Artículos de revistas
Host galaxies of long gamma-ray bursts in the Millennium Simulation
Fecha
2010-10Registro en:
Chisari, N. E.; Tissera, Patricia Beatriz; Pellizza González, Leonardo Javier; Host galaxies of long gamma-ray bursts in the Millennium Simulation; Wiley Blackwell Publishing, Inc; Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society; 408; 1; 10-2010; 647-656
0035-8711
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Chisari, N. E.
Tissera, Patricia Beatriz
Pellizza González, Leonardo Javier
Resumen
In this work, we investigate the nature of the host galaxies of long Gamma-Ray bursts (LGRBs) using a galaxy catalogue constructed from the Millennium Simulation. We developed a LGRB synthetic model based on the hypothesis that these events originate at the end of the life of massive stars following the collapsar model, with the possibility of including a constraint on the metallicity of the progenitor star. A complete<br />observability pipeline was designed to calculate a probability estimation for a galaxy to be observationally identified as a host for LGRBs detected by present observational facililties. This new tool allows us to build an observable host galaxy catalogue which is required to reproduce the current stellar mass distribution of observed hosts. This observability pipeline predicts that the minimum mass for the progenitor stars should<br />be ~ 75 Msun in order to be able to reproduce BATSE observations. Systems in our observable catalogue are able to reproduce the observed properties of host galaxies, namely stellar masses, colours, luminosity, star formation activity and metallicities as a function of redshift. At z > 2, our model predicts that the observable host galaxies would be very similar to the global galaxy population. We found that ~ 88 per cent of<br />the observable host galaxies with mean gas metallicity lower than 0.6 Zsun have stellar masses in the range 10^8.5?10^10.3Msun in excellent agreement with observations. Interestingly, in our model observable host galaxies remain mainly within this mass range regardless of redshift, since lower stellar mass systems would have a low probability of being observed while more massive ones would be too metal-rich. Observable host galaxies are predicted to preferentially inhabit dark matter haloes in the range 10^11?10^11.5M, with a weak dependence on redshift. They are also found to preferentially map different density environments at different stages of evolution of the Universe. At high redshifts, the observable host galaxies are predicted to be located in similar environments as the global galaxy population but to have a slightly higher probability to have a close companion.