2014AJ....147...78W


Query : 2014AJ....147...78W

2014AJ....147...78W - Astron. J., 147, 78 (2014/April-0)

The luminosity function of star clusters in 20 star-forming galaxies based on Hubble Legacy Archive photometry.

WHITMORE B.C., CHANDAR R., BOWERS A.S., LARSEN S., LINDSAY K., ANSARI A. and EVANS J.

Abstract (from CDS):

Luminosity functions (LFs) have been determined for star cluster populations in 20 nearby (4-30 Mpc), star-forming galaxies based on Advanced Camera for Surveys source lists generated by the Hubble Legacy Archive (HLA). These cluster catalogs provide one of the largest sets of uniform, automatically generated cluster candidates available in the literature at present. Comparisons are made with other recently generated cluster catalogs demonstrating that the HLA-generated catalogs are of similar quality, but in general do not go as deep. A typical cluster LF can be approximated by a power law, dN/dL∝L α, with an average value for α of -2.37 and rms scatter = 0.18 when using the F814W ("I") band. A comparison of fitting results based on methods that use binned and unbinned data shows good agreement, although there may be a systematic tendency for the unbinned (maximum likelihood) method to give slightly more negative values of α for galaxies with steeper LFs. We find that galaxies with high rates of star formation (or equivalently, with the brightest or largest numbers of clusters) have a slight tendency to have shallower values of α. In particular, the Antennae galaxy (NGC 4038/39), a merging system with a relatively high star formation rate (SFR), has the second flattest LF in the sample. A tentative correlation may also be present between Hubble type and values of α, in the sense that later type galaxies (i.e., Sd and Sm) appear to have flatter LFs. Hence, while there do appear to be some weak correlations, the relative similarity in the values of α for a large number of star-forming galaxies suggests that, to first order, the LFs are fairly universal. We examine the bright end of the LFs and find evidence for a downturn, although it only pertains to about 1% of the clusters. Our uniform database results in a small scatter (~0.4 to 0.5 mag) in the correlation between the magnitude of the brightest cluster (Mbrightest) and log of the number of clusters brighter than MI= -9 (log N). We also examine the magnitude of the brightest cluster versus log SFR for a sample including both dwarf galaxies and ULIRGs. This shows that the correlation extends over roughly six orders of magnitude but with scatter that is larger than for our spiral sample, probably because of the high levels of extinction in many of the LIRGs.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: individual: (NGC 45, NGC 406, NGC 628, NGC 1300, NGC 1309, NGC 1313, NGC 1483, NGC 2397, NGC 3627, NGC 4038,sol - 39, NGC 4258, NGC 4394, NGC 4395, NGC 4736, NGC 5055, NGC 5236, NGC 5457, NGC 6217, NGC 6503, NGC 7793) - galaxies: interactions - galaxies: star clusters: general

CDS comments: objects in Figure 2 (from Chandar et al. 2010, 2014) are not yet identified.

Simbad objects: 25

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Number of rows : 25
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 NGC 45 Sy2 00 14 04.0072128696 -23 10 55.132646808 11.92 11.21 10.73 10.58 10.4 ~ 255 1
2 NGC 406 G 01 07 25.060 -69 52 45.27   13.02   12.14 12.0 ~ 84 0
3 M 74 G 01 36 41.7451236624 +15 47 01.107512304 10.52 10.00 9.46 9.16   ~ 1733 1
4 NGC 1313 AG? 03 18 16.046 -66 29 53.74   10.06 10.0 9.40 10.4 ~ 687 2
5 NGC 1300 Sy2 03 19 41.0462219928 -19 24 40.187565432   11.16 10.42 9.90 10.7 ~ 536 0
6 NGC 1309 GiG 03 22 06.5548977432 -15 23 59.791692912   12.08   12.5 11.7 ~ 221 0
7 NAME Chandra Deep Field-South reg 03 32 28.0 -27 48 30           ~ 2085 1
8 NGC 1483 GiG 03 52 47.608 -47 28 39.06   13.23   13.2 13.0 ~ 81 0
9 NGC 2397 Sy1 07 21 19.8926907744 -69 00 05.031850284   12.85   11.57   ~ 92 0
10 M 66 GiP 11 20 15.0 +12 59 29 9.85 9.65 8.92     ~ 1386 4
11 NGC 4038 EmG 12 01 53.002 -18 52 03.32   10.91   9.74 11.0 ~ 1331 1
12 NAME Antennae IG 12 01 53.170 -18 52 37.92           ~ 1690 0
13 NGC 4039 GiP 12 01 53.51 -18 53 10.3   11.08   9.77   ~ 1159 1
14 M 106 Sy2 12 18 57.620 +47 18 13.39   9.14 8.41 8.11   ~ 2362 3
15 NGC 4395 Sy2 12 25 48.8633109888 +33 32 48.700168152 10.84 10.54 10.11 9.98   ~ 1177 1
16 NGC 4394 GiP 12 25 55.6366312872 +18 12 50.110707636   11.9       ~ 362 0
17 M 94 SyG 12 50 53.0737971432 +41 07 12.900884628 9.15 8.96 8.24 7.78   ~ 1386 2
18 M 63 LIN 13 15 49.2741893928 +42 01 45.728076108   9.34 8.59 8.35   ~ 1223 2
19 M 83 SBG 13 37 00.91920 -29 51 56.7400 8.85 8.11 7.52 7.21   ~ 2571 2
20 M 101 GiP 14 03 12.583 +54 20 55.50   8.46 7.86 7.76   ~ 2914 2
21 IC 4553 SyG 15 34 57.22396 +23 30 11.6084   14.76 13.88     ~ 2959 4
22 NGC 6217 AGN 16 32 39.2100852960 +78 11 53.487076092   14.37 13.88     ~ 302 0
23 NGC 6503 LIN 17 49 26.4207792072 +70 08 39.604132176 11.56 10.95 10.28 9.92   ~ 520 1
24 IC 5283 GiP 23 03 17.9800776408 +08 53 36.838944528   15.2       ~ 120 1
25 NGC 7793 GiG 23 57 49.7540045856 -32 35 27.701550744 10.26 9.74 9.28 9.06 9.7 ~ 1106 2

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