77 research outputs found
Infrared Luminosity Function of the Coma Cluster
Using mid-IR and optical data, we deduce the total infrared (IR) luminosities
of galaxies in the Coma cluster and present their infrared luminosity function
(LF). The shape of the overall Coma IR LF does not show significant differences
from the IR LFs of the general field, which indicates the general independence
of global galaxy star formation on environment up to densities 40 times
greater than in the field (we cannot test such independence above ). However, a shallower faint end slope and a
smaller are found in the core region (where the densities are
still higher) compared to the outskirt region of the cluster, and most of the
brightest IR galaxies are found outside of the core region. The IR LF in the
NGC 4839 group region does not show any unique characteristics. By integrating
the IR LF, we find a total star formation rate in the cluster of about 97.0
M_{\sun}{\rm yr}^{-1}. We also studied the contributions of early- and
late-type galaxies to the IR LF. The late-type galaxies dominate the bright end
of the LF, and the early-type galaxies, although only making up a small portion
( 15%) of the total IR emission of the cluster, contribute greatly to
the number counts of the LF at .Comment: 33 pages, 8 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journa
IR observations of MS 1054-03: Star Formation and its Evolution in Rich Galaxy Clusters
We study the infrared (IR) properties of galaxies in the cluster MS 1054-03
at z=0.83 by combining MIPS 24 micron data with spectra of more than 400
galaxies and a very deep K-band selected catalog. 19 IR cluster members are
selected spectroscopically, and an additional 15 are selected by their
photometric redshifts. We derive the IR luminosity function of the cluster and
find strong evolution compared to the similar-mass Coma cluster. The best
fitting Schechter function gives L*_{IR}=11.49 +0.30/-0.29 L_sun with a fixed
faint end slope, about one order of magnitude larger than that in Coma. The
rate of evolution of the IR luminosity from Coma to MS 1054-03 is consistent
with that found in field galaxies, and it suggests that some internal
mechanism, e.g., the consumption of the gas fuel, is responsible for the
general decline of the cosmic star formation rate (SFR) in different
environments. The mass-normalized integrated SFR within 0.5R_200 in MS 1054-03
also shows evolution compared with other rich clusters at lower redshifts, but
the trend is less conclusive if the mass selection effect is considered. A
nonnegligible fraction (13%) of cluster members, are forming stars actively and
the overdensity of IR galaxies is about 20 compared to the field. It is
unlikely that clusters only passively accrete star forming galaxies from the
surrounding fields and have their star formation quenched quickly afterward;
instead, many cluster galaxies still have large amounts of gas, and their star
formation may be enhanced by the interaction with the cluster.Comment: 49 pages, 9 figures, accepted by Ap
RCS2 J232727.6-020437: An Efficient Cosmic Telescope at
We present a detailed gravitational lens model of the galaxy cluster RCS2
J232727.6-020437. Due to cosmological dimming of cluster members and ICL, its
high redshift () makes it ideal for studying background galaxies.
Using new ACS and WFC3/IR HST data, we identify 16 multiple images. From
MOSFIRE follow up, we identify a strong emission line in the spectrum of one
multiple image, likely confirming the redshift of that system to .
With a highly magnified () source plane area of
arcmin at , RCS2 J232727.6-020437 has a lensing efficiency comparable
to the Hubble Frontier Fields clusters. We discover four highly magnified
candidate Lyman-break galaxies behind the cluster, one of which may be
multiply-imaged. Correcting for magnification, we find that all four galaxies
are fainter than . One candidate is detected at in
both Spitzer/IRAC [3.6] and [4.5] channels. A spectroscopic follow-up with
MOSFIRE does not result in the detection of the Lyman-alpha emission line from
any of the four candidates. From the MOSFIRE spectra we place median upper
limits on the Lyman-alpha flux of ().Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, submitted to ApJ on 3/06/201
Investigating the Presence of 500 μm Submillimeter Excess Emission in Local Star Forming Galaxies
Submillimeter excess emission has been reported at 500 μm in a handful of local galaxies, and previous studies suggest that it could be correlated with metal abundance. We investigate the presence of an excess submillimeter emission at 500 μm for a sample of 20 galaxies from the Key Insights on Nearby Galaxies: a Far Infrared Survey with Herschel (KINGFISH) that span a range of morphologies and metallicities (12 + log (O/H) = 7.8-8.7). We probe the far-infrared (IR) emission using images from the Spitzer Space Telescope and Herschel Space Observatory in the wavelength range 24-500 μm. We model the far-IR peak of the dust emission with a two-temperature modified blackbody and measure excess of the 500 μm photometry relative to that predicted by our model. We compare the submillimeter excess, where present, with global galaxy metallicity and, where available, resolved metallicity measurements. We do not find any correlation between the 500 μm excess and metallicity. A few individual sources do show excess (10%-20%) at 500 μm; conversely, for other sources, the model overpredicts the measured 500 μm flux density by as much as 20%, creating a 500 μm "deficit." None of our sources has an excess larger than the calculated 1σ uncertainty, leading us to conclude that there is no substantial excess at submillimeter wavelengths at or shorter than 500 μm in our sample. Our results differ from previous studies detecting 500 μm excess in KINGFISH galaxies largely due to new, improved photometry used in this study
The Thick Disk in the Galaxy NGC 4244 from S^4G Imaging
If thick disks are ubiquitous and a natural product of disk galaxy formation and/or evolution processes, all
undisturbed galaxies that have evolved during a significant fraction of a Hubble time should have a thick disk. The
late-type spiral galaxy NGC 4244 has been reported as the only nearby edge-on galaxy without a confirmed thick
disk. Using data from the Spitzer Survey of Stellar Structure in Galaxies (S^4G) we have identified signs of two disk
components in this galaxy. The asymmetries between the light profiles on both sides of the mid-plane of NGC 4244
can be explained by a combination of the galaxy not being perfectly edge-on and a certain degree of opacity of
the thin disk. We argue that the subtlety of the thick disk is a consequence of either a limited secular evolution in
NGC 4244, a small fraction of stellar material in the fragments which built the galaxy, or a high amount of gaseous
accretion after the formation of the galaxy
Predicting the Spectrum of UGC 2885, Rubin’s Galaxy with Machine Learning
Wu & Peek predict SDSS-quality spectra based on Pan-STARRS broadband grizy images using machine learning (ML). In this article, we test their prediction for a unique object, UGC 2885 ( Rubin\u27s galaxy ), the largest and most massive, isolated disk galaxy in the local universe (D \u3c 100 Mpc). After obtaining the ML predicted spectrum, we compare it to all existing spectroscopic information that is comparable to an SDSS spectrum of the central region: two archival spectra, one extracted from the VIRUS-P observations of this galaxy, and a new, targeted MMT/Binospec observation. Agreement is qualitatively good, though the ML prediction prefers line ratios slightly more toward those of an active galactic nucleus (AGN), compared to archival and VIRUS-P observed values. The MMT/Binospec nuclear spectrum unequivocally shows strong emission lines except Hβ, the ratios of which are consistent with AGN activity. The ML approach to galaxy spectra may be a viable way to identify AGN supplementing NIR colors. How such a massive disk galaxy (M* = 1011 M⊙), which uncharacteristically shows no sign of interaction or mergers, manages to fuel its central AGN remains to be investigated
Mid-infrared Galaxy Morphology from the Spitzer Survey of Stellar Structure in Galaxies (S^4G): The Imprint of the De Vaucouleurs Revised Hubble-Sandage Classification System at 3.6 μm
Spitzer Space Telescope Infrared Array Camera imaging provides an opportunity to study all known morphological types of galaxies in the mid-IR at a depth significantly better than ground-based near-infrared and optical images. The goal of this study is to examine the imprint of the de Vaucouleurs classification volume in the 3.6 μm band, which is the best Spitzer waveband for galactic stellar mass morphology owing to its depth and its reddening-free sensitivity mainly to older stars. For this purpose, we have prepared classification images for 207 galaxies from the Spitzer archive, most of which are formally part of the Spitzer Survey of Stellar Structure in Galaxies (S^4G), a Spitzer post-cryogenic ("warm") mission Exploration Science Legacy Program survey of 2331 galaxies closer than 40 Mpc. For the purposes of morphology, the galaxies are interpreted as if the images are blue light, the historical waveband for classical galaxy classification studies. We find that 3.6 μm classifications are well correlated with blue-light classifications, to the point where the essential features of many galaxies look very similar in the two very different wavelength regimes. Drastic differences are found only for the most dusty galaxies. Consistent with a previous study by Eskridge et al., the main difference between blue-light and mid-IR types is an ≈1 stage interval difference for S0/a to Sbc or Sc galaxies, which tend to appear "earlier" in type at 3.6 μm due to the slightly increased prominence of the bulge, the reduced effects of extinction, and the reduced (but not completely eliminated) effect of the extreme population I stellar component. We present an atlas of all of the 207 galaxies analyzed here and bring attention to special features or galaxy types, such as nuclear rings, pseudobulges, flocculent spiral galaxies, I0 galaxies, double-stage and double-variety galaxies, and outer rings, that are particularly distinctive in the mid-IR
Metal Abundances of KISS Galaxies. IV. Galaxian Luminosity-Metallicity Relations in the Optical and Near-IR
We explore the galaxian luminosity-metallicity (L-Z) relationship in both the
optical and the near-IR using a combination of optical photometric and
spectroscopic observations from the KPNO International Spectroscopic Survey
(KISS) and near-infrared photometry from the Two-micron All Sky Survey (2MASS).
We supplement the 2MASS data with our own NIR photometry for a small number of
lower-luminosity ELGs that are under-represented in the 2MASS database. Our
B-band L-Z relationship includes 765 star-forming KISS galaxies with coarse
abundance estimates from our follow-up spectra, while the correlation with KISS
and 2MASS yields a total of 420 galaxies in our J-band L-Z relationship. We
explore the effect that changing the correlation between the strong-line
abundance diagnostic R_23 and metallicity has on the derived L-Z relation. We
find that the slope of the L-Z relationship decreases as the wavelength of the
luminosity bandpass increases. We interpret this as being, at least in part, an
effect of internal absorption in the host galaxy. Furthermore, the dispersion
in the L-Z relation decreases for the NIR bands, suggesting that variations in
internal absorption contribute significantly to the observed scatter. We
propose that our NIR L-Z relations are more fundamental than the B-band
relation, since they are largely free of absorption effects and the NIR
luminosities are more directly related to the stellar mass of the galaxy than
are the optical luminosities.Comment: 22 pages, including 6 figures and 6 tables. Accepted for publication
in the Astrophysical Journal (20 May 2005 issue
The emission by dust and stars of nearby galaxies in the Herschel KINGFISH survey
Using new far-infrared imaging from the Herschel Space Observatory with ancillary data from ultraviolet (UV) to submillimeter wavelengths, we estimate the total emission from dust and stars of 62 nearby galaxies in the KINGFISH survey in a way that is as empirical and model independent as possible. We collect and exploit these data in order to measure from the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) precisely how much stellar radiation is intercepted and re-radiated by dust, and how this quantity varies with galaxy properties. By including SPIRE data, we are more sensitive to emission from cold dust grains than previous analyses at shorter wavelengths, allowing for more accurate estimates of dust temperatures and masses. The dust/stellar flux ratio, which we measure by integrating the SEDs, has a range of nearly three decades (from 10(-2.2) to 10(0.5)). The inclusion of SPIRE data shows that estimates based on data not reaching these far-IR wavelengths are biased low by 17% on average. We find that the dust/stellar flux ratio varies with morphology and total infrared (IR) luminosity, with dwarf galaxies having faint luminosities, spirals having relatively high dust/stellar ratios and IR luminosities, and some early types having low dust/stellar ratios. We also find that dust/stellar flux ratios are related to gas-phase metallicity ((log(f(dust)/f(*)) over bar) = -0.66 +/- 0.08 and -0.22 +/- 0.12 for metal-poor and intermediate-metallicity galaxies, respectively), while the dust/stellar mass ratios are less so (differing by approximate to 0.2 dex); the more metal-rich galaxies span a much wider range of the flux ratios. In addition, the substantial scatter between dust/stellar flux and dust/stellar mass indicates that the former is a poor proxy of the latter. Comparing the dust/stellar flux ratios and dust temperatures, we also show that early types tend to have slightly warmer temperatures (by up to 5 K) than spiral galaxies, which may be due to more intense interstellar radiation fields, or possibly to different dust grain compositions. Finally, we show that early types and early-type spirals have a strong correlation between the dust/stellar flux ratio and specific star formation rate, which suggests that the relatively bright far-IR emission of some of these galaxies is due to ongoing (if limited) star formation as well as to the radiation field from older stars, which is heating the dust grains
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