57 research outputs found
A Young Stellar Cluster in the Nucleus of NGC 4449
We have obtained 1-2 A resolution optical Echellette spectra of the nuclear
star cluster in the nearby starburst galaxy NGC 4449. The light is clearly
dominated by a very young (6-10 Myr) population of stars. For our age dating,
we have used recent population synthesis models to interpret the observed
equivalent width of stellar absorption features such as the HI Balmer series
and the CaII triplet around 8500 A. We also compare the observed spectrum of
the nuclear cluster to synthesized spectra of simple stellar populations of
varying ages. All these approaches yield a consistent cluster age. Metallicity
estimates based on the relative intensities of various ionization lines yield
no evidence for significant enrichment in the center of this low mass galaxy:
the metallicity of the nuclear cluster is about one fourth of the solar value,
in agreement with independent estimates for the disk material of NGC 4449.Comment: 24 pages (incl. 7 figures), accepted by AJ, March 2001 issue revised
version with minor changes and additions, one additional figur
Lopsided Galaxies, Weak Interactions and Boosting the Star Formation Rate
To investigate the link between weak tidal interactions in disk galaxies and
the boosting of their recent star formation, we obtain images and spatially
integrated spectra (3615A < lambda < 5315A) for 40 late-type spiral galaxies
(Sab-Sbc) with varying degrees of lopsidedness (a dynamical indicator of weak
interactions). We quantify lopsidedness as the amplitude of the m=1
Fourier component of the azimuthal surface brightness distribution, averaged
over a range of radii. We compare the young stellar content, quantified by
EW(H\delta_abs) and the strength of the 4000 Angstrom break (D_4000), with
lopsidedness and find a 3-4 sigma correlation between the two. We also find a
3.2 sigma correlation between EW(H\beta_emission) and lopsidedness. Using the
evolutionary population synthesis code of Bruzual & Charlot we model the
spectra as an ``underlying population'' and a superimposed ``boost population''
with the aim of constraining the fractional boost in the SFR averaged over the
past 0.5 Gyr (the characteristic lifetime of lopsidedness). From the difference
in both EW(H\delta_abs) and D_4000 between the most and least symmetric thirds
of our sample, we infer that ~ 1x10^9 M_solar of stars are formed over the
duration of a lopsided event in addition to the ``underlying'' SFH (assuming a
final galactic stellar mass of 10^10 M_solar). This corresponds to a factor of
8 increase in the SFR over the past 5x10^8 years. For the nuclear spectra, all
of the above correlations except D_4000 vs. are weaker than for the disk,
indicating that in lopsided galaxies, the SF boost is not dominated by the
nucleus.Comment: 35 pages, including 10 figures, to appear in the Astrophysical
Journal, abridged abstrac
âOmics-guided prediction of the pathway for metabolism of isoprene by Variovorax sp. WS11
Bacteria that inhabit soils and the leaves of trees partially mitigate the release of the abundant volatile organic compound, isoprene (2-methyl-1,3-butadiene). While the initial steps of isoprene metabolism were identified in Rhodococcus sp. AD45 two decades ago, the isoprene metabolic pathway still remains largely undefined. Limited understanding of the functions of isoG, isoJ and aldH and uncertainty in the route of isoprene-derived carbon into central metabolism have hindered our understanding of isoprene metabolism. These previously uncharacterised iso genes are essential in Variovorax sp. WS11, determined by targeted mutagenesis. Using combined âomics-based approaches, we propose the complete isoprene metabolic pathway. Isoprene is converted to propionyl-CoA, which is assimilated by the chromosomally encoded methylmalonyl-CoA pathway, requiring biotin and vitamin B12, with the plasmid-encoded methylcitrate pathway potentially providing robustness against limitations in these vitamins. Key components of this pathway were induced by both isoprene and its initial oxidation product, epoxyisoprene, the principal inducer of isoprene metabolism in both Variovorax sp. WS11 and Rhodococcus sp. AD45. Analysis of the genomes of distinct isoprene-degrading bacteria indicated that all of the genetic components of the methylcitrate and methylmalonyl-CoA pathways are not always present in isoprene degraders, although incorporation of isoprene-derived carbon via propionyl-CoA and acetyl-CoA is universally indicated
Direct Measurements of the Stellar Continua and Balmer/4000 Angstrom Breaks of Red z>2 Galaxies: Redshifts and Improved Constraints on Stellar Populations
We use near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy obtained with GNIRS on Gemini,
NIRSPEC on KECK, and ISAAC on the VLT to study the rest-frame optical continua
of three `Distant Red Galaxies' (having Js - Ks > 2.3) at z>2. All three galaxy
spectra show the Balmer/4000 Angstrom break in the rest-frame optical. The
spectra allow us to determine spectroscopic redshifts from the continuum with
an estimated accuracy dz/(1+z) ~ 0.001-0.04. These redshifts agree well with
the emission line redshifts for the 2 galaxies with Halpha emission. This
technique is particularly important for galaxies that are faint in the
rest-frame UV, as they are underrepresented in high redshift samples selected
in optical surveys and are too faint for optical spectroscopy. Furthermore, we
use the break, continuum shape, and equivalent width of Halpha together with
evolutionary synthesis models to constrain the age, star formation timescale,
dust content, stellar mass and star formation rate of the galaxies. Inclusion
of the NIR spectra in the stellar population fits greatly reduces the range of
possible solutions for stellar population properties. We find that the stellar
populations differ greatly among the three galaxies, ranging from a young dusty
starburst with a small break and strong emission lines to an evolved galaxy
with a strong break and no detected line emission. The dusty starburst galaxy
has an age of 0.3 Gyr and a stellar mass of 1*10^11 Msun. The spectra of the
two most evolved galaxies imply ages of 1.3-1.4 Gyr and stellar masses of
4*10^11 Msun. The large range of properties seen in these galaxies strengthens
our previous much more uncertain results from broadband photometry. Larger
samples are required to determine the relative frequency of dusty starbursts
and (nearly) passively evolving galaxies at z~2.5.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 12 pages, 6
figure
Spectroscopic Identification of Massive Galaxies at z~2.3 with Strongly Suppressed Star Formation
We present first results of a spectroscopic survey targeting K-selected
galaxies at z=2.0-2.7 using the GNIRS instrument on Gemini-South. We obtained
near-infrared spectra with a wavelength coverage of 1.0-2.5 micron for 26
K-bright galaxies (K<19.7) selected from the MUSYC survey using photometric
redshifts. We successfully derived spectroscopic redshifts for all 26 galaxies
using rest-frame optical emission lines or the redshifted Balmer/4000 Angstrom
break. Twenty galaxies have spectroscopic redshifts in the range 2.0<z<2.7, for
which bright emission lines like Halpha and [OIII] fall in atmospheric windows.
Surprisingly, we detected no emission lines for nine of these 20 galaxies. The
median 2 sigma upper limit on the rest-frame equivalent width of Halpha for
these nine galaxies is ~10 Angstrom. The stellar continuum emission of these
same nine galaxies is best fitted by evolved stellar population models. The
best-fit star formation rate (SFR) is zero for five out of nine galaxies, and
consistent with zero within 1 sigma for the remaining four. Thus, both the
Halpha measurements and the independent stellar continuum modeling imply that
45% of our K-selected galaxies are not forming stars intensely. This high
fraction of galaxies without detected line emission and low SFRs may imply that
the suppression of star formation in massive galaxies occurs at higher redshift
than is predicted by current CDM galaxy formation models. However, obscured
star formation may have been missed, and deep mid-infrared imaging is needed to
clarify this situation.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
The Color Magnitude Distribution of Field Galaxies to z~3: the evolution and modeling of the blue sequence
Using deep NIR VLT/ISAAC and optical HST/WFPC2 imaging in the fields of the
HDFS and MS1054-03, we study the rest-frame UV-to-optical colors and magnitudes
of galaxies to z~3. While there is no evidence for a red sequence at z~3, there
does appear to be a well-defined color-magnitude relation (CMR) for blue
galaxies at all redshifts, with more luminous galaxies having redder U-V
colors. The slope of the blue CMR is independent of redshift d(U-V)/dMV = -0.09
(0.01) and can be explained by a correlation of dust-reddening with luminosity.
The average color at fixed luminosity reddens strongly \Delta(U-V) = 0.75 from
z~3 to z=0, much of which can be attributed to aging of the stars. The color
scatter of the blue sequence is relatively small sigma(U-V) = 0.25 (0.03) and
constant to z~3, but notably asymmetrical with a sharp blue ridge and a wing
towards redder colors. We explore sets of star formation histories to study the
constraints placed by the shape of the scatter at z=2-3. One particular set of
models, episodic star formation, reproduces the detailed properties very well.
For a two-state model with high and low star formation, the duty cycle is
constrained to be > 40% and the contrast between the states must be a factor >
5 (or a scatter in log(SFR) of > 0.35 dex around the mean). However, episodic
models do not explain the observed tail of very red galaxies, primarily Distant
Red Galaxies (DRGs), which may have ceased star formation altogether or are
more heavily obscured. Finally, the relative number density of red, luminous MV
< -20.5 galaxies increases by a factor of ~ 6 from z = 2.7 to z = 0.5, as does
their contribution to the total rest-frame V-band luminosity density. We are
likely viewing the progressive formation of red, passively evolving galaxies.Comment: 29 pages, 24 figures, in emulateapj style. Abstract is abridged. Some
postscript figures are compressed. accepted for publication in ApJ (scheduled
for August 20, 2007, v665n 2 issue
Kinematics, Abundances, and Origin of Brightest Cluster Galaxies
We present kinematic parameters and absorption line strengths for three
brightest cluster galaxies, NGC 6166, NGC 6173 and NGC 6086. We find that NGC
6166 has a velocity dispersion profile which rises beyond 20 arcsec from the
nucleus, with a halo velocity dispersion in excess of 400 km/s. All three
galaxies show a positive and constant h4 Hermite moment. The rising velocity
dispersion profile in NGC 6166 thus indicates an increasing mass-to-light
ratio. Rotation is low in all three galaxies, and NGC 6173 and NGC 6086 show
possible kinematically decoupled cores. All three galaxies have Mg2 gradients
similar to those found in normal bright ellipticals, which are not steep enough
to support simple dissipative collapse models, but these could be accompanied
by dissipationless mergers which would tend to dilute the abundance gradients.
The [Mg/Fe] ratios in NGC 6166 and NGC 6086 are higher than that in NGC 6173,
and if NGC 6173 is typical of normal bright ellipticals, this suggests that cDs
cannot form from late mergers of normal galaxies.Comment: 21 pages, accepted for publication in MNRA
The Stellar Populations in the Central Parsecs of Galactic Bulges Central Stellar Populations
We present Hubble Space Telescope blue spectra at intermediate spectral
resolution for the nuclei of 23 nearby disk galaxies. These objects were
selected to have nebular emission in their nuclei, and span a range of
emission-line classifications as well as Hubble types. In this paper we focus
on the stellar population as revealed by the continuum spectral energy
distribution measured within the central 0."13 (~8pc) of these galaxies. The
data were modeled with linear combinations of single-age stellar population
synthesis models. The large majority (~80%) of the surveyed nuclei have spectra
whose features are consistent with a predominantly old (>5x10^9 yr) stellar
population. Approximately 25% of these nuclei show evidence of a component with
age younger than 1 Gyr, with the incidence of these stars related to the
nebular classification. Successful model fits imply an average reddening
corresponding to A_V~0.4 mag and stellar metallicity of (1--2.5) Z_sun. We
discuss the implications of these results for the understanding of star
formation history in the environment of quiescent and active supermassive black
holes. Our findings reinforce the picture wherein Seyfert nuclei and the
majority of low-ionization nuclear emission-line regions (LINERs) are
predominantly accretion-powered, and suggest that much of the central star
formation in Hii nuclei is actually circumnuclear.Comment: 10 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication on Ap
Early-type galaxies in the SDSS. I. The sample
A sample of nearly 9000 early-type galaxies, in the redshift range 0.01 < z <
0.3, was selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey using morphological and
spectral criteria. This paper describes how the sample was selected, presents
examples of images and seeing corrected fits to the observed surface brightness
profiles, describes our method for estimating K-corrections, and shows that the
SDSS spectra are of sufficiently high quality to measure velocity dispersions
accurately. It also provides catalogs of the measured photometric and
spectroscopic parameters. In related papers, these data are used to study how
early-type galaxy observables, including luminosity, effective radius, surface
brightness, color, and velocity dispersion, are correlated with one another.Comment: 63 pages, 21 figures. Accepted by AJ (scheduled for April 2003). This
paper is part I of a revised version of astro-ph/0110344. The full version of
Tables 2 and 3, i.e. the tables listing the photometric and spectroscopic
parameters of ~ 9000 galaxies, are available at
http://astrophysics.phys.cmu.edu/~bernardi/SDSS/Etypes/TABLE
The DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: Design, Observations, Data Reduction, and Redshifts
We describe the design and data sample from the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey,
the densest and largest precision-redshift survey of galaxies at z ~ 1
completed to date. The survey has conducted a comprehensive census of massive
galaxies, their properties, environments, and large-scale structure down to
absolute magnitude M_B = -20 at z ~ 1 via ~90 nights of observation on the
DEIMOS spectrograph at Keck Observatory. DEEP2 covers an area of 2.8 deg^2
divided into four separate fields, observed to a limiting apparent magnitude of
R_AB=24.1. Objects with z < 0.7 are rejected based on BRI photometry in three
of the four DEEP2 fields, allowing galaxies with z > 0.7 to be targeted ~2.5
times more efficiently than in a purely magnitude-limited sample. Approximately
sixty percent of eligible targets are chosen for spectroscopy, yielding nearly
53,000 spectra and more than 38,000 reliable redshift measurements. Most of the
targets which fail to yield secure redshifts are blue objects that lie beyond z
~ 1.45. The DEIMOS 1200-line/mm grating used for the survey delivers high
spectral resolution (R~6000), accurate and secure redshifts, and unique
internal kinematic information. Extensive ancillary data are available in the
DEEP2 fields, particularly in the Extended Groth Strip, which has evolved into
one of the richest multiwavelength regions on the sky. DEEP2 surpasses other
deep precision-redshift surveys at z ~ 1 in terms of galaxy numbers, redshift
accuracy, sample number density, and amount of spectral information. We also
provide an overview of the scientific highlights of the DEEP2 survey thus far.
This paper is intended as a handbook for users of the DEEP2 Data Release 4,
which includes all DEEP2 spectra and redshifts, as well as for the
publicly-available DEEP2 DEIMOS data reduction pipelines. [Abridged]Comment: submitted to ApJS; data products available for download at
http://deep.berkeley.edu/DR4
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