Bibcode
Sánchez-Janssen, R.; Amorín, R.; García-Vargas, M.; Gomes, J. M.; Huertas-Company, M.; Jiménez-Esteban, F.; Mollá, M.; Papaderos, P.; Pérez-Montero, E.; Rodrigo, C.; Sánchez-Almeida, J.; Solano, E.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 554, id.A20, 13 pp.
Advertised on:
6
2013
Journal
Citations
12
Refereed citations
12
Description
Context. Even though they are by far the most abundant of all galaxy
types, the detailed properties of dwarf galaxies are still only poorly
characterised - especially because of the observational challenge that
their intrinsic faintness and weak clustering properties represent. Aims: AVOCADO aims at establishing firm conclusions on the formation
and evolution of dwarf galaxies by constructing and analysing a
homogeneous, multiwavelength dataset for a statistically significant
sample of approximately 6500 nearby dwarfs (Mi - 5 log
h100 > - 18 mag). The sample is selected to lie within the
20 < D < 60 h100-1 Mpc volume covered by the
SDSS-DR7 footprint, and is thus volume-limited for Mi - 5 log
h100 < -16 mag dwarfs - but includes ≈1500 fainter
systems. We will investigate the roles of mass and environment in
determining the current properties of the different dwarf morphological
types - including their structure, their star formation activity, their
chemical enrichment history, and a breakdown of their stellar, dust, and
gas content. Methods: We present the sample selection criteria
and describe the suite of analysis tools, some of them developed in the
framework of the Virtual Observatory. We use optical spectra and
UV-to-NIR imaging of the dwarf sample to derive star formation rates,
stellar masses, ages, and metallicities - which are supplemented with
structural parameters that are used to classify them morphologically.
This unique dataset, coupled with a detailed characterisation of each
dwarf's environment, allows for a fully comprehensive investigation of
their origins and enables us to track the (potential) evolutionary paths
between the different dwarf types. Results: We characterise the
local environment of all dwarfs in our sample, paying special attention
to trends with current star formation activity. We find that virtually
all quiescent dwarfs are located in the vicinity (projected distances
≲ 1.5 h100-1 Mpc) of ≳
L∗ companions, consistent with recent results. While
star-forming dwarfs are preferentially found at separations of the order
of 1 h100-1 Mpc, there appears to be a tail
towards low separations (≲ 100 h100-1 kpc) in
the distribution of projected distances. We speculate that, modulo
projection effects, this probably represents a genuine population of
late-type dwarfs caught upon first infall about their host and before
environmental quenching has fully operated. In this context, these
results suggest that internal mechanisms - such as gas exhaustion via
star formation or feedback effects - are not sufficient to completely
cease the star formation activity in dwarf galaxies, and that becoming
the satellite of a massive central galaxy appears to be a necessary
condition to create a quiescent dwarf.
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Starbursts in Galaxies GEFE
Starsbursts play a key role in the cosmic evolution of galaxies, and thus in the star formation (SF) history of the universe, the production of metals, and the feedback coupling galaxies with the cosmic web. Extreme SF conditions prevail early on during the formation of the first stars and galaxies, therefore, the starburst phenomenon constitutes a
Casiana
Muñoz Tuñón