265 research outputs found

    Evidence of very low metallicity and high ionization state in a strongly lensed, star-forming dwarf galaxy at z=3.417

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    We investigate the gas-phase metallicity and Lyman Continuum (LyC) escape fraction of a strongly gravitationally lensed, extreme emission-line galaxy at z=3.417, J1000+0221S, recently discovered by the CANDELS team. We derive ionization and metallicity sensitive emission-line ratios from H+K band LBT/LUCI medium resolution spectroscopy. J1000+0221S shows high ionization conditions, as evidenced by its enhanced [OIII]/[OII] and [OIII]/Hbeta ratios. Consistently, strong-line methods based on the available line ratios suggest that J1000+0221S is an extremely metal-poor galaxy, with a metallicity of 12+log(O/H) < 7.44 (< 5% solar), placing it among the most metal-poor star-forming galaxies at z > 3 discovered so far. In combination with its low stellar mass (2x10^8 Msun) and high star formation rate (5 Msun/yr), the metallicity of J1000+0221S is consistent with the extrapolation to low masses of the mass-metallicity relation traced by Lyman-break galaxies at z > 3, but it is 0.55 dex lower than predicted by the fundamental metallicity relation at z < 2.5. These observations suggest the picture of a rapidly growing galaxy, possibly fed by the massive accretion of pristine gas. Additionally, deep LBT/LBC in the UGR bands are used to derive a limit to the LyC escape fraction, thus allowing us to explore for the first time the regime of sub-L* galaxies at z > 3. We find a 1sigma upper limit to the escape fraction of 23%, which adds a new observational constraint to recent theoretical models predicting that sub-L* galaxies at high-z have high escape fractions and thus are the responsible for the reioization of the Universe.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures and 1 table. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter

    Multiferroism and enhancement of material properties across the morphotropic phase boundary of BiFeO3-PbTiO3

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    Strong phase-change magnetoelectric responses have been anticipated by a first-principles investigation of phases in the perovskite BiFeO 3-BiCoO3 solid solution, specifically at the morphotropic phase boundary (MPB) between the multiferroic rhombohedral and tetragonal polymorphs. This might be a general property of multiferroic MPBs and a novel promising approach for room temperature magnetoelectricity, which requires the identification of suitable material systems. We present here a comprehensive description of the electrical and electromechanical properties across one such system; the perovskite BiFeO3-PbTiO3 solid solution. All the temperature dependence of dielectric permittivity, ferroelectric hysteresis loops, and piezoelectric coefficients have been obtained, and are discussed in relation to the previously reported perovskite structural evolution. Results show ceramic materials to be very promising for ferroelectric random access memories (remnant polarization as high as 63 μC cm-2 with a comparatively low coercive field of 4.5 kV mm-1 for MPB compositions) and high temperature electromechanical transduction (crystal piezoelectric coefficient of 87 pC N-1 with a Curie temperature above 873 K). Moreover, the occurrence of phase changes between the monoclinic and tetragonal polymorphs under high electric fields is indicated, while the canted antiferromagnetic character of the phases involved is corroborated. © 2014 AIP Publishing LLC.Funded by MINECO (Spain) through the MAT2011-23709 project. Dr. H. Amorín thanks financial support by MICINN Ramón y Cajal Programme (RYC-2008-03247). Ms. C. Correas and Ms. C. M. Fernández-Posada also thank the specific financial support of FPI Programme (BES-2008-005409 and BES-2012-053017, respectively).Peer Reviewe

    Extremely Metal-Poor Galaxies: The HI Content

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    Extremely metal-poor (XMP) galaxies are chemically, and possibly dynamically, primordial objects in the local Universe. Our objective is to characterize the HI content of the XMP galaxies as a class, using as a reference the list of 140 known local XMPs compiled by Morales-Luis et al. (2011). We have observed 29 XMPs, which had not been observed before at 21 cm, using the Effelsberg radio telescope. This information was complemented with HI data published in literature for a further 53 XMPs. In addition, optical data from the literature provided morphologies, stellar masses, star-formation rates and metallicities. Effelsberg HI integrated flux densities are between 1 and 15 Jy km/s, while line widths are between 20 and 120 km/s. HI integrated flux densities and line widths from literature are in the range 0.1 - 200 Jy km/s and 15 - 150 km/s, respectively. Of the 10 new Effelsberg detections, two sources show an asymmetric double-horn profile, while the remaining sources show either asymmetric (7 sources) or symmetric (1 source) single-peak 21 cm line profiles. An asymmetry in the HI line profile is systematically accompanied by an asymmetry in the optical morphology. Typically, the g-band stellar mass-to-light ratios are ~0.1, whereas the HI gas mass-to-light ratios may be up to 2 orders of magnitude larger. Moreover, HI gas-to-stellar mass ratios fall typically between 10 and 20, denoting that XMPs are extremely gas-rich. We find an anti-correlation between the HI gas mass-to-light ratio and the luminosity, whereby fainter XMPs are more gas-rich than brighter XMPs, suggesting that brighter sources have converted a larger fraction of their HI gas into stars. The dynamical masses inferred from the HI line widths imply that the stellar mass does not exceed 5% of the dynamical mass, while the \ion{H}{i} mass constitutes between 20 and 60% of the dynamical mass. (abridged)Comment: 30 pages, accepted for A&

    The star formation history and metal content of the "Green Peas". New detailed GTC-OSIRIS spectrophotometry of three galaxies

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    We present deep broad-band imaging and long-slit spectroscopy of three compact, low-mass starburst galaxies at redshift z\sim0.2-0.3, also referred to as Green Peas (GP). We measure physical properties of the ionized gas and derive abundances for several species with high precision. We find that the three GPs display relatively low extinction, low oxygen abundances, and remarkably high N/O ratios We also report on the detection of clear signatures of Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars in these galaxies. We carry out a pilot spectral synthesis study using a combination of both population and evolutionary synthesis models. Their outputs are in qualitative agreement, strongly suggesting a formation history dominated by starbursts. In agreement with the presence of WR stars, these models show that these GPs currently undergo a major starburst producing between ~4% and ~20% of their stellar mass. However, as models imply, they are old galaxies having had formed most of their stellar mass several Gyr ago. The presence of old stars has been spectroscopically verified in one of the galaxies by the detection of Mg I 5167, 5173 absorption line. Additionally, we perform a surface photometry study based on HST data, that indicates that the three galaxies posses an exponential low-surface brightness envelope. If due to stellar emission, the latter is structurally compatible to the evolved hosts of luminous BCD/HII galaxies, suggesting that GPs are identifiable with major episodes in the assembly history of local BCDs. These conclusions highlight the importance of these objects as laboratories for studying galaxy evolution at late cosmic epochs.Comment: 30 pages, 9 figures and 7 tables. Accepted for publication in Ap

    An extreme [OIII] emitter at z=3.2z=3.2: a low metallicity Lyman continuum source

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    [Abridged] We investigate the physical properties of a Lyman continuum emitter candidate at z=3.212z=3.212 with photometric coverage from UU to MIPS 24μ\mum band and VIMOS/VLT and MOSFIRE/Keck spectroscopy. Investigation of the UV spectrum confirms a direct spectroscopic detection of the Lyman continuum emission with S/N>5S/N>5. Non-zero Lyα\alpha flux at the systemic redshift and high Lyman-α\alpha escape fraction suggest a low HI column density. The weak C and Si low-ionization absorption lines are also consistent with a low covering fraction along the line of sight. The [OIII]λλ4959,5007+Hβ\lambda\lambda4959,5007+\mathrm{H}\beta equivalent width is one of the largest reported for a galaxy at z>3z>3 (EW([OIII]λλ4959,5007+Hβ)1600A˚\mathrm{EW}([\mathrm{OIII}]\lambda\lambda4959,5007+\mathrm{H}\beta) \simeq 1600\AA, rest-frame) and the NIR spectrum shows that this is mainly due to an extremely strong [OIII] emission. The large observed [OIII]/[OII] ratio (>10>10) and high ionization parameter are consistent with prediction from photoionization models in case of a density-bounded nebula scenario. Furthermore, the EW([OIII]λλ4959,5007+Hβ)\mathrm{EW}([\mathrm{OIII}]\lambda\lambda4959,5007+\mathrm{H}\beta) is comparable to recent measurements reported at z79z\sim7-9, in the reionization epoch. We also investigate the possibility of an AGN contribution to explain the ionizing emission but most of the AGN identification diagnostics suggest that stellar emission dominates instead. This source is currently the first high-zz example of a Lyman continuum emitter exhibiting indirect and direct evidences of a Lyman continuum leakage and having physical properties consistent with theoretical expectation from Lyman continuum emission from a density-bounded nebula.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. Minor modifications, Figure 2 updated, Figure 9 adde

    Exploring the hardness of the ionising radiation with the infrared softness diagram. I. Similar effective temperature scales for starbursts and (ultra)luminous infrared galaxies

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    {We explored the {softness parameter} in the infrared, whose main purpose is the characterisation of the hardness of the incident ionising radiation in emission-line nebulae. This parameter is obtained from the combination of mid-infrared wavelength range transitions corresponding to consecutive ionisation stages in star-forming regions. We compiled observational data from a sample of star-forming galaxies (SFGs), including luminous and ultraluminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs and ULIRGs), to study the softness parameter and its equivalent expression in two dimensions, the softness diagram. We compared them with predictions from photoionisation models to determine the shape of the ionising continuum energy distribution in each case. We also used the measured emission-line ratios as input for HCmistry-Teff-IR, a code that performs a Bayesian-like comparison with photoionisation model predictions in order to quantify the equivalent effective temperature (T*) and the ionisation parameter. We found similar average values within the errors of the softness parameter in (U)LIRGs (-0.57) in the rest of the SFGs (-0.51), which could be interpreted as indicative of a similar incident radiation field. This result is confirmed from the analysis using HCm-Teff-IR, which simultaneously points to a slightly lower, although similar within the errors, T* scale for (U)LIRGs, even when a higher dust-to-gas mass ratio is considered in the models for these objects. These derived T* values are compatible with the ionisation from massive stars, without any need of harder ionising sources, both for (U)LIRGs and the rest of the SFGs. However, the derived T* in (U)LIRGs do not show any correlation with metallicity. This could be interpreted as a sign that their similar average T* values are due to the attenuation of the energetic incident flux from massive stars by the heated dust mixed with the gas.Comment: Accepted for publication by Astronomy & Astrophysics. 9 pages, 6 figure

    Ionized gas kinematics and chemical abundances of low-mass star-forming galaxies at z3z\sim 3

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    We selected 35 low-mass SFGs (7.9<log(M_*/M_{\odot})<10.3) from deep spectroscopic surveys based on their CIII]1908 emission. We used follow-up NIR observations to examine their rest-optical emission lines and identify ionized outflow signatures through broad emission wings detected after Gaussian modeling of [OIII]4959,5007 profiles. We characterized the galaxies' gas-phase metallicity and carbon-to-oxygen (C/O) abundance using a Te-based method via the OIII]1666/[OIII]5007 ratio and photoionization models. We find line ratios and rest-frame EWs characteristic of high-ionization conditions powered by massive stars. Our sample displays mean rest-frame EW([OIII]5007)~560\r{A} while 15% of them show EW([OIII]4959,5007)>1000\r{A} and EW(CIII])>5\r{A}, closely resembling those now seen in EoR galaxies with JWST. We find low gas-phase metallicities 12+log(O/H)~7.5-8.5 and C/O abundances from 23%-128% solar, with no apparent increasing trend with metallicity. From our [OIII]4959,5007 profile modeling, we find that 65% of our sample shows an outflow component, which is shifted relative to the ionized gas systemic velocity, with mean vmaxv_{max}~280 km/s which correlates with the ΣSFR\Sigma_{SFR}. We find that the mass-loading factor μ\mu of our sample is typically lower than in more massive galaxies from literature but higher than in typical local dwarf galaxies. In the stellar mass range covered, we find that μ\mu increases with ΣSFR\Sigma_{SFR} thus suggesting that for a given stellar mass, denser starbursts in low-mass galaxies produce stronger outflows. Our results complement the picture drawn by similar studies at lower redshift, suggesting that the removal of ionized gas in low-mass SFGs driven by stellar feedback is regulated by their stellar mass and by the strength and concentration of their star formation, i.e. ΣSFR\Sigma_{\rm SFR}.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. We updated the manuscript following referee's suggestions. We updated the estimations of C/O by not including CIV flux since it is not detected in most of our sample. No major changes in our results compared with previous versio

    Search for Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxies During Quiescence

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    Blue Compact Dwarf (BCD) galaxies are metal poor systems going through a major starburst that cannot last for long. We have identified galaxies which may be BCDs during quiescence (QBCD), i.e., before the characteristic starburst sets in or when it has faded away. These QBCD galaxies are assumed to be like the BCD host galaxies. The SDSS/DR6 database provides ~21500 QBCD candidates. We also select from SDSS/DR6 a complete sample of BCD galaxies to serve as reference. The properties of these two galaxy sets have been computed and compared. The QBCD candidates are thirty times more abundant than the BCDs, with their luminosity functions being very similar except for the scaling factor, and the expected luminosity dimming associated with the end of the starburst. QBCDs are redder than BCDs, and they have larger HII region based oxygen abundance. QBCDs also have lower surface brightness. The BCD candidates turn out to be the QBCD candidates with the largest specific star formation rate (actually, with the largest H_alpha equivalent width). One out of each three dwarf galaxies in the local universe may be a QBCD. The properties of the selected BCDs and QBCDs are consistent with a single sequence in galactic evolution, with the quiescent phase lasting thirty times longer than the starburst phase. The resulting time-averaged star formation rate is low enough to allow this cadence of BCD -- QBCD phases during the Hubble time.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 17 pages. 13 Fig
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