2,555 research outputs found
On TP-AGB stars and the mass of galaxies
Recent calculations of evolutionary tracks of TP-AGB stars of different mass
and metallicity by Marigo et al. (2007) have been incorporated in the Bruzual &
Charlot evolutionary population synthesis models. The mass of the stellar
population in HUDF galaxies at z from 1 to 3 determined from fits to the
spectro-photometric data of these galaxies is 50 to 80% lower than the mass
determined from the BC03 models. The ages inferred for these populations are,
with exceptions, 40 to 60% of the BC03 estimates.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, in Proceedings of the IAU Symposium No. 241
"Stellar populations as building blocks of galaxies", eds. A. Vazdekis and R.
Peletier, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, in pres
Stellar Populations in Normal Galaxies
I describe very briefly the new libraries of empirical spectra of stars
covering wide ranges of values of the atmospheric parameters Teff, log g,
[Fe/H], as well as spectral type, that have become available in the recent
past, among them the HNGSL, MILES, UVES-POP, and Indo-US libraries. I show the
results of using the HNGSL to build population synthesis models. These
libraries are complementary in spectral resolution and wavelength coverage, and
will prove extremely useful to describe spectral features expected in galaxy
spectra from the NUV to the NIR.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, in Proceedings of the IAU Symposium No. 222 "The
Interplay Among Black Holes, Stars, and ISM in Galactic Nuclei", eds. T.
Storchi-Bergmann, L.C. Ho, and H.R. Schmitt, Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 121-12
Modelling the nebular emission from primeval to present-day star-forming galaxies
We present a new model of the nebular emission from star-forming galaxies in
a wide range of chemical compositions, appropriate to interpret observations of
galaxies at all cosmic epochs. The model relies on the combination of
state-of-the-art stellar population synthesis and photoionization codes to
describe the ensemble of HII regions and the diffuse gas ionized by young stars
in a galaxy. A main feature of this model is the self-consistent yet versatile
treatment of element abundances and depletion onto dust grains, which allows
one to relate the observed nebular emission from a galaxy to both gas-phase and
dust-phase metal enrichment. We show that this model can account for the
rest-frame ultraviolet and optical emission-line properties of galaxies at
different redshifts and find that ultraviolet emission lines are more sensitive
than optical ones to parameters such as C/O abundance ratio, hydrogen gas
density, dust-to-metal mass ratio and upper cutoff of the stellar initial mass
function. We also find that, for gas-phase metallicities around solar to
slightly sub-solar, widely used formulae to constrain oxygen ionic fractions
and the C/O ratio from ultraviolet and optical emission-line luminosities are
reasonable faithful. However, the recipes break down at non-solar
metallicities, making them inappropriate to study chemically young galaxies. In
such cases, a fully self-consistent model of the kind presented in this paper
is required to interpret the observed nebular emission.Comment: 20 pages, 15 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
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