📣 Help Shape the Future of UKRI's Gateway to Research (GtR)

We're improving UKRI's Gateway to Research and are seeking your input! If you would be interested in being interviewed about the improvements we're making and to have your say about how we can make GtR more user-friendly, impactful, and effective for the Research and Innovation community, please email gateway@ukri.org.

Galaxy formation and evolution 2010 - 2015

Lead Research Organisation: University of Cambridge
Department Name: Institute of Astronomy

Abstract

TThis programmatic five-year rolling grant application addresses one of the most important problems in extragalactic astronomy, the formation and evolution of galaxies. The task is one of the key goals in the current STFC Road Map and is a defining objective of virtually every national decadal survey world-wide. A full understanding of galaxy formation and evolution requires multiple lines of attack. Observations of the resolved stellar populations in the Milky Way and its Local Group companions provide a detailed fossil record of the dynamical assemblies of the galaxies, the formation of stars, and the buildup of heavy elements over a wide range of mass scales and initial conditions. At the other end of the scale, observations of distant galaxies spanning lookback times of up to 12 Gyr provide direct measurements of the evolution of galaxy populations and the buildup of stars and metals with cosmic time. Finally, measurements of the large-scale star formation and abundance properties of nearby galaxies form a vital astrophysical bridge between the studies of nearby resolved stellar populations and the distant high-redshift investigations, by allowing us to characterise the evolutionary properties of the Hubble sequence and the complex ``gastrophysical'' processes that regulate the accretion of gas and the formation of stars in galaxies. In this rolling grant application we propose a series of investigations that will advance our understanding of galaxy formation and evolution on all three fronts.

Publications

10 25 50

publication icon
Van Leeuwen F (2009) Hipparcos, the New Reduction in Space Science Reviews

publication icon
Madej O (2010) A relativistically broadened O viii Lya line in the ultracompact X-ray binary 4U 0614+091 in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters

publication icon
Niederste-Ostholt M (2010) RE-ASSEMBLING THE SAGITTARIUS DWARF GALAXY in The Astrophysical Journal

publication icon
Zimmerman N (2010) PARALLACTIC MOTION FOR COMPANION DISCOVERY: AN M-DWARF ORBITING ALCOR in The Astrophysical Journal

publication icon
Ponti G (2010) Relativistic disc reflection in the extreme NLS1 IRAS13224-3809 Relativistic reflection in IRAS13224-3809 in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

publication icon
Van Wassenhove S (2010) Massive black holes lurking in Milky Way satellites Black holes in dwarfs in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

publication icon
Fabian A (2010) X-ray Reflection in Space Science Reviews

publication icon
Kennicutt RC (2010) Astrophysics: Young stars in young galaxies. in Nature

publication icon
Dhillon, VS (2010) Rapid timing studies of black hole binaries in Optical and X-rays: correlated and non-linear variability in X-RAY ASTRONOMY-2009: PRESENT STATUS, MULTI-WAVELENGTH APPROACH AND FUTURE PERSPECTIVES, PROCEEDINGS

publication icon
Macciò A (2010) Luminosity function and radial distribution of Milky Way satellites in a ?CDM Universe in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

publication icon
Ercolano B (2010) Metallicity, planet formation and disc lifetimes in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

publication icon
Potter A (2010) Magnetic field evolution of white dwarfs in strongly interacting binary star systems in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

publication icon
Watkins L (2010) The masses of the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies The masses of the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

publication icon
Smart R (2010) The distance to the cool T9 brown dwarf ULAS J003402.77-005206.7 in Astronomy and Astrophysics

publication icon
Bonsor A (2010) Post-main-sequence evolution of A star debris discs Post-main-sequence evolution of debris discs in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

publication icon
Hurley J (2010) Formation of binary millisecond pulsars by accretion-induced collapse of white dwarfs in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

publication icon
Reis R (2010) Black hole accretion discs in the canonical low-hard state in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

publication icon
Treu T (2010) THE INITIAL MASS FUNCTION OF EARLY-TYPE GALAXIES in The Astrophysical Journal

publication icon
Niederste-Ostholt M (2010) The tidal tails of the ultrafaint globular cluster Palomar 1 in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters

publication icon
Dunn R (2010) The radio properties of a complete, X-ray selected sample of nearby, massive elliptical galaxies in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

publication icon
Russell H (2010) The X-ray luminous cluster underlying the bright radio-quiet quasar H1821+643 in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

publication icon
Owen J (2010) Radiation-hydrodynamic models of X-ray and EUV photoevaporating protoplanetary discs in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society