32 research outputs found
A photometrically and spectroscopically confirmed population of passive spiral galaxies
We have identified a population of passive spiral galaxies from photometry and integral field spectroscopy. We selected z < 0.035 spiral galaxies that have WISE colours consistent with little mid-infrared emission from warm dust. Matched aperture photometry of 51 spiral galaxies in ultraviolet, optical and mid-infrared show these galaxies have colours consistent with passive galaxies. Six galaxies form a spectroscopic pilot study and were observed using the Wide-Field Spectrograph to check for signs of nebular emission from star formation. We see no evidence of substantial nebular emission found in previous red spiral samples. These six galaxies possess absorption-line spectra with 4000 Å breaks consistent with an average luminosity-weighted age of 2.3 Gyr. Our photometric and integral field spectroscopic observations confirm the existence of a population of local passive spiral galaxies, implying that transformation into early-type morphologies is not required for the quenching of star formation
The influence of red spiral galaxies on the shape of the local K-band luminosity function
We have determined K-band luminosity functions for 13,325 local universe galaxies as a function of morphology and color (for Ktot ≤ 10.75). Our sample is drawn from the Two Micron All Sky Survey Extended Source Catalog, with all sample galaxies having measured morphologies and distances (including 4219 archival redshift-independent distances). The luminosity function for our total sample is in good agreement with previous works, but is relatively smooth at faint magnitudes (due to bulk flow distance corrections). We investigated the differences due to morphological and color selection using 5417 sample galaxies with NASA Sloan Atlas optical colors and find that red spirals comprise 20%–50% of all spirals with −25 ≤ MK < −20. Fainter than MK = −24, red spirals are as common as early types, explaining the different faint end slopes (α = −0.87 and −1.00 for red and early-types, respectively). While we find red spirals comprise more than 50% of all MK < −25 spiral galaxies, they do not dominate the bright end of the overall red galaxy luminosity function, which is dominated by early-type galaxies. The brightest red spirals have ongoing star formation and those without are frequently misclassified as early-types. The faintest ones have an appearance and Sérsic indices consistent with faded disks, rather than true bulge-dominated galaxies
Relationships between HI Gas Mass, Stellar Mass and Star Formation Rate of HICAT+WISE (HI-WISE) Galaxies
We have measured the relationships between HI mass, stellar mass and star
formation rate using the HI Parkes All Sky-Survey Catalogue (HICAT) and the
Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE). Of the 3,513 HICAT sources, we find
3.4 micron counterparts for 2,896 sources (80%) and provide new WISE matched
aperture photometry for these galaxies. For our principal sample of spiral
galaxies with W1 10 mag and z 0.01, we identify HI detections for
93% of the sample. We measure lower HI-stellar mass relationships that HI
selected samples that do not include spiral galaxies with little HI gas. Our
observations of the spiral sample show that HI mass increases with stellar mass
with a power-law index 0.35; however, this value is dependent on T-type, which
affects both the median and the dispersion of HI mass. We also observe an upper
limit on the HI gas fraction, which is consistent with a halo spin parameter
model. We measure the star formation efficiency of spiral galaxies to be
constant 10 yr 0.4 dex for 2.5 orders of magnitude in
stellar mass, despite the higher stellar mass spiral showing evidence of
quenched star formation.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figures; accepted for publication by Ap
Multiple mechanisms quench passive spiral galaxies
We examine the properties of a sample of 35 nearby passive spiral galaxies in order to determine their dominant quenching mechanism(s). All five low-mass (M⋆ < 1 × 1010 M⊙) passive spiral galaxies are located in the rich Virgo cluster. This is in contrast to low-mass spiral galaxies with star formation, which inhabit a range of environments. We postulate that cluster-scale gas stripping and heating mechanisms operating only in rich clusters are required to quench low-mass passive spirals, and ram-pressure stripping and strangulation are obvious candidates. For higher mass passive spirals, while trends are present, the story is less clear. The passive spiral bar fraction is high: 74 ± 15 per cent, compared with 36 ± 5 per cent for a mass, redshift and T-type matched comparison sample of star-forming spiral galaxies. The high mass passive spirals occur mostly, but not exclusively, in groups, and can be central or satellite galaxies. The passive spiral group fraction of 74 ± 15 per cent is similar to that of the comparison sample of star-forming galaxies at 61 ± 7 per cent. We find evidence for both quenching via internal structure and environment in our passive spiral sample, though some galaxies have evidence of neither. From this, we conclude no one mechanism is responsible for quenching star formation in passive spiral galaxies – rather, a mixture of mechanisms is required to produce the passive spiral distribution we see today
The 1.4 GHz Cosmic Star Formation History at z < 1.3
We measure the cosmic star formation history out to z = 1.3 using a sample of
918 radio-selected star forming galaxies within the 2 square degree COSMOS
field. To increase our sample size, we combine 1.4 GHz flux densities from the
VLA-COSMOS catalogue with flux densities measured from the VLA-COSMOS radio
continuum image at the positions of I < 26.5 galaxies, enabling us to detect
1.4 GHz sources as faint as 40 uJy. We find radio measurements of the cosmic
star formation history are highly dependent on sample completeness and models
used to extrapolate the faint end of the radio luminosity function. For our
preferred model of the luminosity function, we find the star formation rate
density increases from 0.019 Solar masses per year per cubic Mpc at z = 0.225
to 0.104 Solar masses per year per cubic Mpc, which agrees to within 33% of
recent UV, IR and 3 GHz measurements of the cosmic star formation history.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in Publications of the
Astronomical Society of Australi
Calibration of Ultraviolet, Mid-infrared, and Radio Star Formation Rate Indicators
We present calibrations for star formation rate (SFR) indicators in the ultraviolet, mid-infrared, and radio-continuum bands, including one of the first direct calibrations of 150 MHz as an SFR indicator. Our calibrations utilize 66 nearby star-forming galaxies with Balmer-decrement-corrected luminosities, which span five orders of magnitude in SFR and have absolute magnitudes of -24 < M_r < -12. Most of our photometry and spectrophotometry are measured from the same region of each galaxy, and our spectrophotometry has been validated with SDSS photometry, so our random and systematic errors are small relative to the intrinsic scatter seen in SFR indicator calibrations. We find that the Wide-field Infrared Space Explorer W4 (22.8 μm), Spitzer 24 μm, and 1.4 GHz bands have tight correlations with the Balmer-decrement-corrected Hα luminosity, with a scatter of only 0.2 dex. Our calibrations are comparable to those from the prior literature for L* galaxies, but for dwarf galaxies, our calibrations can give SFRs that are far greater than those derived from most previous literature
A Solve-RD ClinVar-based reanalysis of 1522 index cases from ERN-ITHACA reveals common pitfalls and misinterpretations in exome sequencing
Purpose
Within the Solve-RD project (https://solve-rd.eu/), the European Reference Network for Intellectual disability, TeleHealth, Autism and Congenital Anomalies aimed to investigate whether a reanalysis of exomes from unsolved cases based on ClinVar annotations could establish additional diagnoses. We present the results of the “ClinVar low-hanging fruit” reanalysis, reasons for the failure of previous analyses, and lessons learned.
Methods
Data from the first 3576 exomes (1522 probands and 2054 relatives) collected from European Reference Network for Intellectual disability, TeleHealth, Autism and Congenital Anomalies was reanalyzed by the Solve-RD consortium by evaluating for the presence of single-nucleotide variant, and small insertions and deletions already reported as (likely) pathogenic in ClinVar. Variants were filtered according to frequency, genotype, and mode of inheritance and reinterpreted.
Results
We identified causal variants in 59 cases (3.9%), 50 of them also raised by other approaches and 9 leading to new diagnoses, highlighting interpretation challenges: variants in genes not known to be involved in human disease at the time of the first analysis, misleading genotypes, or variants undetected by local pipelines (variants in off-target regions, low quality filters, low allelic balance, or high frequency).
Conclusion
The “ClinVar low-hanging fruit” analysis represents an effective, fast, and easy approach to recover causal variants from exome sequencing data, herewith contributing to the reduction of the diagnostic deadlock