ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
This is the fourth paper in a series studying star formation rates, stellar components, metallicities, and star formation histories of a blue compact galaxy (BCG) sample. Using Ha, [OII]3727, IR, radio (1.4GHz) luminosities and neutral hydrogen gas masses, we estimated star formation rates(SFR) and gas depletion timescales of 72 star-forming BCGs. The SFRs of the BCGs in our sample span nearly four orders of magnitude, from approximately 10^-2 to 10^2M_sun/yr, with a median SFR of about 3M_sun/yr. The typical gas depletion timescale of BCGs is about one billion years. We found that subtracting underlying stellar absorption is very important to calculate both dust extinction and SFR of galaxies. Otherwise, the intrinsic extinction will be overestimated, the SFRs derived from [OII] and Ha will be underestimated (if the underlying stellar absorption and the internal extinction were not corrected from the observed luminosity) or overestimated (if an overestimated internal extinction were used for extinction correction). After both the underlying stellar absorption and the dust extinction were corrected, a remarkably good correlation emerges among Ha, [OII], IR and radio SFR indicators. Finally, we find a good correlation between the measured SFR and the absolute blue magnitude, metallicity, interstellar extinction of BCGs. Our results indicate that faint, low-mass BCGs have lower star formation rates.
We examine the metallicity and age of a large set of SDSS/DR6 galaxies that may be Blue Compact Dwarf (BCD) galaxies during quiescence (QBCDs).The individual spectra are first classified and then averaged to reduce noise. The metallicity inferred fro
Cosmological numerical simulations of galaxy evolution show that accretion of metal-poor gas from the cosmic web drives the star formation in galaxy disks. Unfortunately, the observational support for this theoretical prediction is still indirect, an
We use a series of N-body/smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations and analytic arguments to show that the presence of an effective temperature floor in the interstellar medium at T_F ~ 10^4 K naturally explains the tendency for low-mass galaxies
$^{12}CO(J=1 to 0)$ observations of 34 blue compact and star burst galaxies are presented. Although these galaxies are experiencing vigorous star formation at the current epoch, CO has been detected in only five of them. The five detections reported
Recent work has identified a population of low-redshift E/S0 galaxies that lie on the blue sequence in color vs. stellar mass parameter space, where spiral galaxies typically reside. While high-mass blue-sequence E/S0s often resemble young merger or