240 research outputs found
Ecology of galaxy stellar populations from optical spectroscopic surveys
The age and chemical composition of the stars in present-day galaxies carry
important clues about their star formation processes. The latest generation of
population synthesis models have allowed to derive age and stellar metallicity
estimates for large samples of low-redshift galaxies. After reviewing the main
results about the distribution in ages and metallicities as a function of
galaxy mass, I will concentrate on recent analysis that aims at disentangling
the dependences of stellar populations properties on environment and on galaxy
stellar mass. Finally, new models that predict the response of the full
spectrum to variations in [alpha/Fe] will allow us to derive accurate estimates
of element abundance ratios and gain deeper insight into the timescales of star
formation cessation.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, proceedings of IAUS 262 "Stellar populations:
planning for the next decade
Stellar mass-to-light ratios from galaxy spectra: how accurate can they be?
Stellar masses play a crucial role in the exploration of galaxy properties
and the evolution of the galaxy population. In this paper, we explore the
minimum possible uncertainties in stellar mass-to-light (M/L) ratios from the
assumed star formation history (SFH) and metallicity distribution, with the
goals of providing a minimum set of requirements for observational studies. We
use a large Monte Carlo library of SFHs to study as a function of galaxy
spectral type and signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) the statistical uncertainties of
M/L values using either absorption-line data or broad band colors. The accuracy
of M/L estimates can be significantly improved by using metal-sensitive indices
in combination with age-sensitive indices, in particular for galaxies with
intermediate-age or young stellar populations. While M/L accuracy clearly
depends on the spectral S/N ratio, there is no significant gain in improving
the S/N much above 50/pix and limiting uncertainties of 0.03 dex are reached.
Assuming that dust is accurately corrected or absent and that the redshift is
known, color-based M/L estimates are only slightly more uncertain than
spectroscopic estimates (at comparable spectroscopic and photometric quality),
but are more easily affected by systematic biases. This is the case in
particular for galaxies with bursty SFHs (high Hdelta at fixed D4000), the M/L
of which cannot be constrained any better than 0.15 dex with any indicators
explored here. Finally, we explore the effects of the assumed prior
distribution in SFHs and metallicity, finding them to be higher for color-based
estimates.Comment: accepted for publication on ApJ
The ages and metallicities of galaxies in the local universe
We derive stellar metallicities, light-weighted ages and stellar masses for a
magnitude-limited sample of 175,128 galaxies drawn from the Sloan Digital Sky
Survey Data Release Two (SDSS DR2). We compute median-likelihood estimates of
these parameters using a large library of model spectra at medium-high
resolution, covering a comprehensive range of star formation histories. The
constraints we derive are set by the simultaneous fit of five spectral
absorption features, which are well reproduced by our population synthesis
models. By design, these constraints depend only weakly on the alpha/Fe element
abundance ratio. Our sample includes galaxies of all types spanning the full
range in star formation activity, from dormant early-type to actively
star-forming galaxies. We show that, in the mean, galaxies follow a sequence of
increasing stellar metallicity, age and stellar mass at increasing 4000AA-break
strength (D4000). For galaxies of intermediate mass, stronger Balmer absorption
at fixed D4000 is associated with higher metallicity and younger age. We
investigate how stellar metallicity and age depend on total galaxy stellar
mass. Low-mass galaxies are typically young and metal-poor, massive galaxies
old and metal-rich, with a rapid transition between these regimes over the
stellar mass range 3x10^9<M/Msun<3x10^10. Both high- and low-concentration
galaxies follow these relations, but there is a large dispersion in stellar
metallicity at fixed stellar mass, especially for low-concentration galaxies of
intermediate mass. Despite the large scatter, the relation between stellar
metallicity and stellar mass is similar to the correlation between gas-phase
oxygen abundance and stellar mass for star-forming galaxies. [abriged]Comment: 22 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication on MNRAS, data
available at http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/SDSS
Stellar Ages and Metallicities of Central and Satellite Galaxies: Implications for Galaxy Formation and Evolution
Using a large SDSS galaxy group catalogue, we study how the stellar ages and
metallicities of central and satellite galaxies depend on stellar mass and halo
mass. We find that satellites are older and metal-richer than centrals of the
same stellar mass. In addition, the slopes of the age-stellar mass and
metallicity-stellar mass relations are found to become shallower in denser
environments. This is due to the fact that the average age and metallicity of
low mass satellite galaxies increase with the mass of the halo in which they
reside. A comparison with the semi-analytical model of Wang et al. (2008) shows
that it succesfully reproduces the fact that satellites are older than centrals
of the same stellar mass and that the age difference increases with the halo
mass of the satellite. This is a consequence of strangulation, which leaves the
stellar populations of satellites to evolve passively, while the prolonged star
formation activity of centrals keeps their average ages younger. The resulting
age offset is larger in more massive environments because their satellites were
accreted earlier. The model fails, however, in reproducing the halo mass
dependence of the metallicities of low mass satellites, yields
metallicity-stellar mass and age-stellar mass relations that are too shallow,
and predicts that satellite galaxies have the same metallicities as centrals of
the same stellar mass, in disagreement with the data. We argue that these
discrepancies are likely to indicate the need to (i) modify the recipes of both
supernova feedback and AGN feedback, (ii) use a more realistic description of
strangulation, and (iii) include a proper treatment of the tidal stripping,
heating and destruction of satellite galaxies. [Abridged]Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures, submitted for publication in MNRA
A merger in the dusty, galaxy A1689-zD1?
The gravitationally-lensed galaxy A1689-zD1 is one of the most distant
spectroscopically confirmed sources (). It is the earliest known galaxy
where the interstellar medium (ISM) has been detected; dust emission was
detected with the Atacama Large Millimetre Array (ALMA). A1689-zD1 is also
unusual among high-redshift dust emitters as it is a sub-L* galaxy and is
therefore a good prospect for the detection of gaseous ISM in a more typical
galaxy at this redshift. We observed A1689-zD1 with ALMA in bands 6 and 7 and
with the Green Bank Telescope (GBT) in band . To study the structure of
A1689-zD1, we map the mm thermal dust emission and find two spatial components
with sizes about \,kpc (lensing-corrected). The rough spatial
morphology is similar to what is observed in the near-infrared with {\it HST}
and points to a perturbed dynamical state, perhaps indicative of a major merger
or a disc in early formation. The ALMA photometry is used to constrain the
far-infrared spectral energy distribution, yielding a dust temperature (--\,K for ). We do not detect the CO(3-2) line
in the GBT data with a 95\% upper limit of 0.3\,mJy observed. We find a slight
excess emission in ALMA band~6 at 220.9\,GHz. If this excess is real, it is
likely due to emission from the [CII] 158.8\,m line at . The stringent upper limits on the [CII]/ luminosity ratio
suggest a [CII] deficit similar to several bright quasars and massive
starbursts.Comment: 9 pages, accepted to MNRAS, in pres
A new population of recently quenched elliptical galaxies in the SDSS
We use the Sloan Digital Sky Survey to investigate the properties of massive
elliptical galaxies in the local Universe (z\leq0.08) that have unusually blue
optical colors. Through careful inspection, we distinguish elliptical from
non-elliptical morphologies among a large sample of similarly blue galaxies
with high central light concentrations (c_r\geq2.6). These blue ellipticals
comprise 3.7 per cent of all c_r\geq2.6 galaxies with stellar masses between
10^10 and 10^11 h^{-2} {\rm M}_{\sun}. Using published fiber spectra
diagnostics, we identify a unique subset of 172 non-star-forming ellipticals
with distinctly blue urz colors and young (< 3 Gyr) light-weighted stellar
ages. These recently quenched ellipticals (RQEs) have a number density of
2.7-4.7\times 10^{-5}\,h^3\,{\rm Mpc}^{-3} and sufficient numbers above
2.5\times10^{10} h^{-2} {\rm M}_{\sun} to account for more than half of the
expected quiescent growth at late cosmic time assuming this phase lasts 0.5
Gyr. RQEs have properties that are consistent with a recent merger origin
(i.e., they are strong `first-generation' elliptical candidates), yet few
involved a starburst strong enough to produce an E+A signature. The preferred
environment of RQEs (90 per cent reside at the centers of < 3\times
10^{12}\,h^{-1}{\rm M}_{\sun} groups) agrees well with the `small group scale'
predicted for maximally efficient spiral merging onto their halo center and
rules out satellite-specific quenching processes. The high incidence of Seyfert
and LINER activity in RQEs and their plausible descendents may heat the
atmospheres of small host halos sufficiently to maintain quenching.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figures. Revised version; accepted for publication in
MNRA
A dynamical view on stellar metallicity gradient diversity across the Hubble sequence with CALIFA
We analyze radial stellar metallicity and kinematic profiles out to 1Re in
244 CALIFA galaxies ranging from morphological type E to Sd, to study the
evolutionary mechanisms of stellar population gradients. We find that linear
metallicity gradients exhibit a clear correlation with galaxy morphological
type - with early type galaxies showing the steepest gradients. We show that
the metallicity gradients simply reflect the local mass-metallicity relation
within a galaxy. This suggests that the radial stellar population distribution
within a galaxys effective radius is primarily a result of the \emph{in-situ}
local star formation history. In this simple picture, the dynamically derived
stellar surface mass density gradient directly predicts the metallicity
gradient of a galaxy. We show that this correlation and its scatter can be
reproduced entirely by using independent empirical galaxy structural and
chemical scaling relations. Using Schwarzschild dynamical models, we also
explore the link between a galaxys local stellar populations and their orbital
structures. We find that galaxies angular momentum and metallicity gradients
show no obvious causal link. This suggests that metallicity gradients in the
inner disk are not strongly shaped by radial migration, which is confirmed by
the lack of correlation between the metallicity gradients and observable probes
of radial migration in the galaxies, such as bars and spiral arms. Finally, we
find that galaxies with positive metallicity gradients become increasingly
common towards low mass and late morphological types - consistent with stellar
feedback more efficiently modifying the baryon cycle in the central regions of
these galaxies.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figure
The Universal Stellar Mass-Stellar Metallicity Relation for Dwarf Galaxies
We present spectroscopic metallicities of individual stars in seven gas-rich dwarf irregular galaxies (dIrrs), and we show that dIrrs obey the same mass-metallicity relation as the dwarf spheroidal (dSph) satellites of both the Milky Way and M31: Z_* ∝ M_*^(0.30±0.02). The uniformity of the relation is in contradiction to previous estimates of metallicity based on photometry. This relationship is roughly continuous with the stellar mass-stellar metallicity relation for galaxies as massive as M_* = 10^(12) M_☉. Although the average metallicities of dwarf galaxies depend only on stellar mass, the shapes of their metallicity distributions depend on galaxy type. The metallicity distributions of dIrrs resemble simple, leaky box chemical evolution models, whereas dSphs require an additional parameter, such as gas accretion, to explain the shapes of their metallicity distributions. Furthermore, the metallicity distributions of the more luminous dSphs have sharp, metal-rich cut-offs that are consistent with the sudden truncation of star formation due to ram pressure stripping
Resolving the age bimodality of galaxy stellar populations on kpc scales
Galaxies in the local Universe are known to follow bimodal distributions in
the global stellar populations properties. We analyze the distribution of the
local average stellar-population ages of 654,053 sub-galactic regions resolved
on ~1-kpc scales in a volume-corrected sample of 394 galaxies, drawn from the
CALIFA-DR3 integral-field-spectroscopy survey and complemented by SDSS imaging.
We find a bimodal local-age distribution, with an old and a young peak
primarily due to regions in early-type galaxies and star-forming regions of
spirals, respectively. Within spiral galaxies, the older ages of bulges and
inter-arm regions relative to spiral arms support an internal age bimodality.
Although regions of higher stellar-mass surface-density, mu*, are typically
older, mu* alone does not determine the stellar population age and a bimodal
distribution is found at any fixed mu*. We identify an "old ridge" of regions
of age ~9 Gyr, independent of mu*, and a "young sequence" of regions with age
increasing with mu* from 1-1.5 Gyr to 4-5 Gyr. We interpret the former as
regions containing only old stars, and the latter as regions where the relative
contamination of old stellar populations by young stars decreases as mu*
increases. The reason why this bimodal age distribution is not inconsistent
with the unimodal shape of the cosmic-averaged star-formation history is that
i) the dominating contribution by young stars biases the age low with respect
to the average epoch of star formation, and ii) the use of a single average age
per region is unable to represent the full time-extent of the star-formation
history of "young-sequence" regions.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, MNRAS accepte
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