Herschel-ATLAS: Far-infrared properties of radio-selected galaxies

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 409:1 (2010) 122-131

Authors:

MJ Hardcastle, JS Virdee, MJ Jarvis, DG Bonfield, L Dunne, S Rawlings, JA Stevens, NM Christopher, I Heywood, T Mauch, D Rigopoulou, A Verma, IK Baldry, SP Bamford, S Buttiglione, A Cava, DL Clements, A Cooray, SM Croom, A Dariush, G De Zotti, S Eales, J Fritz, DT Hill, D Hughes, R Hopwood, E Ibar, RJ Ivison, DH Jones, J Loveday, SJ Maddox, MJ Michałowski, M Negrello, P Norberg, M Pohlen, M Prescott, EE Rigby, ASG Robotham, G Rodighiero, D Scott, R Sharp, DJB Smith, P Temi, E Van Kampen

Abstract:

We use the Herschel-Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey (ATLAS) science demonstration data to investigate the star formation properties of radio-selected galaxies in the GAMA-9h field as a function of radio luminosity and redshift. Radio selection at the lowest radio luminosities, as expected, selects mostly starburst galaxies. At higher radio luminosities, where the population is dominated by active galactic nuclei (AGN), we find that some individual objects are associated with high far-infrared luminosities. However, the far-infrared properties of the radio-loud population are statistically indistinguishable from those of a comparison population of radio-quiet galaxies matched in redshift and K-band absolute magnitude. There is thus no evidence that the host galaxies of these largely low-luminosity (Fanaroff-Riley class I), and presumably low-excitation, AGN, as a population, have particularly unusual star formation histories. Models in which the AGN activity in higher luminosity, high-excitation radio galaxies is triggered by major mergers would predict a luminosity-dependent effect that is not seen in our data (which only span a limited range in radio luminosity) but which may well be detectable with the full Herschel-ATLAS data set. © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2010 RAS.

Infrared-correlated 31-GHz radio emission from Orion East

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 407:4 (2010) 2223-2229

Authors:

C Dickinson, S Casassus, RD Davies, JR Allison, R Bustos, K Cleary, RJ Davis, ME Jones, TJ Pearson, ACS Readhead, R Reeves, AC Taylor, CT Tibbs, RA Watson

Abstract:

Lynds dark cloud LDN1622 represents one of the best examples of anomalous dust emission, possibly originating from small spinning dust grains. We present Cosmic Background Imager (CBI) 31-GHz data of LDN1621, a diffuse dark cloud to the north of LDN1622 in a region known as Orion East. A broken ring-like structure with diameter ≈20 arcmin of diffuse emission is detected at 31 GHz, at ≈20-30 mJy beam-1 with an angular resolution of ≈5 arcmin. The ring-like structure is highly correlated with far-infrared (FIR) emission at 12-100 μm with correlation coefficients of r ≈ 0.7-0.8, significant at ~10σ. The FIR-correlated emission at 31 GHz therefore appears to be mostly due to radiation associated with dust. Multifrequency data are used to place constraints on other components of emission that could be contributing to the 31-GHz flux. An analysis of the GB6 survey maps at 4.85 GHz yields a 3σ upper limit on free-free emission of 7.2 mJy beam-1 (30 per cent of the observed flux) at the CBI resolution. The bulk of the 31-GHz flux therefore appears to be mostly due to dust radiation. Aperture photometry, at an angular resolution of 13 arcmin and with an aperture of diameter 30 arcmin, allowed the use of IRAS maps and the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe 5-yr W-band map at 93.5 GHz. A single modified blackbody model was fitted to the data to estimate the contribution from thermal dust, which amounts to~10 per cent at 31 GHz. In this model, an excess of 1.52 ± 0.66 Jy (2.3σ) is seen at 31 GHz. Correlations with the IRAS 100 μm gave a coupling coefficient of 18.1 ± 4.4 μK (MJy sr-1)-1, consistent with the values found for LDN1622. © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation. © 2010 RAS.

Obscured star formation at z = 0.84 with HiZELS: The relationship between star formation rate and Hα or ultraviolet dust extinction

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 402:3 (2010) 2017-2030

Authors:

T Garn, D Sobral, PN Best, JE Geach, I Smail, M Cirasuolo, GB Dalton, JS Dunlop, RJ McLure, D Farrah

Abstract:

We compare Hα, ultraviolet (UV) and infrared (IR) indicators of star formation rate (SFR) for a well-defined sample of z = 0.84 emission-line galaxies from the High-. z Emission Line Survey (HiZELS). Using emission-line, optical, IR, radio and X-ray diagnostics, we estimate that 5-11 per cent of Hα emitters at this redshift are active galactic nuclei. We detect 35 per cent of the Hα emitters individually at 24 μm, and stack the locations of star-forming emitters on deep 24-μm Spitzer Space Telescope images in order to calculate the typical SFRs of our Hα-emitting galaxies. These are compared to the observed Hα line fluxes in order to estimate the extinction at z = 0.84, and we find a significant increase in dust extinction for galaxies with higher SFRs. We demonstrate that the relationship between SFR and extinction found in the local Universe is also suitable for our high-redshift galaxies, and attribute the overall increase in the typical dust extinction for z = 0.84 galaxies to an increase in the average SFR, rather than to a change in dust properties at higher redshift. We calculate the UV extinction, and find a similar dependence on SFR to the Hα results, but no evidence for a 2175 Å UV bump in the dust attenuation law for high-redshift star-forming galaxies. By comparing Hα and UV indicators, we calculate the conversion between the dust attenuation of nebular and stellar radiation, γ, and show that γ = 0.50 ± 0.14. The extinction/SFR relationship is shown to be applicable to galaxies with a range of morphologies and bulge-to-disc ratios, to both merging and non-merging galaxies, and to galaxies within high- and low-density environments, implying that it is a fundamental property of star-forming regions. In order to allow future studies to easily correct for a SFR-dependent amount of dust extinction, we present an equation to predict the extinction of a galaxy, based solely on its observed Hα luminosity, and use this to recalculate the Hα luminosity function and SFR density at z = 0.84. © 2009 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2009 RAS.

The ATLAS3D project: A paradigm shift for early-type galaxies

AIP Conference Proceedings 1240 (2010) 335-338

Authors:

E Emsellem, K Alatalo, L Blitz, M Bois, F Bournaud, M Bureau, M Cappellari, RL Davies, TA Davis, PT De Zeeuw, S Khochfar, D Krajnović, H Kuntschner, PY Lablanche, RM McDermid, R Morganti, T Naab, T Oosterloo, M Sarzi, N Scott, P Serra, A Weijmans, LM Young

Abstract:

In this short paper, we present a few preliminary results from the ambitious ATLAS3D project, which intends to probe the first volume-limited sample of early-type galaxies observed via multi-band photometry, integral-field spectroscopy, radio and millimeter observations, and supported by a large library of numerical simulations and models. We more specifically address the existence of two main families of early-type galaxies, the slow and fast rotators. © 2010 American Institute of Physics.

The SAURON project - XV. Modes of star formation in early-type galaxies and the evolution of the red sequence

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 402:4 (2010) 2140-2186

Authors:

KL Shapiro, J Falcón-Barroso, G van de Ven, P Tim de Zeeuw, M Sarzi, R Bacon, A Bolatto, M Cappellari, D Croton, RL Davies, E Emsellem, O Fakhouri, D Krajnović, H Kuntschner, RM McDermid, RF Peletier, RCE van den Bosch, G van der Wolk

Abstract:

We combine SAURON integral field data of a representative sample of local early-type, red sequence galaxies with Spitzer/Infrared Array Camera imaging in order to investigate the presence of trace star formation in these systems. With the Spitzer data, we identify galaxies hosting low-level star formation, as traced by polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon emission, with measured star formation rates that compare well to those estimated from other tracers. This star formation proceeds according to established scaling relations with molecular gas content, in surface density regimes characteristic of disc galaxies and circumnuclear starbursts. We find that star formation in early-type galaxies happens exclusively in fast-rotating systems and occurs in two distinct modes. In the first, star formation is a diffuse process, corresponding to widespread young stellar populations and high molecular gas content. The equal presence of co- and counter-rotating components in these systems strongly implies an external origin for the star-forming gas, and we argue that these star formation events may be the final stages of (mostly minor) mergers that build up the bulges of red sequence lenticulars. In the second mode of star formation, the process is concentrated into well-defined disc or ring morphologies, outside of which the host galaxies exhibit uniformly evolved stellar populations. This implies that these star formation events represent rejuvenations within previously quiescent stellar systems. Evidence for earlier star formation events similar to these in all fast-rotating early-type galaxies suggests that this mode of star formation may be common to all such galaxies, with a duty cycle of roughly 1/10, and likely contributes to the embedded, corotating inner stellar discs ubiquitous in this population. © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2010 RAS.