2,276 research outputs found
LSD and AMAZE: the mass-metallicity relation at z>3
We present the first results on galaxy metallicity evolution at z>3 from two
projects, LSD (Lyman-break galaxies Stellar populations and Dynamics) and AMAZE
(Assessing the Mass Abundance redshift Evolution). These projects use deep
near-infrared spectroscopic observations of a sample of ~40 LBGs to estimate
the gas-phase metallicity from the emission lines. We derive the
mass-metallicity relation at z3 and compare it with the same relation at
lower redshift. Strong evolution from z=0 and z=2 to z=3 is observed, and this
finding puts strong constrains on the models of galaxy evolution. These
preliminary results show that the effective oxygen yields does not increase
with stellar mass, implying that the simple outflow model does not apply at
z>3.Comment: 5 pages, to appear in the IAUS 255 conference proceedings:
"Low-Metallicity Star Formation: from the First Stars to Dwarf Galaxies",
L.K. Hunt, S. Madden and R. Schneider ed
Narrow band imaging and long slit spectroscopy of UGC 5101
UGC 5101 (z = 0.04; D is approximately equal to 240 Mpc) is one of the so called Ultraluminous IRAS sources. Two important properties of the members of this group are their L(sub IR) is greater than or equal to 10(exp 12) solar luminosity, and their space density in the universe up to z is less than 0.1 is equal or even larger than the space density of the quasars. Further noteworthy features of the Ultraluminous IRAS sources are their being morphologically peculiar and the fact that they all seem to host active nuclei in their center. We have observed UGC 5101 in an effort to study the interplay between the gas ionized by the central active nucleus and that gas ionized by other processes which may hold important clues to the understanding of the entire picture of this object. In particular these other ionizing processes could well be massive stars formed recently after the galactic encounter and shocks possibly also related to the galaxy collision. The data that we discuss were obtained between Dec. 1989 and Jan. 1992 with the WHT 4.2 m telescope using the two-arm spectrograph ISIS. Several spectral frames were obtained at three different position angles: PA 84--along the tail of the galaxy; PA 32--along the dust lane; and PA 110. The blue spectra are centered on the H beta line, while the red spectra are centered on the H alpha line. In the configuration we used for the long slit spectra, the spectral scale was 0.74 A per pixel, and the spatial scale was .37 arcsec per pixel; we also observed the H alpha region with a spectral scale of .37 A per pixel, at position angle 84. The narrow band images were obtained at the auxiliary port of ISIS, with a scale of .2 arcsec per pixel, and were centered at the H alpha wavelength, and on the adjacent continuum. The H alpha images and the spectra support the following model. UGC 5101 hosts an active nucleus; the NLR extends up to about 1.5 kpc and shows a complex velocity field, superimposed on the rotation curve of the galaxy. Besides the NLR, in the H alpha image are visible tow bright cones that extend up to 3 kpc along PA 32. The long slit spectra at PA 32 show that the velocity field of the gas in these regions is peculiar, while the ionization structure of the gas is similar to that of the NLR
Nuclear star formation in the quasar PG1126-041 from adaptive optics assisted spectroscopy
We present adaptive optics assisted spectroscopy of three quasars obtained
with NACO at VLT. The high angular resolution achieved with the adaptive optics
(~0.08"), joined to the diagnostic power of near-IR spectroscopy, allow us to
investigate the properties of the innermost 100 pc of these quasars. In the
quasar with the best adaptive optics correction, PG1126-041, we spatially
resolve the Pa-alpha emission within the nuclear 100 pc. The comparison with
higher excitation lines suggests that the narrow Pa-alpha emission is due to
nuclear star formation. The inferred intensity of the nuclear star formation
(13 M(sun)/yr) may account for most of the far-IR luminosity observed in this
quasar.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
De re metallica: the cosmic chemical evolution of galaxies
The evolution of the content of heavy elements in galaxies, the relative
chemical abundances, their spatial distribution, and how these scale with
various galactic properties, provide unique information on the galactic
evolutionary processes across the cosmic epochs. In recent years major progress
has been made in constraining the chemical evolution of galaxies and inferring
key information relevant to our understanding of the main mechanisms involved
in galaxy evolution. In this review we provide an overview of these various
areas. After an overview of the methods used to constrain the chemical
enrichment in galaxies and their environment, we discuss the observed scaling
relations between metallicity and galaxy properties, the observed relative
chemical abundances, how the chemical elements are distributed within galaxies,
and how these properties evolve across the cosmic epochs. We discuss how the
various observational findings compare with the predictions from theoretical
models and numerical cosmological simulations. Finally, we briefly discuss the
open problems the prospects for progress in this field in the nearby future.STFC
ER
Taking stock of SLSN and LGRB host galaxy comparison using a complete sample of LGRBs
Long gamma-ray bursts (LGRBs) and superluminous supernovae (SLSNe) are both
explosive transients with very massive progenitor stars. Clues about the nature
of the progenitors can be found by investigating environments in which such
transients occur. While studies of LGRB host galaxies have a long history,
dedicated observational campaigns have only recently resulted in a high enough
number of photometrically and spectroscopically observed SLSN hosts to allow
statistically significant analysis of their properties. In this paper we make a
comparison of the host galaxies of hydrogen-poor (H-poor) SLSNe and the
Swift/BAT6 sample of LGRBs. In contrast to previous studies we use a complete
sample of LGRBs and we address a special attention to the comparison
methodology and the selection of SLSN sample whose data have been compiled from
the available literature. At intermediate redshifts (0.3 < z < 0.7) the two
classes of transients select galaxies whose properties (stellar mass,
luminosity, star-formation rate, specific star-formation rate and metallicity)
do not differ on average significantly. Moreover, the host galaxies of both
classes of objects follow the fundamental metallicity relation and the
fundamental plane of metallicity. In contrast to previous studies we show that
at intermediate redshifts the emission line equivalent widths of the two
populations are essentially the same and that the previous claims regarding the
higher fraction of SLSN hosts among the extreme emission line galaxies with
respect to LGRBs are mostly due to a larger fraction of strong-line emitters
among SLSN hosts at z < 0.3, where samples of LGRB hosts are small and poorly
defined.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, accepted to Astronomy & Astrophysic
The Kormendy relation of massive elliptical galaxies at z~1.5. Evidence for size evolution ?
We present the morphological analysis based on HST-NIC2 (0.075 arcsec/pixel)
images in the F160W filter of a sample of 9 massive field (> 10^{11} M_\odot)
galaxies spectroscopically classified as early-types at 1.2<z<1.7. Our analysis
shows that all of them are bulge dominated systems. In particular, 6 of them
are well fitted by a de Vaucouleurs profile (n=4) suggesting that they can be
considered pure elliptical galaxies. The remaining 3 galaxies are better fitted
by a Sersic profile with index 1.9<n<2.3 suggesting that a disk-like component
could contribute up to 30% to the total light of these galaxies. We derived the
effective radius R_e and the mean surface brightness within R_e of our
galaxies and we compared them with those of early-types at lower redshifts. We
find that the surface brightness of our galaxies should get fainter by
2.5 mag from z~1.5 to z~0 to match the surface brightness of the local
ellipticals with comparable R_e, i.e. the local Kormendy relation. Luminosity
evolution without morphological changes can only explain half of this effect,
as the maximum dimming expected for an elliptical galaxy is ~1.6 mag in this
redshift range. Thus, other parameters, possibly structural, may undergo
evolution and play an important role in reconciling models and observations.
Hypothesizing an evolution of the effective radius of galaxies we find that R_e
should increase by a factor 1.5 from z~1.5 to z~0.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 15 pages, 8 figure
Is there any evidence that ionised outflows quench star formation in type 1 quasars at z<1?
The aim of this paper is to test the basic model of negative AGN feedback.
According to this model, once the central black hole accretes at the Eddington
limit and reaches a certain critical mass, AGN driven outflows blow out gas,
suppressing star formation in the host galaxy and self-regulating black hole
growth. We consider a sample of 224 quasars selected from the SDSS at z<1
observed in the infrared band by Herschel. We evaluate the star formation rate
in relation to several outflow signatures traced by the [OIII]4959,5007 and
[OII]3726,3729 emission lines in about half of the sample with high quality
spectra. Most of the quasars show asymmetric and broad wings in [OIII], which
we interpret as outflow signatures. We separate the quasars in two groups,
``weakly'' and ``strongly'' outflowing, using three different criteria. When we
compare the mean star formation rate in five redshift bins in the two groups,
we find that the SFRs are comparable or slightly larger in the strongly
outflowing quasars. We estimate the stellar mass from SED fitting and the
quasars are distributed along the star formation main sequence, although with a
large scatter. The scatter from this relation is uncorrelated with respect to
the kinematic properties of the outflow. Moreover, for quasars dominated in the
infrared by starburst or by AGN emission, we do not find any correlation
between the star formation rate and the velocity of the outflow, a trend
previously reported in the literature for pure starburst galaxies. We conclude
that the basic AGN negative feedback scenario seems not to agree with our
results. Although we use a large sample of quasars, we did not find any
evidence that the star formation rate is suppressed in the presence of AGN
driven outflows on large scale. A possibility is that feedback is effective
over much longer timescales than those of single episodes of quasar activity.Comment: 18 pages, new version that implements the suggestions of the referee
and matches the AA published versio
The metallicity properties of simulated long-GRB galaxy hosts and the Fundamental Metallicity Relation
We study the implication of the collapsar model for Long Gamma-Ray Bursts
(LGRBs) on the metallicity properties of the host galaxies, by combining
high-resolution N-body simulations with semi-analytic models of galaxy
formation. The cosmological model that we use reproduces the Fundamental
Metallicity Relation recently discovered for the SDSS galaxies, whereby the
metallicity decreases with increasing Star Formation Rate for galaxies of a
given stellar mass. We select host galaxies housing pockets of gas-particles,
young and with different thresholds in metallicities, that can be sites of LRGB
events, according to the collapsar model. The simulated samples are compared
with 18 observed LGRB hosts in the aim at discriminating whether the
metallicity is a primary parameter. We find that a threshold in metallicity for
the LGRB progenitors, within the model galaxies, is not necessary in order to
reproduce the observed distribution of host metallicities. The low
metallicities of observed LGRB hosts is a consequence of the high star
formation environment. The star formation rate appears to be the primary
parameter to generate a burst event. Finally, we show that only a few LGRBs are
observed in massive, highly extincted galaxies, while these galaxies are
expected to produce many such events. We identify these missing events with the
fraction of dark LGRBs.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, submitted MNRA
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