171 research outputs found

    The Evolution of the Visible and Hidden Star Formation in the Universe: Implication from the Luminosity Functions at FUV and FIR

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    Based on GALEX and IRAS/Spitzer datasets, we have found that both FUV and FIR luminosity functions (LFs) show a strong evolution from z=0 to z=1, but the FIR LF evolves much stronger than the FUV one. Consequently, the FIR/FUV luminosity density ratio increases from 4 (z=0) to 15 (z=1). It means that more than 80% of the star-forming activity in the Universe is hidden by dust at z=1. To explore this issue further, we have performed a combined analysis of the galaxy sample in FUV and FIR. For the Local Universe we used GALEX-IRAS sample, whereas at z=1 we used the Lyman-break galaxy sample selected by GALEX bands constructed by Burgarella et al. (2005), which is known to be representative of visible (i.e., non-obscured) star-forming galaxies at z=1. From these datasets, we constructed the LFs of the FUV-selected galaxies by the survival analysis to, take into account the upper-limit data properly. We discovered that the FIR LF of the Lyman-break galaxies show a significant evolution comparing with the local FIR LF, but it is a factor of 2-3 lower than the global FIR LF (Le Floc'h et al. 2005). This indicates that the evolution of visible galaxies is not strong enough to explain the drastic evolution of the FIR LF. Namely, a FIR-luminous, rapidly diminishing population of galaxies is required.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, conference proceedings of "At the Edge of the Universe", Sintra 9-13 October 200

    The Formation of Galaxies, the Formation of Old Globular Clusters and the Link with High-Redshift Objects

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    In this paper, we are exploring the properties of old, metal-poor globular clusters in galaxies. We investigate whether their properties are related to the properties of their host galaxies, and whether we can constrain their formation. The main result is that the mean metallicities of old GC systems are found to lie in a narrow range -1.7 < [Fe/H] < -1.1 (80 % of the population). Moreover, no correlations are found between the mean metallicities and other galaxy properties which implies a GC formation independent of the host galaxies. Further, we try to identify the sites of old, metal-poor GC formation, with any currently known high redshift objects. We find that the metalicities of damped Lyα\alpha systems in the redshift range 1.6 < z < 4 are consistent with our GC metalicities, which suggests that these high-density neutral gas objects may be the progenitors of the old, metal-poor globular clusters.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, to appear in A.S.P. Conf. Series "Massive Stellar Clusters" held in Strasbourg, Nov. 8-10, 1999, eds. A. Lancon et C. Boily. The files for Figs.2 were wron

    Deep 15um AKARI observations in the CDFS: estimating dust luminosities for a MIR-selected sample and for Lyman Break Galaxies and the evolution of L(dust)/L(UV) with the redshift

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    Deep observations of the CDFS have been secured at 15um with AKARI/IRC infrared space telescope (ESA open time). From these observations, we define a sample of MIR-selected galaxies at 15um and we also obtain 15um flux densities for a sample of LBGs at z=1 already observed at 24um with Spitzer/MIPS. Number counts for the MIR-selected sample show a bump around a 15um flux density of 0.2mJy that can be attributed to galaxies at z>0.4 and at z>0.8 for the fainter part of the bump. This bump seems to be shifted as compared to other works and a possible origin can be the Cosmic variance. Thanks to this dataset, we have tested, on the two above samples at z=1, the validity of the conversions from monochromatic luminosities nu.f(nu) at a rest-frame wavelength of 8um by a comparison with total dust luminosities estimated from Spitzer rest-frame 12um data that we use as a reference. We find that the 8um dust luminosities are not all consistent and that some of them are better when compared to L(dust) evaluated from longer wavelength luminosities. We also find that the rest-frame 8um luminosities provide globally good estimates of L(dust). By comparing our data for the two samples to several libraries of SEDs, we find that models can explain the diversity of the observed f(24)/f(15) ratio quite reasonably for the MIR-selected sample and better for the LBG sample which are less dispersed than the MIR selection. However, when we analyse the luminosity dependence of this ratio, we find important discrepancies. Finally, we revisit the evolution of L(dust)/L(UV) ratio with the redshift z by re-calibrating previous L(dust) at z=2 based on our results and added new data points at higher redshifts. The decreasing trend is amplified as compared to the previous estimate.Comment: Paper accepted for publication in PAS

    Effects of dust scattering albedo and 2175 A bump on ultraviolet colours of normal disc galaxies

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    We discuss dust properties in the interstellar medium (ISM) of nearby normal galaxies, by comparing observations in the ultraviolet (UV) with simulations by a radiative transfer model. The observed UV colours of nearby galaxies show a reddening relative to their expected intrinsic colours. Some authors argued that the Milky Way dust cannot reproduce the reddening because of the prominent 2175 \AA absorption bump. Other authors proposed a reduction mechanism of the bump strength in an {\it attenuation law} derived from the ratio of the observed intensity to the intrinsic one through an age-selective attenuation (i.e., young stars are more attenuated selectively). We newly find that the wavelength dependence of the scattering albedo also has a strong effect on the UV colour; an albedo decreasing toward shorter wavelengths (except for the absorption bump range) produces a significant UV reddening. After comparing the observed UV colours of nearby normal galaxies with those expected from radiative transfer simulations assumed several dust models, we find two sorts of dust suitable for these galaxies: (1) dust with a bump and a smaller albedo for a shorter wavelength (except for the bump range), and (2) dust without any bump but with an almost constant albedo. If very small carbonaceous grains responsible for the common unidentified infrared emission band are also the bump carrier, the former dust is favorable. Finally, we derive mean attenuation laws of various dust models as a function of the UV attenuation, and derive some relations between the UV attenuation and observable/theoretical quantities.Comment: MNRAS in pres

    CIGALEMC: Galaxy Parameter Estimation using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo Approach with Cigale

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    We introduce a fast Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) exploration of the astrophysical parameter space using a modified version of the publicly available code CIGALE (Code Investigating GALaxy emission). The original CIGALE builds a grid of theoretical Spectral Energy Distribution (SED) models and fits to photometric fluxes from Ultraviolet (UV) to Infrared (IR) to put contraints on parameters related to both formation and evolution of galaxies. Such a grid-based method can lead to a long and challenging parameter extraction since the computation time increases exponentially with the number of parameters considered and results can be dependent on the density of sampling points, which must be chosen in advance for each parameter. Markov Chain Monte Carlo methods, on the other hand, scale approximately linearly with the number of parameters, allowing a faster and more accurate exploration of the parameter space by using a smaller number of efficiently chosen samples. We test our MCMC version of the code CIGALE (called CIGALEMC) with simulated data. After checking the ability of the code to retrieve the input parameters used to build the mock sample, we fit theoretical SEDs to real data from the well known and studied SINGS sample. We discuss constraints on the parameters and show the advantages of our MCMC sampling method in terms of accuracy of the results and optimization of CPU time.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables, updated to match the version accepted for publication in ApJ; code available at http://www.oamp.fr/cigale
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