Aviso: para depositar documentos, por favor, inicia sesión e identifícate con tu cuenta de correo institucional de la UCM con el botón MI CUENTA UCM. No emplees la opción AUTENTICACIÓN CON CONTRASEÑA
 

Luminous compact blue galaxies up to z ~ 1 in the Hubble space telescope ultra deep field. I. Small galaxies or blue centers of massive disks?

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Full text at PDC

Publication date

2006

Advisors (or tutors)

Editors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

American Astronomical Society
Citations
Google Scholar

Citation

Abstract

We analyze 26 luminous compact blue galaxies (LCBGs) in the Hubble Space Telescope ACS Ultra Deep Field (UDF) at z ~ 0.2-1.3, to determine whether these truly are small galaxies or, rather, bright central starbursts within existing or forming large disk galaxies. Surface brightness profiles from UDF images reach fainter than rest-frame 26.5 B mag arcsec^-2 even for compact objects at z ~ 1. Most LCBGs show a smaller, brighter component that is likely star-forming, and an extended, roughly exponential component with colors suggesting stellar ages from ≳100 Myr to a few gigayears. Scale lengths of the extended components are mostly ≲2 kpc, more than 1.5-2 times smaller than those of nearby large disk galaxies like the Milky Way. Larger, very low surface brightness disks can be excluded down to faint rest-frame surface brightnesses (≳26 B mag arcsec^-2). However, one or two of the LCBGs are large, disklike galaxies that meet LCBG selection criteria because of a bright central nucleus, possibly a forming bulge. These results indicate that ≳90% of high-z LCBGs are small galaxies that will evolve into small disk galaxies, or low-mass spheroidal or irregular galaxies in the local universe, assuming passive evolution and no significant disk growth. The data do not reveal signs of disk formation around small, H II galaxy-like LCBGs, nor do they suggest a simple inside-out growth scenario for larger LCBGs with a disklike morphology. Irregular blue emission in distant LCBGs is relatively extended, suggesting that nebular emission lines from star-forming regions sample a major fraction of an LCBG's velocity field.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Description

© 2006. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. We wish to thank Professor M. Bershady for the WIYN R-band image of NGC 7673. Research by D. C. K. and K. G. N. was partly funded by NSF grants AST 00-71198 and AST 05-07483 and HST grants GO-09126.02-A and AR- 10321.02-A. We thank the referees for their valuable comments on this Letter, and B. Holden for helpful advice on ACS PSF peculiarities.

Unesco subjects

Keywords

Collections