Title: GONE%20WITH%20THE%20WIND
1GONE WITH THE WIND
Galaxy Transformation in Abell 2125
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5Galaxy Cluster Abell 2125
- Among richest clusters in Abell catalog
- Redshift z0.25, D3 billion light-years
- 266 confirmed members
- Uniquely rich in radio sources
- Complex structure assembly by infall?
- Underachieving in X-rays for a rich cluster
- Laboratory for active galaxy evolution
6Trail of evidence
- Radio survey shows A2125 as special
- C153 among strongest radio emitters
- Redshift survey identifies cluster components
- Hubble imaging shows unusual structure
- Narrowband imaging reveals O tail
- Spectra show gas and stars move differently
- Chandra shows soft X-ray tail
7Frazer Owen and Mike Ledlow at Kitt Peak
8Abell 2125 is unusual
A2125 X-ray clumps, many radio sources
A2645 just as rich, X-rays smooth, few radio
sources
9Galaxy redshifts show multiple subgroups
C153
10Hubble WFPC2 imagery
- Asymmetric flying fish structure
- Disturbed disk, chaotic dust lanes
- Star-forming blue knots downstream
11Kitt Peak Mosaic images
- Narrow-band filter isolated O II emission
- Long ionized-gas trail stretching 200,000 ly
- Mass greater than 100 million solar masses
12Gemini-N spectra
- Burst of star formation 100 million years ago (as
galaxy entered cluster core?) involving several
billion solar masses - This fits with galaxy being 7 times too bright
for its gravitational mass - Stars orbits not strongly disturbed
- Gas and stellar motions are completely different
which would not result from gravity during a
tidal interaction
13Gemini spectrum Best-fit model (100 Myr
burst on 10-Gyr basis)
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15Chandra X-ray results
- C153 shows a trail in soft X-rays (cooler gas
than surrounding cluster material) - Roughly matches optical gas trail
16Galaxies in the eggbeater
- Known since Butcher/Oemler in 1978 that galaxy
populations in rich clusters change with time
(especially over last 5 Gyr) - Hubble images show much of the action is in
destruction/transformation of spirals - Usually hard to distinguish roles of multiple
processes in these busy environments
17Coma - 300 million l.y. (Bothun/McGraw-Hill Obs.)
18Abell 851 5 billion l.y. Hubble
(Dressler/Morrison)
19Coma cluster in X-rays
U. Briel et al, XMM-Newton
20Clusters themselves are dynamic
- Local redshift model implies Virgo growing
- Even rich relaxed clusters (Coma) show X-ray
and redshift substructure - Clusters as well as galaxies grow by merger and
acquisition
21Where have all the spirals gone?
- Most into elliptical and S0 galaxies
- Galaxy collisions/mergers
- Tidal forces from the cluster core
- Cumulative weak tides harassment
- Stripping by ram pressure as galaxies move
through hot cluster gas - These would often happen together and are
difficult to separate
22An ongoing view of stripping
- C153 has an unusually high velocity within A2125
(at least 2000 km/s) - It is the only large disk to have passed close to
the dense gas of the cluster core - Distinct star/gas responses tell us that its
transformation is being dominated by gas
stripping.
23Summary
- We see all the signatures of ongoing stripping of
gas from a spiral galaxy - Previous detections have inferred this process
from its aftermath, or seen more subtle effects
from a single tracer - Favorable circumstances of C153 allow this
process to be seen very clearly - Is this the Milky Way in 50 billion years?