-J Brook et al 2011 Simulation: B-band surface brightness and HI contours (1019 to 1022 cm-2) at z ~ 1.2. Extended HI relative to star forming region. mag arcsec-2 Brook et al 2011 Maccio et al 2012 show how the heating of the DM cusp via the outflow can erase the central cusp in the DM distribution, as many have suggested. Low feedback High feedback The angular momentum content of disks (the M-J relation) is a critical constraint on formation mechanism (eg Fall 1983, Romanowsky & Fall 2012). Angular momentum per unit mass vs mass J ~ M 0.6 where J is the specific angular momentum i.e. the angular momentum per unit mass. Where does this scaling relation come from ? NGC 2915 Meurer et al 1996 MB = -16 Vc = 80 km/s Abundance Z ~ 0.4 Z in outer disk HII regions (Werk et al 2010) NGC 5055 Battaglia et al (2006) weak warp, weakly lopsided: inner HI dominated by stellar disk, outer HI by DM. Some star formation in outer HI. Vc = 206 km/s. How do the baryons get into the galaxies ? Before about 2000, gas was believed to fall into the galaxies as the halo was being built up. The gas clouds virialize and the gas is shock-heated to a temperature corresponding to its virial velocity. T ~ V 2 : for V = 200 km/s, T ~ 2.6 x 10 6 K This gives a hot halo of gas. Getting gas out of this hot halo into the disk to form stars is not so easy. Since about 2003, belief is that this is still true for the very massive DM halos (hot halos are seen in very massive galaxies), but accretion in filaments of cold gas through the hot halos is more important for galaxies with M < 2-3. 1011 M (Dekel et al 2009) Paradigm for baryon acquisition Most of the baryonic mass in galaxies with halo masses < 2-3. 1011 M is acquired through filamentary cold-mode accretion of gas that was never shock-heated to its virial temperature (eg Birnboim & Dekel 2003, Keres et al 2005, 2009). Atmospheres of hot virialized gas develop in halos above 2-3.1011 M but cold accretion persists (especially at z > 2) and is the main driver of the cosmic SFH. Keres et al 2009 How to get the hot gas from the halo into the disk to fuel star formation (and how to get it out of the disk into the halo) High Velocity Clouds: (infalling HI clouds around the MW), long believed to be gas fuel source for the disk. Their formation is not completely understood yet. Their metallicities are ~ 0.2 Z (eg Sembach 2004) Condensation of HVCs from hot halo via thermal instability (Maller & Bullock 2004). Difficult to make this work in linear theory - would be mostly suppressed by buoyancy and thermal conduction (Binney et al 2009). Simulations of non-linear perturbations (overdensities 10-20) can generate cool clouds from hot halo if cooling time is shorter than the dynamical time. Otherwise clouds are disrupted by Kelvin-Helmholtz (shear) and & Rayleigh-Taylor (buoyancy) instabilities (Joung et al 2012) Only larger clouds (~ 105 M) can survive the trip from halo to disk. Smaller clouds lose their HI over ~ 10 kpc of travel and may become part of warm ionized Galactic disk. Keres & Hernquist (2009) simulations: at high z, gas is accreted from intergalactic medium in cold filamentary infall. At later times, densities are lower and filamentary flows are disrupted in inner regions of massive halos. Disrupted filaments are still able to supply cold gas to MWsized galaxies. Cooling and Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities produce cold (< 104 K) clouds. Again, process needs seeding with moderate overdensities from the filamentary gas. Interaction of hot halo gas with infalling satellites : is this a significant source of fuel ? Cosmological hydro simulations provide a guide: simulations (Fernandez et al 2012) of a MW-sized galaxy shows that the amount of HI present in the halo since z = 0.3 is roughly constant, at about 108 M. The HI accretion rate on to the disk is about 0.2 M yr -1. The satellites are losing gas (about 0.06 M yr -1) so other sources are needed to fuel the current star formation rate. Most of the cold gas in the halo comes from filamentary flows - much of it does not make it directly to disk but some is able to cool and form clouds. Gas stripped from satellites provides a fraction of the cold halo gas. Kauffmann et al 2012 agree: from study of isolated central galaxies (SDSS), accretion rate of gas from satellites is too small to feed the current star formation rate in the primary galaxies. SFR in primary galaxies correlates with the amount of gas in satellites - maybe the satellites are tracing a larger reservoir of ionized gas, that is accreting on to the primaries. Metals in the halos If the halos are at least partly from gas ejected from star formation sites in the disk, then they would also be a reservoir of metals. eg Tumlinson et al (2011) found UV OVI absorption in 27/30 galaxies with sSFR > 10-11 yr -1 and only 4/12 passive galaxies with sSFR < 10-11 along sightlines with projected radii up to 150 kpc. log M* = 9.5 - 11.5 IGM median Diversion Red Blue The blue cloud / red sequence dichotomy is closely reflected in the chemical properties of the gaseous halo out to 150 kpc. The dichotomy is seen in the colors of galaxies: the red ones are mainly passive (little or no star formation) and the blue ones are star forming. Evolution is believed to be mainly from the blue cloud to the red sequence as blue galaxies run out of gas or are quenched. But some galaxies may go the other way: red galaxies that have acquired gas and restarted their star formation. See NGC 5102 above. Kauffmann et al 2003 The halo O-mass and total gas mass is comparable with that of the ISM. In Tumlinson’s passive galaxies, the gas may have been stripped, re-accreted or have cooled (or heated) so that the OVI is undetectable The gaseous halo may be a basic component of star forming galaxies that is removed or transformed when star formation is quenched (I.e. turned off). cf the Fraternali & Binney 2008 mechanism of halo gas entrainment: star formation drives the entrainment which then feeds the star formation. What is mode of quenching in this picture - what stops the star formation ? Mergers ? Where does the warm halo oxygen come from ? The O was likely produced by star formation in the disk and ejected into the CGM. Only 0.3 Gyr of SF at the present rate would be enough to produce it if it were all ejected. It could have accumulated over many Gyr, or be leftover from early starbursts. An estimate of [O/Fe] (or other Fe-peak element) In the gaseous halo could give some constraint on when enrichment occurred. If the mass-metallicity relation of galaxies is associated with ejection and inflow of metals, (eg Davé et al 2011) rather than by rate of SF (eg Tassis et al 2008), then ejected material in lower-mass galaxies may be locked in the CGM and may return later to affect their chemical evolution. The ejected material may also feed the extended non-star-forming HI envelopes seen in many isolated disk galaxies and raise the abundances of these envelopes to their observed level (> 0.2 Z - eg Werk et al 2010, 2011). The Fraternali-Binney circulation could be a way to feed the outer HI envelopes with enriched material. Diversion: Toomre Q (Toomre 1964) An axisymmetric disk is stable to axisymmetric perturbations if where is the epicyclic frequency, cs is the sound speed and is the surface density. A high sound speed (or velocity dispersion) stabilises the disk. Although Q < 1 is a criterion for largescale axisymmetric instability of the disk, it seems to be related to the smaller scale star formation threshold in disks of spiral galaxies (not a very secure result). Very low star formation efficiency in outer regions of HI disks Bigiel et al 2010b : 17 spirals 5 dwarfs SF efficiency drops for lower HI column density. Depletion time ~ 100 Gyr in outer regions. In outer regions, SF efficiency not strongly correlated with local Q Stabilized by DM ? (cf Schaye 2008) All gas at z = 0.5 Gas at z = 0.5 which will form stars by z = 0 Outflowing gas Disk is seen edge-on. Gas which feeds SF is near plane of the disk. Outflowing gas is perpendicular to plane. Brook et al 2011