Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
2005-03-29
Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc. 360 (2005) 587-609
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
MNRAS, in press. 18 pages in mn2e style, with 10 inline figures and two long tables. Appendix figures provided as separate, lo
Scientific paper
10.1111/j.1365-2966.2005.09047.x
We present UFTI K-band imaging observations of 222 galaxies that are selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey to have unusually strong Hdelta absorption equivalent widths, W(Hd)>4A. Using GIM2D, the images are fit with two-dimensional surface brightness models consisting of a simple disk and bulge component to derive B/T, the fraction of luminosity in the bulge. We find that the galaxies with weak or absent Halpha or [OII] emission (known as k+a galaxies) are predominantly bulge-dominated (with a mode of B/T~0.6), while galaxies with nebular emission (known as e[a] galaxies) are mostly disk-dominated (B/T~0.1). The morphologies and (r-k) colours of most k+a galaxies are inconsistent with the hypothesis that they result from the truncation of star formation in normal, spiral galaxies. However, their (u-g) and (r-k) colours, as well as their Hdelta line strengths, form a sequence that is well matched by a model in which >5 per cent of the stellar mass has been produced in a recent starburst. The lack of scatter in the dust-sensitive (r-k) colours suggests that the unusual spectra of k+a galaxies are not due to the effects of dust. The e(a) galaxies, on the other hand, have a colour distribution that is distinct from the k+a population, and typical of normal or dusty (tauV~2) spiral galaxies. We conclude that many e(a) galaxies are not progenitors of k+a galaxies, but are a separate phenomenon. Both k+a and e(a) galaxies reside in environments (characterized by the local density of galaxies brighter than Mr=-20) that are typical of normal galaxies and that are inconsistent with overdense regions like rich galaxy clusters.
Balogh Michael L.
Goto Tomo
Miller Chris
Nichol Robert
Zabludoff Ann
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