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In systems undergoing starbursts the evolution of the young stellar population is expected to drive changes in the emission line properties. This evolution is usually studied theoretically, with a combination of evolutionary synthesis models for the spectral energy distribution of starbursts and photoionization calculations. In this paper we present a more empirical approach to this issue. We apply empirical population synthesis techniques to samples of Starburst and HII galaxies in order to measure their evolutionary state and correlate the results with their emission line properties. A couple of useful tools are introduced which greatly facilitate the interpretation of the synthesis: (1) an evolutionary diagram, whose axis are the strengths of the young, intermediate age and old components of the stellar population mix, and (2) the mean age of stars associated with the starburst, $ov{t}_{SB}$. These tools are tested with grids of theoretical galaxy spectra and found to work very well even when only a small number of observed properties (absorption line equivalent widths and continuum colors) is used in the synthesis. Starburst nuclei and HII galaxies are found to lie on a well defined sequence in the evolutionary diagram. Using the empirically defined mean starburst age in conjunction with emission line data we have verified that the equivalent widths of H$beta$ and [OIII] decrease for increasing $ov{t}_{SB}$. The same evolutionary trend was identified for line ratios indicative of the gas excitation, although no clear trend was identified for metal rich systems. All these results are in excellent agreement with long known, but little tested, theoretical expectations.
Post-starburst galaxies are typically considered to be a transition population, en route to the red sequence after a recent quenching event. Despite this, recent observations have shown that these objects typically have large reservoirs of cold molec
There is a consensus in the literature that starburst galaxies are triggered by inter- action events. However, it remains an open question as to what extent both merging and non-merging interactions have in triggering starbursts? In this study, we ma
We study the rest-frame morphology and structural properties of optically selected starburst galaxies at redshift z < 1, using multi-waveband (BViz) high resolution images taken by the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) as part of the Great Observator
We derive dust masses ($M_{rm dust}$) from the spectral energy distributions of 58 post-starburst galaxies (PSBs). There is an anticorrelation between specific dust mass ($M_{rm dust}$/$M_{star}$) and the time elapsed since the starburst ended, indic
The SKA will be a unique instrument with which to study the evolution of the gas content of galaxies. A proposed deep (~8 Msec) pencil-beam survey is simulated using recently updated specifications for SKA sensitivity and survey speed. Almost 10^7 ga