* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download from z=0 to z=1
Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam wikipedia , lookup
History of Solar System formation and evolution hypotheses wikipedia , lookup
Rare Earth hypothesis wikipedia , lookup
International Ultraviolet Explorer wikipedia , lookup
Aquarius (constellation) wikipedia , lookup
Physical cosmology wikipedia , lookup
Outer space wikipedia , lookup
Astrophysical X-ray source wikipedia , lookup
Dark matter wikipedia , lookup
Gamma-ray burst wikipedia , lookup
Space Interferometry Mission wikipedia , lookup
Malmquist bias wikipedia , lookup
Star formation wikipedia , lookup
High-velocity cloud wikipedia , lookup
Observational astronomy wikipedia , lookup
Cosmic distance ladder wikipedia , lookup
Timeline of astronomy wikipedia , lookup
Corvus (constellation) wikipedia , lookup
Modified Newtonian dynamics wikipedia , lookup
Structure formation wikipedia , lookup
Lambda-CDM model wikipedia , lookup
Observable universe wikipedia , lookup
Future of an expanding universe wikipedia , lookup
Bright Side versus Dark Side of Star Formation: UV and IR Views C. Kevin Xu, IPAC, Caltech Veronique Buat, LAM, Marseille Collaborators: J. Iglesias-Paramo, T. Tekeuchi, M. Rowan-Robinson, GALEX team, SWIRE team Question: Do UV and IR surveys see the two sides of SF of the same population, or SF of two different populations? 1 population: Total SFR 2 populations: Total SFR UV surveys IR surveys Talk plan • Local UV and IR galaxies: how much do they overlap? • comparisons of IR/UV ratio, L_tot, Hubble type, mass, clustering • UV LF of IR galaxies and IR LF of UV galaxies • IR-quiet UV galaxies (low metallicity dwarfs) • UVLGs and ULIRGs • LBGs and SCUBA galaxies: UV and IR galaxies at z ~ 3 • UV and IR galaxies at intermediate redshifts (0.5 < z < 0.7) --- early results from a GALEX/SWIRE comparison study • evolution of attenuation in UV and IR selected galaxies • evolution of stellar mass in UV and IR selected galaxies • Summary FIR-UV bivariate luminosity function of local UV+FIR galaxies Martin et al. 2005, ApJL, GALEX Edition • Saturation of L_UV at ~ 2 x10^10 L_sun • bi-modality (of L_IR/L_UV ratio) •Strong dependence of L_IR/L_UV (best A_FUV indicator) on L_tot L_tot LF of local UV+IR galaxies Martin et al. 2005, ApJL, GALEX Edition L_tot=L_FUV+L_60 Solid line -log-normal fit Blue -- UV selected (GALEX src) Red -- IR selected (IRAS src) UV galaxies are absent in high L_tot (>10^11) end! Local samples: IR selected versus UV selected (details in J. Iglesias’ talk) IR selected (126): f60 > 0.6 Jy UV selected (61): NUV < 16 mag UV: low L_60/L_FUV IR: high L_60/L_FUV L_IR/L_FUV distributions of IR and UV selected galaxies • Very different. • The overlap between the two samples is ~ 30%. •The mean ratio of IR galaxies is ~ 10 times higher than that of UV galaxies! Mean attenuations from the Fdust/F(UV) ratio NUV selected sample <A(NUV)>=0.8+/-0.3 mag <A(FUV)>=1.1+/-0.3 mag FIR selected sample <A(NUV)>=2.1+/-1.0 mag <A(FUV)>=2.9+/-1.0 mag NUV (Buat et al. 2005, ApJL, GALEX edition) FUV Confirm pre-GALEX results L_IR/L_FUV v.s. L_tot (`Adelberger plot’) Two populations are separated: IR: high L_tot, high L_IR/L_UV ratio UV: low L_tot, low L_IR/L_UV ratio Explanation: Consequence of selection effect on L_IR/L_UV ratio, and the strong correlation between the ratio and L_tot. L_tot LFs of local UV and IR galaxies Using L_IR/L_UV ratio to convert to L_tot •The L_tot of UV galaxies has a sharp cutoff at ~ 10^11 L_sun Comparison of Hubble type distributions of local UV and IR galaxies Good overlap in the middle: both populations peak around ~ Sbc IR galaxies: • excess of interacting galaxies (~ 30%) • more early types (S0/Sa/Sb) UV galaxies: • more late types (Sc/Sd/Ir/CB ~ 50%) Comparison of correlation lengths UV (FOCA sources): r_0=3.2 (+0.8, -2.3) h-1 Mpc (Heinis et al. 2004) (FOCA result) IRAS galaxies IR (IRAS sources): r_0=3.9+-1.8 h-1 Mpc (Strauss et al. 1992) UV galaxies seem to be less clustered than IR galaxies (confirmed by preliminary GALEX results) (Heinis et al. 2004 A&A 424, L9) Comparisons of stellar mass distributions Mstars: estimated from L_K (Cole et al. 2001 calibration, H_0= 70 km s-1 Mpc-1). `Survival Tech.’ used. Good overlap between two populations: medians differ < 2, both are sub-M*. Though: IR: slightly tilted for more massive end UV: more galaxies with low mass (<10^10 L_sun). L_tot v.s. mass L_IR/L_UV v.s. mass • UV galaxies of lowest mass (< 10^10) have lowest L_tot and IR/UV • most massive IR galaxies (>10^12) are not galaxies with highest L_tot • brightest IR galaxies (~ ULIRGs) have mass ~ M* • for given mass, UV galaxies have lower L_tot and IR/UV ratio than IR galaxies 60m LF of UV galaxies FUV LF of IR galaxies L • UV galaxies substantially underrepresent galaxies of L_IR > 10^11 L_sun (LIGs). • ULIRGs (L_IR > 10^12) are completely absent in UV sample. • IR galaxies can fully account for all UV galaxies of L_UV > 10^9 (L* ~ 4 10^9). • some fainter UV galaxies (L_UV < 10^9) could be missing in IR sample. IR-quiet UV galaxies I Zw 18: prototype metallicity = 1/50 solar (lowest known) low mass (star+gas): ~ 2 10^8 M_sun distance=15 Mpc L(FUV)=2.5 10^8 not detected in FIR: L_dust/L_FUV < 0.25 (from NED, Hubble Heritage Gallery image) SBS0335-052 another prototype IRquiet UV galaxy: metallicity = 1/35 solar (2nd lowest) undetected by IRAS, but detected by both ISO and Spitzer: very different IR SED from normal galaxies M82 mass (star+gas) ~ 2 10^9 M_sun distance=58.3 Mpc L(FUV) ~ 10^9 L_dust/L_FUV ~ 0.4 (Houck et al. 2004, ApJS, Spitzer edition) Characteristics of IR quiet UV galaxies dwarf galaxies of low metallicity < ~1/10 solar IR-quiet mass: a few 10^8 -- 10^9 UV lum: a few 10^8 -- 10^9 (~ 10 times < L* of FUV, not z~0 LBG) L_dust/L_FUV ~0.3 (~ a few % of UV galaxies) IR-quiet UV luminous galaxies (UVLG): z~0 LBGs (Heckman et al 05, ApJL GALEX edition) FUV Surface Brightness vs. Stellar Mass (kpc) (L๏ kpc-2) (L๏/kpc2) FUV Luminosity vs. Half-light Radius Compact Large (L๏) (M๏) •Nearby galaxies brighter than L_UV=2 1010 L(sun) with z<0.3 •10-5 galaxy/Mpc3 (~100 times less dense than LBGs) Population Comparison Large UVLGs, Compact UVLGs, LBGs (Slide courtesy of Chris Martin) Log LUV Log rUV 12 1.5 12 11 1 10 9 M* AUV Log b [O/H] 3 2 9 11 2 1 8.5 0.5 10 1 0 8 9 9 0 -1 7.5 A_FUV vs. SFR plot of UVLGs: comparison with ULIRGs and others • UVLGs occupy the bright end of UV population, but still they have L_tot cutoff at ~ 2 10^11. • Their attenuation (IR/UV ratio) spans the same range as that of major UV population. • None of UVLGs is as bright as ULIRGs (>10^12). /LIRGs LBGs and SCUBA galaxies: UVLGs and ULIRGs at z~3 •Blue dots: LBG galaxies. L_dust/L_1600 estimated using UV slope (very uncertain). •Red squares: SCUBA galaxies (radio preselected) studied in Chapman et al. 2004. • The overlap between the two populations is small: only 1 LBG detected by SCUBA (Chapman et al. 2000). Only 1 red square (SCUBA) has IR/UV < 100. (Adelberger & Steidel 2001) SCUBA galaxies: HST ACS images overlaid by radio contours Extended UV emission outside the radio/FIR emission region: unobscured UV light. 3” (Chapman et al. 2004, ApJ 611, 732) Rest frame V-band luminosity and mass SCUBA galaxies: stellar mass (estimated from rest V-band lum.) plus gas mass ~ 5 10^10 M_sun, (Spitzer measurements of rest frame K may be ~2 times higher). A few times (~1.5 mag) more massive than LBGs (green curve). LBG (Shapley et al 2001) (Smail et al. 2004, ApJ 616, 71) Corrlations lengths of SCUBA galaxies and LBGs SCUBA galaxies: r_0=6.9+-2.1 h-1 Mpc Significantly larger than that of LBGs (~ 3 -- 4 h-1 Mpc) (Blain et al. 2004, ApJ 611, 725) SCUBA LBGs UV and IR galaxies at intermediate redshifts (z ~ 0.6) --- early results of a GALEX/SWIRE comparison study • Why z=0.6? • close to the peak of cosmic SF suggested by some ISO and SDSS fossil studies • for z ~ 1 or larger , NUV is affected by rest frame Ly emission/absorption (K-correction for L_UV very uncertain) • at z~0.6: • NUV ( 2300A) ---> rest frame FUV (1500A) • MIPS 24m ---> rest frame 15m (L_IR indicator) • IRAC 3.6m ---> rest frame K band (stellar mass indicator) Field: GALEX ELAISE-N1_00 (~ 1 deg2) (inside SWIRE ELAISE-N1 ~ 9 deg2) restrictions: - within 1 deg circle of GALEX field - exclude the SWIRE gap Final area: 0.6 deg2 NUV sources: 8995 F3.6 sources: 19100 F24 sources: 2080 Matches f24/NUV: 1086 (52% of f24 srcs, 12% of NUV srcs) ELAIS-N1_00 NUV NUV ELAIS-N1, 24μ m Sample selection of 0.5<z<0.7 galaxies • redshifts: photo-z catalog of ELAIS-N1 (ugriz + IRAC, by Rowan-Robinson) • GALEX sources: 1124 (NUV <~ 24) • MIPS sources: 396 (F24 ~ > 0.2mJy) • NUV/F24 matches: F24 ~ 0.2mJy, z~0.6 --> L_dust ~ 10^11 L_sun 159 ( 40% of F24 NUV ~ 24, z~0.6 --> L_FUV~ 10^9.5 L_sun src, but only 14% of NUV src!!). Mean f24 flux of z=0.6 UV sources from stacking 9.4 < log(L_FUV) < 9.8: 212 sources, <f24>=39 Jy Stacked f24 image of UV sources in bin 9.4 < log(L_FUV) < 9.8 9.8 < log(L_FUV) < 10.2: 422 sources, <f24>=70 Jy 10.2 < log(L_FUV) < 10.5: 95 sources, <f24>=107 Jy 10.5 < log(L_FUV) < 10.8: 17 sources, <f24>=219 Jy (212 sources) L_dust of z=0.6 UV galaxies: comparison with z=0 couterparts <f24> --> < L(15m)> in rest frame •L_dust = 11.1 x L(15m) (Chary & Elbaz 2001, Elbaz et al. 2002) •Error bar estimated from fraction of F24 > 0.2mJy In the 2 fainter L_UV bins, the means of z=0.6 and z=0 galaxies are close to each other, both are a factor of few below the SWIRE detection limit. Comparison of mean L_dust/L_FUV ratios of z=0.6 and z=0 UV galaxies • for galaxies of L_FUV < 10^10.2 L_sun, the IR/UV ratio does not show any evolution from z=0 to z=0.6. • for brighter galaxies of L_FUV > 10^10.2 L_sun, there seems to be a negative evolution in the sense that z=0.6 galaxies have lower ratios. However, is the extrapolation from L(15m) to L_dust reliable??? SEDs of the 160um source at z=0.6 Need to check the SEDs of z=0.6 sources which are also detected in MIPS 70m band and 160m band. Only 1 z=0.6 source in 24m sample (395 sources) is also detected in both 70m and 160m band. It is a ULIRG with an SED close to that Arp220! (M82 SED is closer to Elbaz calib.) F24 image of the f160 source at z=0.6 The green circle: 160m beam (40”) An isolated, clean source (no confusion). Other 4 z=0.6 sources are detected in 70m, but not in 160m: 2 have log(L_dust) < 12 and M82 like SEDs. ~ 2 have log(L_dust) >12 ~ and SEDs closer to Arp220. Conclusion: SEDs span a wide range. SEDs of 70m sources at z=0.6 effect of different calibrations When Arp220 SED is used in converting L(15m) to L_dust, the mean IR/UV ratio of z=0.6 UV galaxies in 2 bright bins (log(L_FUV)>10.2) is in good agreement with that of z=0 galaxies. Consistent with no evolution in the ratio! L_dust/L_FUV ratio of z=0.6 IR galaxies • Elbaz calibration • mean ratios derived from both stacking and ‘survival tech.’ (consistent with each other). • mean ratios of z=0.6 galaxies in all lum. bins are consistent with those of z=0 galaxies in the same bins. Effect of Arp220 calibration • The arp220 calib. shifts the points along the IR/UV vs. L_dust correlation line, so does not change the result that the IR/UV ratio for given L_dust does not have any significant evolution. Stellar mass of given L_FUV: comparison of z=0.6 and z=0 UV galaxies • Stellar mass: estimated from f3.6 (rest frame K). • SWIRE sensitivity limit of 3.6 m band (the green line). • The stellar mass of z=0.6 galaxies of given L_FUV is about ~2 times less than that of their z=0 counterparts. blue squares: z=0 pink points: z=0.6 f3.6=3.7Jy Stellar mass v.s. L_dust: comparison of z=0.6 and z=0 IR galaxies No evidence for evolution in stellar mass of IR selected galaxies. red points: z=0.6 Evolution seen in IR and in UV: from z=0 to z=1 (dust) (FUV) (dust)/ (L0 Mpc-3) (L0 Mpc-3) (FUV) 0.06 6 107 1.8 107 3.3 z A(FUV) (mag) 1.2 0.5 30 107 4.1 107 7.4 1.9 0.7 50 107 7.7 107 6.5 1.8 1 96 107 6.9 107 13.9 2.1 • (dust): ~ (1+z)4, Spitzer results of Le Floch et al. (2005). • (FUV): Schiminovich et al. 2005 (ApJL, GALEX Edition). • Both IR and UV have luminosity evolution --> at high z galaxies on average are more luminous, therefore with higher attenuation. Summary 1. By selection, UV galaxies and IR galaxies have very different characteristic IR/UV ratios (the means differ by a factor of 10). 2. The morphological and stellar mass distributions of the two populations have good overlaps (> 70%). IR galaxies tend to be more massive and earlier types, with an excess of interacting galaxies, and UV galaxies to be less massive and later types. 3. UV galaxies are less clustered than IR galaxies. 4. Galaxies with the highest SFR (>100 M ๏ /yr, Ltot > 1012 L ๏), are missed in the UV samples. 5. A population of low metallicity (< 1/10 solar), low mass (<10^9 M ) dwarf UV galaxies (prototype I Zw 18) are `IR quiet’, with the ๏ IR/UV ratio ~ 0.3 or less. They occupy only a few percent of a UV selected sample. Summary (continue) 5. The z~0 counterparts of LBGs are a population of compact luminous UV galaxies (UVLG). In terms of Ltot (SFR), UVLGs are more than 10 times fainter than ULIRGs. 6. LBGs and SCUBA galaxies (UV and IR selected galaxies at z~3) do not overlap with each other very much. SCUBA galaxies have significantly higher SFR, higher attenuation, higher stellar mass, and higher correlation length than LBGs. 7. At intermediate redshifts of z~0.6, UV selected galaxies show moderate evolution in stellar mass in the sense that for a given luminosity, galaxies at z=0.6 have stellar mass ~2 times less than their z=0 counterparts. No evidence for any evolution in the IR/UV ratio (attenuation) for UV galaxies. For IR (24m) selected galaxies at z~0.6, no evidence is found for evolution of either the stellar mass or the IR/UV ratio for given LIR. 8. Both IR and UV evolve significantly from z=0 to z=1, and the ratio IR/UV increases by ~ 4. This is consistent with the scenario that high z galaxies are more luminous therefore with higher attenuation. Star formation history measured in diff. wavebands 1) They have the same trend (rising from z=0 to z ~1, then becoming relatively flat). 2) IR (ISO, IRAS, SCUBA) and rest frame UV (blue symbols and yellow shade) measurements agree with each other within a factor of ~2!! Schiminovich et al. 2005 I Zw 18 does have dust: Balmer decrement (Hb/H) study (Cannon et la. 2001) found dust in regions delineated by the boxes in the H image, covering only parts of the bubble-like star formation regions: blow-away of dust? HST H image (Cannon et al. 2002, ApJ. 595, 931)