Bibcode
López-Corredoira, M.; Vazdekis, A.; Gutiérrez, C. M.; Castro-Rodríguez, N.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 600, id.A91, 13 pp.
Advertised on:
4
2017
Journal
Citations
33
Refereed citations
30
Description
Context. A set of 20 extremely red galaxies at 2.5 ≤
zphot. ≤ 3.8 with photometric features of old
passive-evolving galaxies without dust, with stellar masses of
1011M⊙, have colors that could be related to
passive-evolving galaxies with mean ages larger than 1 Gyr. This
suggests they have been formed, on average, when the Universe was very
young (<1 Gyr). Aims: We provide new estimates for the stellar
content of these 20 galaxies, with a deeper analysis for two of them
that includes spectroscopy. Methods: We obtained, with the
GRANTECAN-10.4 m, ultraviolet rest-frame spectra of two galaxies and
analyzed them together with photometric data. The remaining 18 galaxies
are analyzed only with photometry. We fit the data with models of a
single-burst stellar population (SSP), combinations of two SSPs, as well
as with extended star formation. Results: Fits based on one SSP
do not provide consistent results for the blue and red wavelengths.
Moreover, the absence in the spectra of a break at 2 ×
103 Å indicates that a rather young component is
necessary. Using two SSPs we can match the photometric and spectroscopic
data, with the bulk of the stellar population being very old (several
Gyr) and the remaining contribution (<5% of stellar mass fraction)
from a young, likely residual star formation component with age ≲
0.1 Gyr. Exponentially decaying extended star formation (τ) models
improve slightly the fits with respect to the single burst model, but
they are considerably worse than the two SSP based fits, further
supporting the residual star formation scenario. Conclusions: The
fact that one SSP cannot match these early-type galaxies highlights the
limitations for the use of age estimators based on single lines or
breaks, such as the Balmer break used in cosmic chronometers, thus
questioning this approach for cosmological purposes.
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