SIMBAD references

2012ApJ...757...85G - Astrophys. J., 757, 85 (2012/September-3)

A stellar mass threshold for quenching of field galaxies.

GEHA M., BLANTON M.R., YAN R. and TINKER J.L.

Abstract (from CDS):

We demonstrate that dwarf galaxies (107 < Mstellar< 109 M, -12 > Mr> -18) with no active star formation are extremely rare (<0.06%) in the field. Our sample is based on the NASA-Sloan Atlas which is a reanalysis of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 8. We examine the relative number of quenched versus star-forming dwarf galaxies, defining quenched galaxies as having no Hα emission (EW< 2 Å) and a strong 4000 Å break. The fraction of quenched dwarf galaxies decreases rapidly with increasing distance from a massive host, leveling off for distances beyond 1.5 Mpc. We define galaxies beyond 1.5 Mpc of a massive host galaxy to be in the field. We demonstrate that there is a stellar mass threshold of Mstellar< 1.0 x109 M below which quenched galaxies do not exist in the field. Below this threshold, we find that none of the 2951 field dwarf galaxies are quenched; all field dwarf galaxies show evidence for recent star formation. Correcting for volume effects, this corresponds to a 1σ upper limit on the quenched fraction of 0.06%. In more dense environments, quenched galaxies account for 23% of the dwarf population over the same stellar mass range. The majority of quenched dwarf galaxies (often classified as dwarf elliptical galaxies) are within 2 virial radii of a massive galaxy, and only a few percent of quenched dwarf galaxies exist beyond 4 virial radii. Thus, for galaxies with stellar mass less than 1.0x109 M, ending star formation requires the presence of a more massive neighbor, providing a stringent constraint on models of star formation feedback.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: dwarf - galaxies: stellar content - methods: statistical

Simbad objects: 3

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