Bibcode
Rodríguez Zaurín, J.; Tadhunter, C. N.; González Delgado, R. M.
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 403, Issue 3, pp. 1317-1330.
Fecha de publicación:
4
2010
Número de citas
43
Número de citas referidas
42
Descripción
This is the second of two papers presenting a detailed long-slit
spectroscopic study of the stellar populations in a sample of 36
ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs). In the previous paper, we
presented the sample, the data and the spectral synthesis modelling. In
this paper, we carry out a more detailed analysis of the modelling
results, with the aim of investigating the general properties of the
stellar populations (i.e. age, reddening and percentage contribution)
and the evolution of the host galaxies, comparing the results with other
studies of ULIRGs and star-forming galaxies in the high-z Universe. The
characteristic age of the young stellar populations (YSPs) is <=100
Myr in the nuclei of the overwhelming majority of galaxies, consistent
with the characteristic time-scale of the major burst of star formation
(SF) associated with the final stages of major galaxy mergers. However,
the modelling results clearly reveal that the SF histories of ULIRGs are
complex, with at least two epochs of SF activity. Overall, these results
are consistent with models that predict an epoch of enhanced SF
coinciding with the first peri-centre passage of the merging nuclei,
along with a further, more intense, episode of SF occurring as the
nuclei finally merge together. It is also found that, although YSPs make
a major contribution to the optical emission in most of the extended and
nuclear apertures examined, they tend to be younger and more reddened in
the nuclear regions of the galaxies. This is in good agreement with the
merger simulations, which predict that the bulk of the SF activity in
the final stages of mergers will occur in the nuclear regions of the
merging galaxies. In addition, our results show that ULIRGs have total
stellar masses that are similar to, or smaller than, the break of the
galaxy mass function (i.e. ULIRGs are sub-m* or ~
m* systems), and that the YSPs detected at optical
wavelengths dominate the stellar mass contents of the galaxies. Finally,
we find no significant differences between the ages of the YSP in ULIRGs
with and without optically detected Seyfert nuclei, nor between those
with warm and cool mid- to far-IR colours. While these results do not
entirely rule out the idea that cool ULIRGs with HII/LINER spectra
evolve into warm ULIRGs with Seyfert-like spectra, it is clear that the
active galactic nucleus (AGN) activity in local Seyfert-like ULIRGs has
not been triggered for a substantial period (>=100 Myr) after the
major merger-induced starbursts in the nuclear regions.