581 research outputs found
Counter-Evolution of Faint Field Galaxies
We adopt a new approach to explore the puzzling nature of faint blue field
galaxies. Instead of assuming that the local luminosity function is well
defined, we first determine whether any non-evolving set of luminosity
functions for different spectral types of galaxies is compatible with the
observed marginal distributions in optical and near-infrared counts, B - R
colors, and redshifts. Exploiting a non-negative least squares method, we
derive a new no-evolution model that is found to fit all the observations
surprisingly well. We conclude that models more exotic than mild luminosity
evolution, such as those requiring rapid evolution in star formation rates,
disappearing dwarf galaxy populations, high values of the cosmological
constant, rapid mergers, or substantial non-conservation of galaxy numbers with
time, are no longer as compelling.Comment: 10 pages + 4 figures (appended), AAS LaTeX v3.0, Ap.J. Letters in
press, UCO/Lick Bulletin #126
The Wyoming Survey for H-alpha. I. Initial Results at z ~ 0.16 and 0.24
The Wyoming Survey for H-alpha, or WySH, is a large-area, ground-based,
narrowband imaging survey for H-alpha-emitting galaxies over the latter half of
the age of the Universe. The survey spans several square degrees in a set of
fields of low Galactic cirrus emission. The observing program focuses on
multiple dz~0.02 epochs from z~0.16 to z~0.81 down to a uniform
(continuum+line) luminosity at each epoch of ~10^33 W uncorrected for
extinction (3sigma for a 3" diameter aperture). First results are presented
here for 98+208 galaxies observed over approximately 2 square degrees at
redshifts z~0.16 and 0.24, including preliminary luminosity functions at these
two epochs. These data clearly show an evolution with lookback time in the
volume-averaged cosmic star formation rate. Integrals of Schechter fits to the
extinction-corrected H-alpha luminosity functions indicate star formation rates
per co-moving volume of 0.009 and 0.014 h_70 M_sun/yr/Mpc^3 at z~0.16 and 0.24,
respectively. The formal uncertainties in the Schechter fits, based on this
initial subset of the survey, correspond to uncertainties in the cosmic star
formation rate density at the >~40% level; the tentative uncertainty due to
cosmic variance is 25%, estimated from separately carrying out the analysis on
data from the first two fields with substantial datasets.Comment: To appear in the Astronomical Journa
A View of Point Sources in Hickson Compact Groups: High AGN fraction but a dearth of strong AGNs
We present X-ray point source catalogs for 9 Hickson Compact Groups
(HCGs, 37 galaxies) at distances Mpc. We perform detailed X-ray point
source detection and photometry, and interpret the point source population by
means of simulated hardness ratios. We thus estimate X-ray luminosities ()
for all sources, most of which are too weak for reliable spectral fitting. For
all sources, we provide catalogs with counts, count rates, power-law indices
(), hardness ratios, and , in the full ( keV), soft
( keV) and hard ( keV) bands. We use optical emission-line
ratios from the literature to re-classify 24 galaxies as star-forming,
accreting onto a supermassive black hole (AGNs), transition objects, or
low-ionization nuclear emission regions (LINERs). Two-thirds of our galaxies
have nuclear X-ray sources with /UVOT counterparts. Two nuclei have
~ erg s, are strong
multi-wavelength AGNs and follow the known correlation for strong AGNs. Otherwise, most nuclei are X-ray faint,
consistent with either a low-luminosity AGN or a nuclear X-ray binary
population, and fall in the "non-AGN locus" in space, which also hosts other, normal, galaxies. Our results suggest
that HCG X-ray nuclei in high specific star formation rate spiral galaxies are
likely dominated by star formation, while those with low specific star
formation rates in earlier types likely harbor a weak AGN. The AGN fraction in
HCG galaxies with and erg
s is , somewhat higher than the fraction
in galaxy clusters.Comment: 77 pages (emulateapj), 28 tables, 11 figures. Accepted by ApJS on
March 5, 201
HI Properties of Low Luminosity Star-Forming Galaxies in the KPNO International Spectroscopic Survey
New HI observations are presented for a complete sample of 109 low luminosity
star-forming galaxies taken from the KPNO International Spectroscopic Survey
(KISS), the first CCD-based wide-field objective-prism survey for emission-line
galaxies. This sample consists of all star-forming galaxies with M_B > -18.0
and cz < 11,000 km/s from the first Halpha-selected survey list. Overall, 97
out of 109 galaxies have been detected in HI. We confirm the weak trend of
increasing gas richness with decreasing luminosity found by previous authors.
Gas richness is also shown to be weakly anti-correlated with metallicity. The
dependence of star formation rates (SFRs) and HI gas depletion timescales on
metallicity is examined. The median solar metallicity based SFR and gas
depletion timescale are 0.1639 M_sun/yr and 5 Gyrs, respectively. Corrections
for variations in metallicity decreases SFRs by about 0.5 dex and increases gas
depletion timescales by an average of about 8 Gyrs. The majority of galaxies in
this sample still have large reservoirs of HI gas, and despite their large
current star formation rates, could have formed stars in a quasi-continuous
manner for a Hubble time. Finally, we present the first HI mass function for
low luminosity star-forming galaxies and show that this subpopulation
contributes 10-15% of the overall HI density in the local universe. We conclude
that if the HI mass function of the Universe does indeed have a steeply rising
low-mass slope as suggested by previous authors, it is not due to the
population of low luminosity star-forming galaxies.Comment: 27 pages, 13 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in the
Astronomical Journa
Radio Continuum Emission at 1.4 GHz from KISS Emission-Line Galaxies
We have searched the Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty centimeters
(FIRST) and the NRAO VLA Sky Survey (NVSS) 1.4 GHz radio surveys for sources
that are coincident with emission-line galaxy (ELG) candidates from the KPNO
International Spectroscopic Survey (KISS). A total of 207 of the 2157 KISS ELGs
(~10%) in the first two H-alpha-selected survey lists were found to possess
radio detections in FIRST and/or NVSS. Follow-up spectra exist for all of the
radio detections, allowing us to determine the activity type (star-forming vs.
AGN) for the entire sample. We explore the properties of the radio-detected
KISS galaxies in order to gain a better insight into the nature of
radio-emitting galaxies in the local universe (z < 0.1). No dwarf galaxies were
detected, despite the large numbers of low-luminosity galaxies present in KISS,
suggesting that lower mass, lower luminosity objects do not possess strong
galaxian-scale magnetic fields. Due to the selection technique used for KISS,
our radio ELGs represent a quasi-volume-limited sample, which allows us to
develop a clearer picture of the radio galaxy population at low redshift.
Nearly 2/3rds of the KISS radio galaxies are starburst/star-forming galaxies,
which is in stark contrast to the results of flux-limited radio surveys that
are dominated by AGNs and elliptical galaxies (i.e., classic radio galaxies).
While there are many AGNs among the KISS radio galaxies, there are no objects
with large radio powers in our local volume. We derive a radio luminosity
function (RLF) for the KISS ELGs that agrees very well with previous RLFs that
adequately sample the lower-luminosity radio population.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal (April 2004); 23
pages, 16 figure
Stellar Populations in Compact Galaxy Groups: a Multi-Wavelength Study of HCGs 16, 22, and 42, their Star Clusters and Dwarf Galaxies
We present a multi-wavelength analysis of three compact galaxy groups, HCGs
16, 22, and 42, which describe a sequence in terms of gas richness, from space-
(Swift, HST, Spitzer) and ground-based (LCO, CTIO) imaging and spectroscopy. We
study various signs of past interactions including a faint, dusty tidal feature
about HCG 16A, which we tentatively age-date at <1 Gyr. This represents the
possible detection of a tidal feature at the end of its phase of optical
observability. Our HST images also resolve what were thought to be double
nuclei in HCG 16C and D into multiple, distinct sources, likely to be star
clusters. Beyond our phenomenological treatment, we focus primarily on
contrasting the stellar populations across these three groups. The star
clusters show a remarkable intermediate-age population in HCG 22, and identify
the time at which star formation was quenched in HCG 42. We also search for
dwarf galaxies at accordant redshifts. The inclusion of 33 members and 27
'associates' (possible members) radically changes group dynamical masses, which
in turn may affect previous evolutionary classifications. The extended
membership paints a picture of relative isolation in HCGs 16 and 22, but shows
HCG 42 to be part of a larger structure, following a dichotomy expected from
recent studies. We conclude that (a) star cluster populations provide an
excellent metric of evolutionary state, as they can age-date the past epochs of
star formation; and (b) the extended dwarf galaxy population must be considered
in assessing the dynamical state of a compact group.Comment: 29 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
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