1,515 research outputs found
Optical Spectroscopy of K-selected Extremely Red Galaxies
We have obtained spectroscopic redshifts for 24 red galaxies from a sample
with median Ks=18.7 and F814W - Ks > 4, using the Keck telescope. These
EROshave high resolution morphologies from HST (Yan & Thompson 2003). Among the
24 redshifts, the majority (92%) are at . We derived the
rest-frame J-band luminosity function at . Our result
suggests that the luminosity evolution between bright EROs at and the
present-day L massive galaxies is at most about 0.7 magnitude. Combining
the morphologies and deep spectroscopy revealed the following properties: (1)
86% of the spectra have absorption features from old stars, suggesting that the
dominant stellar populations seen in the rest-frame UV are old stars. 50% of
the sources have pure absorption lines, while the remaining 50% have emission
lines, indicating recent star formation. We conclude that the color criterion
for EROs is very effective in selecting old stellar populations at ,
and a large fraction of these systems with prominent old stellar populations
also have recent star formation. (2) The 12 emission line systems have the same
number of disk and bulge galaxies as in the remaining 12 pure absorption line
systems. We conclude that spectral classes do not have a simple, direct
correspondence with morphological types. (3) Three EROs could be isolated, pure
passively evolving early-type galaxies at . This implies that only a
small fraction (10%--15%) of early-type galaxies are formed in a rapid burst of
star formation at high redshifts and evolved passively since then. (Abridged).Comment: 27 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomical
Journal, issue March 200
Low, Milky-Way like, Molecular Gas Excitation of Massive Disk Galaxies at z~1.5
We present evidence for Milky-Way-like, low-excitation molecular gas
reservoirs in near-IR selected massive galaxies at z~1.5, based on IRAM Plateau
de Bure Interferometer CO[3-2] and NRAO Very Large Array CO[1-0] line
observations for two galaxies that had been previously detected in CO[2-1]
emission. The CO[3-2] flux of BzK-21000 at z=1.522 is comparable within the
errors to its CO[2-1] flux, implying that the CO[3-2] transition is
significantly sub-thermally excited. The combined CO[1-0] observations of the
two sources result in a detection at the 3 sigma level that is consistent with
a higher CO[1-0] luminosity than that of CO[2-1]. Contrary to what is observed
in submillimeter galaxies and QSOs, in which the CO transitions are thermally
excited up to J>=3, these galaxies have low-excitation molecular gas, similar
to that in the Milky Way and local spirals. This is the first time that such
conditions have been observed at high redshift. A Large Velocity Gradient
analysis suggests that molecular clouds with density and kinetic temperature
comparable to local spirals can reproduce our observations. The similarity in
the CO excitation properties suggests that a high, Milky-Way-like, CO to H_2
conversion factor could be appropriate for these systems. If such
low-excitation properties are representative of ordinary galaxies at high
redshift, centimeter telescopes such as the Expanded Very Large Array and the
longest wavelength Atacama Large Millimeter Array bands will be the best tools
for studying the molecular gas content in these systems through the
observations of CO emission lines.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. ApJ Letters in pres
The contribution of starbursts and normal galaxies to infrared luminosity functions at z < 2
We present a parameter-less approach to predict the shape of the infrared
(IR) luminosity function (LF) at redshifts z < 2. It requires no tuning and
relies on only three observables: (1) the redshift evolution of the stellar
mass function for star-forming galaxies, (2) the evolution of the specific star
formation rate (sSFR) of main-sequence galaxies, and (3) the double-Gaussian
decomposition of the sSFR-distribution at fixed stellar mass into a
contribution (assumed redshift- and mass-invariant) from main-sequence and
starburst activity. This self-consistent and simple framework provides a
powerful tool for predicting cosmological observables: observed IR LFs are
successfully matched at all z < 2, suggesting a constant or only weakly
redshift-dependent contribution (8-14%) of starbursts to the star formation
rate density. We separate the contributions of main-sequence and starburst
activity to the global IR LF at all redshifts. The luminosity threshold above
which the starburst component dominates the IR LF rises from log(LIR/Lsun) =
11.4 to 12.8 over 0 < z < 2, reflecting our assumed (1+z)^2.8-evolution of sSFR
in main-sequence galaxies.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures & 1 table. Accepted for publication in ApJL. Minor
typos corrected in v2 following receipt of proof
Near-IR bright galaxies at z~2. Entering the spheroid formation epoch ?
Spectroscopic redshifts have been measured for 9 K-band luminous galaxies at
1.7 < z < 2.3, selected with Ks < 20 in the "K20 survey" region of the Great
Observatories Origins Deep Survey area. Star formation rates (SFRs) of ~100-500
Msun/yr are derived when dust extinction is taken into account. The fitting of
their multi-color spectral energy distributions indicates stellar masses M ~
10^11 Msun for most of the galaxies. Their rest-frame UV morphology is highly
irregular, suggesting that merging-driven starbursts are going on in these
galaxies. Morphologies tend to be more compact in the near-IR, a hint for the
possible presence of older stellar populations. Such galaxies are strongly
clustered, with 7 out of 9 belonging to redshift spikes, which indicates a
correlation length r_0 ~ 9-17 h^-1 Mpc (1 sigma range). Current semianalytical
models of galaxy formation appear to underpredict by a large factor (about 30)
the number density of such a population of massive and powerful starburst
galaxies at z ~ 2. The high masses and SFRs together with the strong clustering
suggest that at z ~ 2 we may have started to explore the major formation epoch
of massive early-type galaxies.Comment: accepted on June 17. To appear on ApJ Letter
A CO emission line from the optical and near-IR undetected submillimeter galaxy GN10
We report the detection of a CO emission line from the submillimiter galaxy
(SMG) GN10 in the GOODS-N field. GN10 lacks any counterpart in extremely deep
optical and near-IR imaging obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope and
ground-based facilities. This is a prototypical case of a source that is
extremely obscured by dust, for which it is practically impossible to derive a
spectroscopic redshift in the optical/near-IR. Under the hypothesis that GN10
is part of a proto-cluster structure previously identified at z~4.05 in the
same field, we searched for CO[4-3] at 91.4 GHz with the IRAM Plateau de Bure
Interferometer, and successfully detected a line. We find that the most likely
redshift identification is z=4.0424+-0.0013, based on: 1) the very low chance
that the CO line is actually serendipitous from a different redshift; 2) a
radio-IR photometric redshift analysis; 3) the identical radio-IR SED, within a
scaling factor, of two other SMGs at the same redshift. The faintness at
optical/near-IR wavelengths requires an attenuation of A_V~5-7.5 mag. This
result supports the case that a substantial population of very high-z SMGs
exists that had been missed by previous spectroscopic surveys. This is the
first time that a CO emission line has been detected for a galaxy that is
invisible in the optical and near-IR. Our work demonstrates the power of
existing and planned facilities for completing the census of star formation and
stellar mass in the distant Universe by measuring redshifts of the most
obscured galaxies through millimeter spectroscopy.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. ApJ Letters in pres
Very High Gas Fractions and Extended Gas Reservoirs in z=1.5 Disk Galaxies
We present evidence for very high gas fractions and extended molecular gas
reservoirs in normal, near-infrared selected (BzK) galaxies at z~1.5, based on
multi-configuration CO[2-1] observations obtained at the IRAM PdBI. Six of the
six galaxies observed were securely detected. High resolution observations
resolve the CO emission in four of them, implying sizes of order of 6-11 kpc
and suggesting the presence of rotation. The UV morphologies are consistent
with clumpy, unstable disks, and the UV sizes are consistent with the CO sizes.
The star formation efficiencies are homogeneously low and similar to local
spirals - the resulting gas depletion times are ~0.5 Gyr, much higher than what
is seen in high-z submm galaxies and quasars. The CO luminosities can be
predicted to within 0.15 dex from the star formation rates and stellar masses,
implying a tight correlation of the gas mass with these quantities. We use
dynamical models of clumpy disk galaxies to derive dynamical masses. These
models are able to reproduce the peculiar spectral line shapes of the CO
emission. After accounting for the stellar and dark matter masses we derive gas
masses of 0.4-1.2x10^11 Msun. The conversion factor is very high:
alpha_CO=3.6+-0.8, consistent with the Galaxy but four times higher than that
of local ultra-luminous IR galaxies. The gas accounts for an impressive 50-65%
of the baryons within the galaxies' half light radii. We are witnessing truly
gas-dominated galaxies at z~1.5, a finding that explains the high specific SFRs
observed for z>1 galaxies. The BzK galaxies can be viewed as scaled-up versions
of local disk galaxies, with low efficiency star formation taking place inside
extended, low excitation gas disks. They are markedly different than local
ULIRGs and high-z submm galaxies, which have more excited and compact gas.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal, 22 pages, 18
figures, minor revision
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