• Title/Summary/Keyword: starburst galaxies

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DETECTION OF Hα EMISSION FROM z>3.5 GALAXIES WITH AKARI-FUHYU NIR SPECTROSCOPY

  • Sedgwick, Chris;Serjeant, Stephen;Pearson, Chris;Takagi, Toshinobu;Matsuhara, Hideo;Wada, Takehiko;Lee, Hyung Mok;Im, Myungshin;Jeong, Woong-Seob;Oyabu, Shinki;White, Glenn J.
    • Publications of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.27 no.4
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    • pp.357-360
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    • 2012
  • This paper presents $H{\alpha}$ emission line detections for four galaxies at z > 3.5 made with AKARI as part of the FUHYU mission program. These are the highest-redshift $H{\alpha}$ detections to date in star-forming galaxies. AKARI's unique near-infrared spectroscopic capability has made these detections possible. For two of these galaxies, this represents the first evidence of their redshifts and confirms their physical association with a companion radio galaxy. The star formation rates (SFRs) estimated from the $H{\alpha}$ lines under-predict the SFRs estimated from their far-infrared luminosities by a factor of ~ 2 - 3. We have also detected broad $H{\alpha}$ components in the two radio galaxies which indicate the presence of quasars.

A GMOS/IFU Study of Enhanced Star Formation Activity of Jellyfish Galaxies in Massive Galaxy Clusters

  • Lee, Jeong Hwan;Lee, Myung Gyoon;Kang, Jisu;Cho, Brian S.;Mun, Jae Yeon
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.46 no.1
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    • pp.55.1-55.1
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    • 2021
  • Ram-pressure stripping (RPS) is known as a typical mechanism of quenching star formation (SF) of galaxies orbiting in clusters, but it can also boost the SF activity within a short period of time. Jellyfish galaxies, with eye-catching blue tails and knots, are such starburst galaxies undergoing strong RPS in galaxy clusters. Thus, they are very useful targets to understand their SF activity in relation to RPS. We study the SF activity of three jellyfish galaxies in massive clusters at z=0.3-0.4 (MACSJ1752-JFG2, MACSJ0916-JFG1, and A2744-F0083) with Gemini GMOS/IFU and compare our results to those of jellyfish galaxies in low-mass clusters. We obtain total star formation rates (SFRs) of up to 60 Mo/yr and SFRs in the tails of up to 15 Mo/yr, which are much higher than those of jellyfish galaxies in low-mass clusters with the median SFRs of 1.1 Mo/yr in total and 0.03 Mo/yr in tails. In addition, these SFRs are also significantly higher than the SF main sequence of galaxies at the redshifts of the three jellyfish galaxies. This implies that their SF activity is much more enhanced compared to jellyfish galaxies in low-mass clusters due to extreme RPS in massive clusters.

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LYMANα EMITTERS BEYOND REDSHIFT 5: THE DAWN OF GALAXY FORMATION

  • TANIGUCHI YOSHIAKI;SHIOYA YASUHIRO;AJIKI MASARU;FUJITA SHINOBU S.;NAGAO TOHRU;MURAYAMA TAKASHI
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.36 no.3
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    • pp.123-144
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    • 2003
  • The 8m class telescopes in the ground-based optical astronomy together with help from the ultra-sharp eye of the Hubble Space Telescope have enabled us to observe forming galaxies beyond red shift z = 5. In particular, more than twenty Ly$\alpha$-emitting galaxies have already been found at z > 5. These findings provide us with useful hints to investigate how galaxies formed and then evolved in the early universe. Further, detailed analysis of Ly$\alpha$ emission line profiles are useful in exploring the nature of the intergalactic medium because the trailing edge of cosmic reionization could be close to z $\~$ 6 -7, at which forming galaxies have been found recently. We also discuss the importance of superwinds from forming galaxies at high redshift, which has an intimate relationship between galaxies and the intergalactic medium. We then give a review of early cosmic star formation history based on recent progress in searching for Ly$\alpha$-emitting young galaxies beyond red shift 5.

AzTEC Submillimeter Survey of Galaxies

  • Kim, Ki-Hun;Kim, Sung-Eun;AzTEC team, AzTEC team
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.35 no.2
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    • pp.38.1-38.1
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    • 2010
  • We present the results of the survey for submillimeter galaxies in the MS0451 (04h 54m 10.8s, -03d 00m 57.0s) at z = 0.55 and PKS1138-262 (11h 40m 48.25s, -26d 29m 10.1s) at z = 2.16 with the 1.1mm bolometer array AzTEC at the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. The samples were centered on a prominent large-scale structure overdensity. Submillimeter galaxies seem to be starburst galaxies at high redshift ($z\;\geq\;1$) with high starformation rates ($\sim1000M\odot\;yr^{-1}$) or active galactic nuclei (AGN). We have obtained AzTEC images using the AzTEC data reduction pipeline with the IDL language. Through a bayes' theorem, we determined the extragalaxy catalogue, containing the false-detection rate, completeness, flux deboosting correction, and the source positional uncertainty in this region. We compared the catalogue with HST, DSS, 2MASS observations.

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WFC3 study on the early-type galaxy NGC4150

  • Jeong, Hyun-Jin;Yi, Suk-Young K.;Crockett, R. Mark;Kaviraj, Sugata
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.35 no.2
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    • pp.28.1-28.1
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    • 2010
  • Recent surveys have shown that many early-type galaxies have signatures of ongoing or recent star formation (RSF). These RSF galaxies show blue integrated UV-optical colours that set them aside in the NUV integrated colour-magnitude relation. Among them, NGC 4150 has been observed using the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) on board the Hubble Space Telescope to inspect the galaxy with higher spatial resolution. In the WFC3 data, the galaxy reveals ubiquitous near-UV emission and remarkable dusty substructure. Our analysis shows this galaxy to lie in the near-UV green valley, and its pixel-by-pixel photometry exhibits a narrow range of UV-optical colours that are similar to those of nearby E+A (post-starburst) galaxies, and lie between those of M83 (an actively star-forming spiral) and the local quiescent early-type galaxy population. This work reaffirms our hypothesis that minor mergers play a significant role in the evolution of early-type galaxies at late epochs.

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Exploit the Unexploited : the Potential of the PAH 3.3mm emission feature as a star formation rate proxy and beyond

  • Kim, Ji-Hoon;Im, Myung-Shim;Lee, Hyung-Mok;Lee, Myung-Gyoon;AMUSES team, AMUSES team
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.35 no.2
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    • pp.40.2-40.2
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    • 2010
  • Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) features have emerged as one of the most important infrared (IR) features since these PAH features dominate mid-IR spectra of galaxies and are ubiquitous within galactic and extragalactic objects. These PAH features have the potentials to become reliable star formation rate (SFR) proxies and diagnostics of physical conditions of interstellar medium, such as ionization states of dust grains and grain sizes. While constructing an unbiased library of 44 sample galaxies selected from 5MUSES sample, AKARI mJY Unbiased Survey of Extragalactic Sources in 5MUSES (AMUSES) intends to measure and to calibrate the PAH 3.3 mm emission feature which has not been studied extensively due to its weak strength and dearth of capable instruments. Out of 20 target galaxies, we detected the 3.3mm feature from eight galaxies and measured their line strengths, line widths and line ratios with other PAH emission features. Sample galaxies whose spectral energy distributions (SEDs) are classified as starburst-type have clearly stronger 3.3mm emission features than ones with AGN-type SEDs. We also found that there is a correlation between the PAH 3.3mm luminosity and total IR luminosity within our sample galaxies, albeit a large scatter. We further discuss implications of our results.

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STUDY OF SPECTRAL ENERGY DISTRIBUTION OF GALAXIES WITH PRINCIPAL COMPONENT ANALYSIS

  • Kochi, Chihiro;Nakagawa, Takao;Isobe, Naoki;Shirahata, Mai;Yano, Kenichi;Baba, Shunsuke
    • Publications of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.32 no.1
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    • pp.209-211
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    • 2017
  • We performed Principle Component Analysis (PCA) over 264 galaxies in the IRAS Revised Bright Galaxy Sample (Sanders et al., 2003) using 12, 25, 60 and $100{\mu}m$ flux data observed by IRAS and 9, 18, 65, 90 and $140{\mu}m$ flux data observed by AKARI. We found that (i)the first principle component was largely contributed by infrared to visible flux ratio, (ii)the second principal component was largely contributed by the flux ratio between IRAS and AKARI, (iii)the third principle component was largely contributed by infrared colors.

Probing the Starburst-AGN Connection in Type I AGN based on the 3.3 micron PAH lines

  • Woo, Jong-Hak;Kim, Ji-Hoon;Imanishi, Masatoshi
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.36 no.2
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    • pp.74.1-74.1
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    • 2011
  • To probe the connection between starburst and AGN activity, we investigate the relation between the 3.3 micron~PAH emission and AGN properties based on the new AKARI observations and the data collected from the literature. Using a sample of low-z Type I AGN, we measure the global 3.3 micron PAH luminosity from the AKARI slit-less spectroscopy. The 3.3 ${\backslash}$micron~PAH emissions are detected for 7 out of 26 target galaxies, but we find no strong correlation between the 3.3 ${\backslash}$micron~PAH emission and AGN luminosity, suggesting that global star formation may not be tightlyrelated with AGN activity. In contrast the to global star formation, the nuclear 3.3 micron~PAH emission luminosity, which are measured from ground-based long slit spectroscopy with a narrow slit, correlates with AGN luminosity. These results imply that starburst and AGN activity are directly connected at the nuclear region.

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EVOLUTION OF LUMINOUS INFRARED GALAXIES REVEALED BY NEAR-INFRARED MULTI-BAND IMAGING OF THEIR HOSTS

  • Oi, Nagisa;Imanishi, Masatoshi
    • Publications of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.27 no.4
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    • pp.301-303
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    • 2012
  • We present the result of our near infrared J- (${\lambda}=1.25{\mu}m$), H- (${\lambda}=1.63{\mu}m$), and $K_s$-band (${\lambda}=2.14{\mu}m$) imaging of ultraluminous ($L_{IR}$ > $10^{12}L_{\odot}$) and luminous ($L_{IR}=10^{11-12}L_{\odot}$) infrared galaxies (ULIRGs and LIRGs), to investigate their relationship through properties of their host galaxies. We find that (1) for single-nucleus ULIRGs and LIRGs, their spheroidal host galaxies have similar properties, but ULIRGs display a substantially higher level of nuclear activity than LIRGs, suggesting that their infrared luminosity difference comes primarily from the different level of current nuclear activity. We infer that LIRGs and ULIRGs have similar progenitor galaxies, follow similar evolutionary processes, and may evolve into optically-selected QSOs. (2) Largely-separated multiple-nuclei ULIRGs have significantly brighter host galaxies than single-nucleus ULIRGs and LIRGs in $K_s$-band, indicating that multiple-nuclei ULIRGs have a bias towards mergers of intrinsically large progenitor galaxies, in order to produce high infrared luminosity ($L_{IR}$ > $10^{12}L_{\odot}$) even at the early merging stage. (3) We derive dust extinction of host galaxies of ULIRGs and LIRGs to be $A_V$ ~ 14 mag in the optical or equivalently $A_K$ ~ 0.8 mag in the near-infrared $K_s$-band, based on the comparison of host galaxy's luminosities in the J-, H-, and $K_s$-bands.

A study AGN activity on environmental dependence in the SDSS late-type galaxies

  • Kim, Minbae;Choi, Yun-Yung;Kim, Sungsoo S.
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.43 no.1
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    • pp.57.4-58
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    • 2018
  • We explore the role of various environments in triggering star formation (SF) and narrow-line active galactic nucleus (AGN) in SDSS spiral galaxies and the SF-AGN connection, using a volume-limited sample with $M_r$ < -19.5 and 0.02 < z < 0.055 selected from the SDSS Release 7. To avoid the dependency of AGN activity on bulge mass, the central velocity dispersion of the sample galaxies is limited to have a narrow range of $130{\leq}{\sigma}{\leq}200km\;s^{-1}$. We note that in gas sufficient galaxies, AGN feeding lags behind starburst, whereas as the gas exhausts, the SF slows down and AGN seems to even prevent the SF, and thus divide the high-${\sigma}$ sample into two subsamples according to their cold gas content at central region traced by fiber star formation rate, $SFR_{fib}$. We find that a high density (cluster) environment causes a significant increase in AGN activity as well as gas depletion in host galaxies. However, the finding is only noticeable in the high-${\sigma}$ and low $SFR_{fib}$ sample. It seems that a galaxy interaction with the nearest neighbor directly affects the SF of the central region. However, it is unclear whether it directly affects AGN activity.

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