Open Access
The L - σ Relation for Massive Bursts of Star Formation and its Use for Precision Cosmology
Roberto Terlevich,R. Chávez,Elena Terlevich,F. Bresolin,Jorge Melnick,Manolis Plionis,Spyros Basilakos +6 more
- 01 Sep 2014
pp 197-203
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TL;DR: In this paper, the validity of the emission line luminosity vs. ionised gas velocity dispersion correlation for HII galaxies (HIIGx), and its potential as an accurate distance estimator are assessed.
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Abstract: The validity of the emission line luminosity vs. ionised gas velocity dispersion ($L - \sigma$) correlation for HII galaxies (HIIGx), and its potential as an accurate distance estimator are assessed. For a sample of 128 local ($0.02\lesssim z\lesssim 0.2$) compact HIIGx with high equivalent widths of their Balmer emission lines we obtained ionised gas velocity dispersion from high S/N high-dispersion spectroscopy (Subaru-HDS and ESO VLT-UVES) and integrated H$\beta$ fluxes from low dispersion wide aperture spectrophotometry. We find that the $L - \sigma$ relation is strong and stable against restrictions in the sample (mostly based on the emission line profiles). The `gaussianity' of the profile is important for reducing the rms uncertainty of the distance indicator, but at the expense of substantially reducing the sample. By fitting other physical parameters into the correlation we are able to significantly decrease the scatter without reducing the sample. The size of the starforming region is an important second parameter, while adding the emission line equivalent width or the continuum colour and metallicity, produces the solution with the smallest rms scatter=$\delta \log L(\mathrm{H}\beta) = 0.233$. The derived coefficients in the best $L - \sigma$ relation are very close to what is expected from virialized ionising clusters, while the derived sum of the stellar and ionised gas masses are similar to the dynamical mass estimated using the HST corrected Petrosian radius. These results are compatible with gravity being the main mechanism causing the broadening of the emission lines in these very young and massive clusters. The derived masses range from about 2 $\times10^6$ $\mathrm{M}_{\odot}$ to $10^9$ $\mathrm{M}_{\odot}$ and their `corrected' Petrosian radius, from a few tens to a few hundred parsecs.
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Determining the range of validity of quasar X-ray and UV flux measurements for constraining cosmological model parameters
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Extremely Metal-poor Representatives Explored by the Subaru Survey (EMPRESS). I. A Successful Machine-learning Selection of Metal-poor Galaxies and the Discovery of a Galaxy with M* 6 M ⊙ and 0.016 Z ⊙
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Do gamma-ray burst measurements provide a useful test of cosmological models?
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Taxonomy of Dark Energy Models
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59
Constraining the Dark Energy Equation of State with HII Galaxies
R. Chávez,R. Chávez,Manolis Plionis,Spyros Basilakos,Roberto Terlevich,Roberto Terlevich,Elena Terlevich,Jorge Melnick,Fabio Bresolin,Ana Luisa González-Morán +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the HII galaxies $L - sigma relation and the resulting Hubble expansion cosmological probe of a sample of just 25 high-$z$ (up to $z \sim 2.33$) HII galaxy, in a joint likelihood analysis with other well tested cosmology probes (CMB, BAOs) in an attempt to constrain the dark energy equation of state (EoS).
References
The Luminosity function and stellar evolution
TL;DR: In this paper, the evolutionary significance of the observed luminosity function for main-sequence stars in the solar neighborhood is discussed and it is shown that stars move off the main sequence after burning about 10 per cent of their hydrogen mass and that stars have been created at a uniform rate in a solar neighborhood for the last five billion years.
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The Seventh Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
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TL;DR: A series of improvements to the spectroscopic reductions are described, including better flat fielding and improved wavelength calibration at the blue end, better processing of objects with extremely strong narrow emission lines, and an improved determination of stellar metallicities.
•Book
Astrophysics of Gaseous Nebulae and Active Galactic Nuclei
Donald E. Osterbrock,Gary J. Ferland +1 more
- 01 Jan 1989
TL;DR: In this paper, a comparison of theory with observations internal dynamics of gaseous nebulae interstellar dust H II regions in the galactic context is presented. But the results are limited to the case of active galactic nuclei.
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The Dust Content and Opacity of Actively Star-Forming Galaxies
Daniela Calzetti,Lee Armus,Ralph C. Bohlin,Anne L. Kinney,J. Koornneef,Thaisa Storchi-Bergmann +5 more
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Starburst99: Synthesis Models for Galaxies with Active Star Formation
Claus Leitherer,Daniel Schaerer,Jeffrey D. Goldader,Rosa M. González Delgado,Carmelle Robert,Denis Foo Kune,Denis Foo Kune,Duilia F. de Mello,Daniel Devost,Daniel Devost,Timothy M. Heckman +10 more
TL;DR: Starburst99 as mentioned in this paper is a comprehensive set of model predictions for spectrophotometric and related properties of galaxies with active star formation, which is an improved and extended version of the data set previously published by Leitherer & Heckman.
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