Dario Colombo
Max Planck Society
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Publication
Featured researches published by Dario Colombo.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
E. Schinnerer; Sharon E. Meidt; J. Pety; Annie Hughes; Dario Colombo; Santiago Garcia-Burillo; Karl Schuster; Gaelle Dumas; Clare L. Dobbs; Adam K. Leroy; C. Kramer; Todd A. Thompson; Michael W. Regan
The Plateau de Bure Interferometer Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey has mapped the molecular gas in the central similar to 9 kpc of M51 in its (CO)-C-12(1-0) line emission at a cloud-scale resolution of similar to 40 pc using both IRAM telescopes. We utilize this data set to quantitatively characterize the relation of molecular gas (or CO emission) to other tracers of the interstellar medium, star formation, and stellar populations of varying ages. Using two-dimensional maps, a polar cross-correlation technique and pixel-by-pixel diagrams, we find: (1) that (as expected) the distribution of the molecular gas can be linked to different components of the gravitational potential; (2) evidence for a physical link between CO line emission and radio continuum that seems not to be caused by massive stars, but rather depends on the gas density; (3) a close spatial relation between polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) and molecular gas emission, but no predictive power of PAH emission for the molecular gas mass; (4) that the I-H color map is an excellent predictor of the distribution (and to a lesser degree, the brightness) of CO emission; and (5) that the impact of massive (UV-intense) young star-forming regions on the bulk of the molecular gas in central similar to 9 kpc cannot be significant due to a complex spatial relation between molecular gas and star-forming regions that ranges from cospatial to spatially offset to absent. The last point, in particular, highlights the importance of galactic environment-and thus the underlying gravitational potential-for the distribution of molecular gas and star formation.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Dario Colombo; Annie Hughes; E. Schinnerer; Sharon E. Meidt; Adam K. Leroy; J. Pety; Clare L. Dobbs; Santiago Garcia-Burillo; Gaelle Dumas; Todd A. Thompson; Karl Schuster; C. Kramer
Using data from the PdBI Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey (PAWS), we have generated the largest extragalactic giant molecular cloud (GMC) catalog to date, containing 1507 individual objects. GMCs in the inner M51 disk account for only 54% of the total 12CO(1-0) luminosity of the survey, but on average they exhibit physical properties similar to Galactic GMCs. We do not find a strong correlation between the GMC size and velocity dispersion, and a simple virial analysis suggests that ~30% of GMCs in M51 are unbound. We have analyzed the GMC properties within seven dynamically motivated galactic environments, finding that GMCs in the spiral arms and in the central region are brighter and have higher velocity dispersions than inter-arm clouds. Globally, the GMC mass distribution does not follow a simple power-law shape. Instead, we find that the shape of the mass distribution varies with galactic environment: the distribution is steeper in inter-arm region than in the spiral arms, and exhibits a sharp truncation at high masses for the nuclear bar region. We propose that the observed environmental variations in the GMC properties and mass distributions are a consequence of the combined action of large-scale dynamical processes and feedback from high-mass star formation. We describe some challenges of using existing GMC identification techniques for decomposing the 12CO(1-0) emission in molecule-rich environments, such as M51s inner disk.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
Sharon E. Meidt; E. Schinnerer; Santiago Garcia-Burillo; Annie Hughes; Dario Colombo; J. Pety; Clare L. Dobbs; Karl Schuster; C. Kramer; Adam K. Leroy; Gaelle Dumas; Todd A. Thompson
We use the high spatial and spectral resolution of the PAWS CO(1-0) survey of the inner 9 kpc of the iconic spiral galaxy M51 to examine the effects of gas streaming motions on the star-forming properties of individual giant molecular clouds (GMCs). We compare our view of gas flows in M51--which arise due to departures from axisymmetry in the gravitational potential (i.e., the nuclear bar and spiral arms)--with the global pattern of star formation as traced by Hα and 24 μm emission. We find that the dynamical environment of GMCs strongly affects their ability to form stars, in the sense that GMCs situated in regions with large streaming motions can be stabilized, while similarly massive GMCs in regions without streaming go on to efficiently form stars. We argue that this is the result of reduced surface pressure felt by clouds embedded in an ambient medium undergoing large streaming motions, which prevent collapse. Indeed, the variation in gas depletion time expected based on the observed streaming motions throughout the disk of M51 quantitatively agrees with the variation in the observed gas depletion time scale. The example of M51 shows that streaming motions, triggered by gravitational instabilities in the form of bars and spiral arms, can alter the star formation law; this can explain the variation in gas depletion time among galaxies with different masses and morphologies. In particular, we can explain the long gas depletion times in spiral galaxies compared with dwarf galaxies and starbursts. We suggest that adding a dynamical pressure term to the canonical free-fall time produces a single star formation law that can be applied to all star-forming regions and galaxies across cosmic time.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
Annie Hughes; Sharon E. Meidt; Dario Colombo; E. Schinnerer; J. Pety; Adam K. Leroy; Clare L. Dobbs; Santiago Garcia-Burillo; Todd A. Thompson; Gaelle Dumas; Karl Schuster; C. Kramer
We compare the properties of giant molecular clouds (GMCs) in M51 identified by the Plateau de Bure Interferometer Whirlpool Arcsecond Survey with GMCs identified in wide-field, high-resolution surveys of CO emission in M33 and the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). We find that GMCs in M51 are larger, brighter, and have higher velocity dispersions relative to their sizes than equivalent structures in M33 and the LMC. These differences imply that there are genuine variations in the average mass surface density of the different GMC populations. To explain this, we propose that the pressure in the interstellar medium surrounding the GMCs plays a role in regulating their density and velocity dispersion. We find no evidence for a correlation between size and linewidth in M51, M33, or the LMC when the CO emission is decomposed into GMCs, although moderately robust correlations are apparent when regions of contiguous CO emission (with no size limitation) are used. Our work demonstrates that observational bias remains an important obstacle to the identification and study of extragalactic GMC populations using CO emission, especially in molecule-rich galactic environments.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Dario Colombo; Sharon E. Meidt; E. Schinnerer; Santiago Garcia-Burillo; Annie Hughes; J. Pety; Adam K. Leroy; Clare L. Dobbs; Gaelle Dumas; Todd A. Thompson; Karl Schuster; C. Kramer
The kinematic complexity and the favorable position of M51 on the sky make this galaxy an ideal target to test different theories of spiral arm dynamics. Taking advantage of the new high-resolution PdBI Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey data, we undertake a detailed kinematic study of M51 to characterize and quantify the origin and nature of the non-circular motions. Using a tilted-ring analysis supported by several other archival data sets, we update the estimation of M51s position angle (P.A. = (173 ± 3)°) and inclination (i = (22 ± 5)°). Harmonic decomposition of the high-resolution (~40 pc) CO velocity field shows the first kinematic evidence of an m = 3 wave in the inner disk of M51 with a corotation at R CR, m = 3 = 1.1 ± 0.1 kpc and a pattern speed of Ω p, m = 3 ≈ 140 km s-1 kpc-1. This mode seems to be excited by the nuclear bar, while the beat frequencies generated by the coupling between the m = 3 mode and the main spiral structure confirm its density-wave nature. We observe also a signature of an m = 1 mode that is likely responsible for the lopsidedness of M51 at small and large radii. We provide a simple method to estimate the radial variation of the amplitude of the spiral perturbation (V sp) attributed to the different modes. The main spiral arm structure has langV sprang = 50-70 km s-1, while the streaming velocity associated with the m = 1 and m = 3 modes is, in general, two times lower. Our joint analysis of H I and CO velocity fields at low and high spatial resolution reveals that the atomic and molecular gas phases respond differently to the spiral perturbation due to their different vertical distribution and emission morphology. Based on observations carried out with the IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer and 30 m telescope. IRAM is operated by INSY/CNRS (France), MPG (Germany), and IGN (Spain).
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
Sharon E. Meidt; Annie Hughes; Clare L. Dobbs; J. Pety; Todd A. Thompson; Santiago Garcia-Burillo; Adam K. Leroy; E. Schinnerer; Dario Colombo; Miguel Querejeta; C. Kramer; Karl Schuster; Gaelle Dumas
We describe and execute a novel approach to observationally estimate the lifetimes of giant molecular clouds (GMCs). We focus on the cloud population between the two main spiral arms in M51 (the inter-arm region) where cloud destruction via shear and star formation feedback dominates over formation processes. By monitoring the change in GMC number densities and properties from one side of the inter-arm to the other, we estimate the lifetime as a fraction of the inter-arm travel time. We find that GMC lifetimes in M51s inter-arm are finite and short, 20 to 30 Myr. Such short lifetimes suggest that cloud evolution is influenced by environment, in which processes can disrupt GMCs after a few free-fall times. Over most of the region under investigation shear appears to regulate the lifetime. As the shear timescale increases with galactocentric radius, we expect cloud destruction to switch primarily to star formation feedback at larger radii. We identify a transition from shear- to feedback-dominated disruption through a change in the behavior of the GMC number density. The signature suggests that shear is more efficient at completely dispersing clouds, whereas feedback transforms the population, e.g. by fragmenting high mass clouds into lower mass pieces. Compared to the characteristic timescale for molecular hydrogen in M51, our short lifetimes suggest that gas can remain molecular while clouds disperse and reassemble. We propose that galaxy dynamics regulates the cycling of molecular material from diffuse to bound (and ultimately star-forming) objects, contributing to long observed molecular depletion times in normal disk galaxies. We also speculate that, in more extreme environments such as elliptical galaxies and concentrated galaxy centers, star formation can be suppressed when the shear timescale becomes so short that some clouds can not survive to collapse and form stars.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
E. Schinnerer; Sharon E. Meidt; Dario Colombo; Rupali Chandar; Clare L. Dobbs; Santiago Garcia-Burillo; Annie Hughes; Adam K. Leroy; J. Pety; Miguel Querejeta; C. Kramer; Karl Schuster
The process that leads to the formation of the bright star-forming sites observed along prominent spiral arms remains elusive. We present results of a multi-wavelength study of a spiral arm segment in the nearby grand-design spiral galaxy M51 that belongs to a spiral density wave and exhibits nine gas spurs. The combined observations of the (ionized, atomic, molecular, dusty) interstellar medium with star formation tracers (H II regions, young <10 Myr stellar clusters) suggest (1) no variation in giant molecular cloud (GMC) properties between arm and gas spurs, (2) gas spurs and extinction feathers arising from the same structure with a close spatial relation between gas spurs and ongoing/recent star formation (despite higher gas surface densities in the spiral arm), (3) no trend in star formation age either along the arm or along a spur, (4) evidence for strong star formation feedback in gas spurs, (5) tentative evidence for star formation triggered by stellar feedback for one spur, and (6) GMC associations being not special entities but the result of blending of gas arm/spur cross sections in lower resolution observations. We conclude that there is no evidence for a coherent star formation onset mechanism that can be solely associated with the presence of the spiral density wave. This suggests that other (more localized) mechanisms are important to delay star formation such that it occurs in spurs. The evidence of star formation proceeding over several million years within individual spurs implies that the mechanism that leads to star formation acts or is sustained over a longer timescale.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
Adam K. Leroy; E. Schinnerer; Annie Hughes; J. M. Diederik Kruijssen; Sharon E. Meidt; Andreas Schruba; Jiayi Sun; Frank Bigiel; G. Aniano; Guillermo A. Blanc; Alberto D. Bolatto; Mélanie Chevance; Dario Colombo; Molly Gallagher; Santiago Garcia-Burillo; C. Kramer; Miguel Querejeta; J. Pety; Todd A. Thompson; A. Usero
We compare the structure of molecular gas at
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
M. J. Jiménez-Donaire; Frank Bigiel; Adam K. Leroy; D. Cormier; Molly Gallagher; A. Usero; Alberto D. Bolatto; Dario Colombo; S. Garcia-Burillo; Annie Hughes; C. Kramer; Mark R. Krumholz; David S. Meier; E. J. Murphy; J. Pety; Erik Rosolowsky; E. Schinnerer; Andreas Schruba; Neven Tomicic; Laura Zschaechner
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The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
Alberto D. Bolatto; Tony Wong; Dyas Utomo; Leo Blitz; Stuart N. Vogel; Sebastián F. Sánchez; Jorge Barrera-Ballesteros; Yixian Cao; Dario Colombo; H. Dannerbauer; R. García-Benito; R. Herrera-Camus; B. Husemann; Veselina Kalinova; Adam K. Leroy; Gigi Y. C. Leung; Rebecca C. Levy; Damian Mast; Eve C. Ostriker; Erik Rosolowsky; Karin Sandstrom; Peter J. Teuben; Glenn van de Ven; Fabian Walter
pc resolution to the ability of gas to form stars across the disk of the spiral galaxy M51. We break the PAWS survey into