Star Formation in a Complete Spectroscopic Survey of Galaxies
Open Access
- 1 October 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astrophysical Journal
- Vol. 559 (2) , 606-619
- https://doi.org/10.1086/322349
Abstract
The 15R-North galaxy redshift survey is a uniform spectroscopic survey (S/N ~ 10) covering the range 3650-7400 Å for 3149 galaxies with median redshift 0.05. The sample is 90% complete to R = 15.4. The median slit covering fraction is 24% of the galaxy, apparently sufficient to minimize the effects of aperture bias on the EW(Hα). Forty-nine percent of the galaxies in the survey have one or more emission lines detected at ≥2 σ. In agreement with previous surveys, the fraction of absorption-line galaxies increases steeply with galaxy luminosity. We use Hβ, [O III], Hα, and [N II] to discriminate between star-forming galaxies and AGNs. At least 20% of the galaxies are star-forming, at least 17% have AGN-like emission, and 12% have unclassifiable emission. The unclassified 12% may include a "hybrid" population of galaxies with both star formation and AGN activity. The AGN fraction increases steeply with luminosity; the fraction of star-forming galaxies decreases. We use the EW(Hα+[N II]) to estimate the Scalo birthrate parameter, b, the ratio of the current star formation rate to the time averaged star formation rate. The median birthrate parameter is inversely correlated with luminosity in agreement with the conclusions based on smaller samples (Kennicutt, Tamblyn, & Congdon). Because our survey is large, we identify 33 vigorously star-forming galaxies with b > 3. We confirm the conclusion of Jansen, Franx, & Fabricant that EW([O II]) must be used with caution as a measure of current star formation. Finally, we examine the way galaxies of different spectroscopic type trace the large-scale galaxy distribution. As expected the absorption-line fraction decreases and the star-forming emission-line fraction increases as the galaxy density decreases. The AGN fraction is insensitive to the surrounding galaxy density; the unclassified fraction declines slowly as the density increases. For the star-forming galaxies, the EW(Hα) increases very slowly as the galaxy number density decreases. Whether a galaxy forms stars or not is strongly correlated with the surrounding galaxy density averaged over a scale of a few Mpc. This dependence reflects, in large part, the morphology-density relation. However, for galaxies forming stars, the stellar birthrate parameter is remarkably insensitive to the galaxy density. This conclusion suggests that the triggering of star formation occurs on a smaller spatial scale.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Relation between Activity and Environment in Compact Groups of GalaxiesThe Astronomical Journal, 2000
- Tidally Triggered Star Formation in Close Pairs of GalaxiesThe Astrophysical Journal, 2000
- Spectral Classification and Luminosity Function of Galaxies in the Las Campanas Redshift SurveyThe Astrophysical Journal, 1998
- UBVRI Systems: Resolving Different VersionsPublications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 1995
- UBVRI passbandsPublications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 1990
- A model to explain the correlation between the optical and radio properties of high-redshift galaxiesThe Astrophysical Journal, 1990
- The Wasilewski sample of emission-line galaxies - Follow-up CCD imaging and spectroscopic and IRAS observationsThe Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, 1989
- Reddenings derived from H I and galaxy counts - Accuracy and mapsThe Astronomical Journal, 1982
- Classification parameters for the emission-line spectra of extragalactic objectsPublications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 1981
- A survey of interstellar H I from L-alpha absorption measurements. IIThe Astrophysical Journal, 1978