797 research outputs found
Spatially Resolved Spectroscopy of Starburst and Post-Starburst Galaxies in The Rich z~0.55 Cluster CL0016+16
We have used the Low Resolution Imaging Spectrograph (LRIS) on the W.M. Keck
I telescope to obtain spatially resolved spectroscopy of a small sample of six
post-starburst and three dusty-starburst galaxies in the rich cluster CL0016+16
at z=0.55. We use this to measure radial profiles of the Hdelta and OII3727
lines which are diagnostic probes of the mechanisms that give rise to the
abrupt changes in star-formation rates in these galaxies. In the post-starburst
sample we are unable to detect any radial gradients in the Hdelta line
equivalent width - although one galaxy exhibits a gradient from one side of the
galaxy to the other. The absence of Hdelta gradients in these galaxies is
consistent with their production via interaction with the intra-cluster medium,
however, our limited spatial sampling prevents us from drawing robust
conclusions. All members of the sample have early type morphologies, typical of
post-starburst galaxies in general, but lack the high incidence of tidal tails
and disturbances seen in local field samples. This argues against a merger
origin and adds weight to a scenario where truncation by the intra-cluster
medium is at work. The post-starburst spectral signature is consistent over the
radial extent probed with no evidence of OII3727 emission and strong Hdelta
absorption at all radii i.e. the post-starburst classification is not an
aperture effect. In contrast the dusty-starburst sample shows a tendency for a
central concentration of OII3727 emission. This is most straightforwardly
interpreted as the consequence of a central starburst. However, other
possibilities exist such as a non-uniform dust distribution (which is expected
in such galaxies) and/or a non-uniform starburst age distribution. The sample
exhibit late type and irregular morphologies.Comment: accepted for publication in PAS
Line-of-sight velocity distribution corrections for Lick/IDS indices of early-type galaxies
We investigate line-of-sight velocity distribution (LOSVD) corrections for
absorption line-strength indices of early-type galaxies in the Lick/IDS system.
This system is often used to estimate basic stellar population parameters such
as luminosity weighted ages and metallicities. Using single stellar population
model spectral energy distributions by Vazdekis (1999) we find that the LOSVD
corrections are largely insensitive to changes in the stellar populations for
old galaxies (age >3 Gyr). Only the Lick/IDS Balmer series indices show an
appreciable effect, which is on the order of the correction itself.
Furthermore, we investigate the sensitivity of the LOSVD corrections to
non-Gaussian LOSVDs. In this case the LOSVD can be described by a Gauss-Hermite
series and it is shown that typical values of h_3 and h_4 observed in
early-type galaxies can lead to significant modifications of the LOSVD
corrections and thus to changes in the derived luminosity weighted ages and
metallicities. A new, simple parameterisation for the LOSVD corrections, taking
into account the h_3 and h_4 terms, is proposed and calibrations given for a
subset of the Lick/IDS indices and two additional indices applicable to old (>3
Gyr) stellar populations.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, accepted by A&
The Slitless Spectroscopy Data Extraction Software aXe
The methods and techniques for the slitless spectroscopy software aXe, which
was designed to reduce data from the various slitless spectroscopy modes of
Hubble Space Telescope instruments, are described. aXe can treat slitless
spectra from different instruments such as ACS, NICMOS and WFC3 through the use
of a configuration file which contains all the instrument dependent parameters.
The basis of the spectral extraction within aXe are the position, morphology
and photometry of the objects on a companion direct image. Several aspects of
slitless spectroscopy, such as the overlap of spectra, an extraction dependent
on object shape and the provision of flat-field cubes, motivate a dedicated
software package, and the solutions offered within aXe are discussed in detail.
The effect of the mutual contamination of spectra can be quantitatively
assessed in aXe, using spectral and morphological information from the
companion direct image(s). A new method named 'aXedrizzle' for 2D rebinning and
co-adding spectral data, taken with small shifts or dithers, is described. The
extraction of slitless spectra with optimal weighting is outlined and the
correction of spectra for detector fringing for the ACS CCD's is presented.
Auxiliary software for simulating slitless data and for visualizing the results
of an aXe extraction is outlined.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in PASP. A high
resolution version is available at
http://www.stecf.org/software/slitless_software/axe/axe_PASP.pd
Measuring age, metallicity and abundance ratios from absorption line indices
In this study we present detailed calculations of absorption line indices on
the Lick System based on the stellar models by Salasnich et al. (2000)
calculated with enhanced mix of alpha-elements. Using the so-called Response
Functions (RFs) of Tripicco & Bell (1995, TB95), we calculate the indices for
SSPs of different age, metallicity and enhancement. We made use of the triplet
Hb, Mgb and , and Minimum-Distance Method proposed by Trager et al. (2000,
TFWG00) to estimate the age, metallicity and enhancement degree for the
galaxies of the Gonzalez (1993) sample, and compare the results with those
TFWG00 and Thomas et al (2003). Since very large differences are found, in
particular as far as the age is concerned, we analyze in a great detail all
possible sources of disagreement, going from the stellar models and SSPs to
many technical details of the procedure to calculate the indices, and finally
the pattern of chemical elements (especially when alpha-enhanced mixtures are
adopted). The key issue of the analysis is that at given metallicity Z and
enhancement factor, the specific abundance ratios [Xel/Fe] adopted for some
elements (e.g. O, Mg, Ti, and likely others) dominate the scene because with
the TB95 RFs they may strongly affect indices like Hb and the age in turn.
Finally we have drawn some remarks on the interpretation of the distribution of
early-type galaxies in popular two-indices planes, like Hb vs. [MgFe]. We argue
that part of the scatter along the Hb axis observed in this plane could be
attributed instead of the age, the current explanation, to a spread both in the
degree of enhancement and some abundance ratios. The main conclusion of this
study is that deriving ages, metallicities and degree of enhancement from line
indices is a cumbersome affair whose results are still uncertain.Comment: 26 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS. This is a
revised version of our previous submission to astro-ph/030524
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