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How Well Do We Know Stellar Populations?

How Well Do We Know Stellar Populations?. Nick Gnedin. Co-starring. Andrey Kravtsov (Chicago) Kostas Tassis (Crete) Oleg Gnedin (Michigan) Sasha Muratov (Michigan). Where Do Stars Form?. F. Walter & The HI Nearby Galaxy Survey. Where Do Stars Form?.

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How Well Do We Know Stellar Populations?

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  1. How Well Do We Know Stellar Populations? Nick Gnedin

  2. Co-starring Andrey Kravtsov (Chicago) Kostas Tassis (Crete) Oleg Gnedin (Michigan) Sasha Muratov (Michigan)

  3. Where Do Stars Form? F. Walter & The HI Nearby Galaxy Survey

  4. Where Do Stars Form? • In the local universe stars only form in molecular gas. • We know of no example of a single star forming in atomic gas. • On theoretical grounds, molecular gas is expected to be a good tracer of star-forming gas. (Krumholz, Leroy, McKee 2011)

  5. How Molecular Clouds Form • Molecular hydrogen is fragile: it is destroyed by UV radiation in the Lyman-Werner band (11.3 – 13.6 eV). • Molecular clouds only exist because of shielding. • Both, shielding by H2 (self-shielding) and shielding by dust are important.

  6. Atomic-To-Molecular Transition 101 • Dust shielding for hydrogen molecules is like a castle wall for defenders: without the wall, they are not able to withstand the assault of the UV radiation. • But without the defenders, the wall is useless.

  7. Putting It All Together • ART (Adaptive Refinement Tree) Code • N-body + gas + SF + RT + NLTE chemistry • 50 pc spatial resolution in the ISM with mesh refinement • Star formation recipe from Krumholz & Tan 07 • Optically Thin Variable Eddington Tensor Approximation (OTVET) for RT • Non-equilibrium cooling rates and ionization & chemical balance are computed “on the fly” • Realistic galaxies in cosmological simulations in a 35 comoving Mpc box (dynamic range of >105)

  8. Sub-cell Model • Radiative transfer in LW bands can not be done exactly in realistic simulations: 3D, adaptive in space, time-dependent. • Spatial scales over which absorption lines are coherent are sub-parsec (= unresolvable). • Unless aliens give us a super-duper hypercomputer to solve all this, we need to use a “sub-cell” model. • RT in LW bands is done in Sobolev-like approximation (“like” because the velocity field is not resolved).

  9. Multi-phase ISM All 3 main ISM phases are there: • hot coronal gas • warm diffuse gas • cold HI / H2 gas

  10. Picture of M51

  11. Kennicutt-Schmidt Relation • Local galaxies Atomic gas Molecular gas All neutral gas

  12. Kennicutt-Schmidt Relation • Just like atomic-to-molecular transition scales non-trivially with DMW and UMW, so does star formation.

  13. Does It Work In Real Life? Galaxies at z=3 LBG measurement from Rafelski (2011) Local galaxies (THINGS) cB58 (Baker et al. 2004)

  14. Does It Work In Real Life? • Gas in nearby, low metallicity dwarfs appears to be inert to star formation. UGC 5288 NGC 2915

  15. Bimodality Prediction Lot’s of dust, efficient SF Little dust, inefficient SF

  16. Can’t Kill All Birds With One Stone Molecule Oops – observations don’t show any bimodality Local Group dwarfs Sloan galaxies

  17. A Mystery of the “Metallicity Floor” All those heavy elements came from dust-unrelated star formation process.

  18. A Mystery of the “Metallicity Floor” • There is no place known in the whole universe (except 2 stars and 2 LL systems) that has metallicity less than about 0.2% solar. • Most metal-poor galaxies. • Lowest metallicity stars in the Milky Way. • Damped Lyman-a Absorbers. • These heavy elements might have come from the metal-free generation of stars (Pop III stars), but why is it so universal? • Could there be another population of stars (call it Pop A)?

  19. Genealogy Tree for Stars Primordial gas, no metals Pop III stars Metal-enriched gas Dust is present, Pop M (Pop I+II) stars No dust, Pop A stars

  20. From Pop III to Other Pops • Pop III episode is brief: Wise & Abel 2008 Muratov et all 2011

  21. Key Questions #1 Can dust form fast right after a Pop III episode? Little dust is observed in z>5 galaxies & GRBs (Bouwens et al 2010, Zafar et al 2011). Dust mostly forms in the ISM by nucleation; seeds come from AGB and SNe. Nucleation time is long! (Inoue 2011)

  22. Key Questions #2 Have all metals in dwarf galaxies (M*<108M8) come from Pop III stars? Pop III episode is brief. Chemical abundances of the most metal poor stars in the MW and stars in LG dwarfs look normal, unlike those of Pop III ejecta. (Caffau 2011)

  23. Conclusions • The existence of the “metallicity floor” is a hard to understand puzzle in early galaxy formation. • Metals in galaxies with M*<108M8 came from a dust-unrelated episode of star formation. • Pop III a Pop Whatever transition cannot be properly modelled without understanding how dust forms at z>10. • If the dust formation time-scale is long, then high-z galaxies contain little dust (as observed) and a population of stars forming in atomic gas (Pop A) can not be excluded.

  24. The End

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