We study the ultraviolet (UV) continuum beta slope of a sample of 166 clumps, individual star-forming regions observed in highredshift galaxies. They are hosted by 67 galaxies with redshift between 2 and 6.2, strongly lensed by the Hubble Frontier Fields cluster of galaxies MACS J0416.1 - 2403. The beta slope is sensitive to a variety of physical properties, such as the metallicity, the age of the stellar population, the dust attenuation throughout the galaxy, the stellar initial mass function (IMF), and the star formation history (SFH). The aim of this study is to compare the beta-values of individual clumps with those measured on the entire galaxy, to investigate possible physical differences between these regions and their hosts. We found a median value of beta similar to -2.4, lower than that of integrated galaxies. This result confirms that clumps are sites of intense star formation, populated by young, massive stars, whose spectrum strongly emits in the UV. This is also consistent with the assumption that the dust extinction at the location of the clumps is lower than the av erage e xtinction of the galaxy, or that clumps have a different IMF or SFH. We made use of the correlations, disco v ered for high-redshift galaxies, of the beta-value with those of redshift and UV magnitude, MUV, finding that clumps follow the same relations, extended to much fainter magnitudes (MUV < -13). We also find evidence of eight clumps with extremely blue ( beta < -2.7) slopes, which could be the signpost of low-metallicity stars and constrain the emissivity of ionizing photons at high redshift.
UV-continuum β slopes of individual z ∼ 2–6 clumps and their evolution / A. Bolamperti, A. Zanella, U. Mestric, E. Vanzella, M. Castellano, P. Bergamini, F. Calura, C. Grillo, M. Meneghetti, A. Mercurio, P. Rosati, T. Devereaux, E. Iani, J. Vernet. - In: MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY. - ISSN 0035-8711. - 526:4(2023), pp. 5263-5277. [10.1093/mnras/stad3114]
UV-continuum β slopes of individual z ∼ 2–6 clumps and their evolution
U. Mestric;P. Bergamini;C. Grillo;
2023
Abstract
We study the ultraviolet (UV) continuum beta slope of a sample of 166 clumps, individual star-forming regions observed in highredshift galaxies. They are hosted by 67 galaxies with redshift between 2 and 6.2, strongly lensed by the Hubble Frontier Fields cluster of galaxies MACS J0416.1 - 2403. The beta slope is sensitive to a variety of physical properties, such as the metallicity, the age of the stellar population, the dust attenuation throughout the galaxy, the stellar initial mass function (IMF), and the star formation history (SFH). The aim of this study is to compare the beta-values of individual clumps with those measured on the entire galaxy, to investigate possible physical differences between these regions and their hosts. We found a median value of beta similar to -2.4, lower than that of integrated galaxies. This result confirms that clumps are sites of intense star formation, populated by young, massive stars, whose spectrum strongly emits in the UV. This is also consistent with the assumption that the dust extinction at the location of the clumps is lower than the av erage e xtinction of the galaxy, or that clumps have a different IMF or SFH. We made use of the correlations, disco v ered for high-redshift galaxies, of the beta-value with those of redshift and UV magnitude, MUV, finding that clumps follow the same relations, extended to much fainter magnitudes (MUV < -13). We also find evidence of eight clumps with extremely blue ( beta < -2.7) slopes, which could be the signpost of low-metallicity stars and constrain the emissivity of ionizing photons at high redshift.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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