Bibcode
Rodríguez Zaurín, J.; Tadhunter, C. N.; González Delgado, R. M.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 384, Issue 3, pp. 875-885.
Advertised on:
3
2008
Citations
22
Refereed citations
19
Description
We present long-slit, optical spectra of the merging system Arp220,
obtained using the William Herschel Telescope (WHT) on La Palma. These
data were taken as a part of a large study of ultraluminous infrared
galaxies (ULIRGs) with the aim of investigating the evolution and star
formation histories of such objects. Spectral synthesis modelling has
been used to estimate the ages of the stellar populations found in the
diffuse light sampled by the spectra. As the closest ULIRG, it proved
possible to perform a detailed study of the stellar populations over the
entire body of the object. The data show a remarkable uniformity in the
stellar populations across the full 65 arcsec covered by our slit
positions, sampling the measurable extent of the galaxy. The results are
consistent with a dominant intermediate-age stellar population (ISP)
with age 0.5 <= tISP <= 0.9 Gyr that is present at all
locations, with varying contributions from a young (<=0.1 Gyr)
stellar population (YSP) component. However, it is notable that while
the flux contribution of the YSP component in the extended regions is
relatively small (<=40 per cent), adequate fits in the nuclear region
are only found for combinations with a significant contribution of a YSP
component (22-63 per cent). Moreover, while a low intrinsic reddening
(E(B - V) <~ 0.3) is found for the ISPs in the extended regions,
intrinsic reddening values as high as E(B - V) ~ 1.0 are required in the
galactic centre. This clearly reflects the presence of a reddening
gradient, with higher concentrations of gas and dust towards the nuclear
regions, coinciding with dust lanes in the Hubble Space Telescope
images. Overall, our results are consistent with models that predict an
epoch of enhanced star formation coinciding with the first pass of the
merging nuclei (represented by the ISP), with a further episode of star
formation occurring as the nuclei finally merge together (represented by
the YSP and ULIRG).