NWU Institutional Repository

The void galaxy survey: star formation properties

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Beygu, B.
Kreckel, K.
Van der Hulst, J.M.
Jarrett, T.H.
Peletier, R.

Researcher ID

Supervisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Oxford Univ Press

Record Identifier

Abstract

We study the star formation properties of 59 void galaxies as part of the Void Galaxy Survey (VGS). Current star formation rates are derived from H α and recent star formation rates from near-UV imaging. In addition, infrared 3.4, 4.6, 12 and 22 μm Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer emission is used as star formation and mass indicator. Infrared and optical colours show that the VGS sample displays a wide range of dust and metallicity properties. We combine these measurements with stellar and HI masses to measure the specific SFRs (SFR/M*) and star formation efficiencies ( SFR/MHI ). We compare the star formation properties of our sample with galaxies in the more moderate density regions of the cosmic web, ‘the field’. We find that specific SFRs of the VGS galaxies as a function of stellar and HI mass are similar to those of the galaxies in these field regions. Their SFR α is slightly elevated than the galaxies in the field for a given total HI mass. In the global star formation picture presented by Kennicutt–Schmidt, VGS galaxies fall into the regime of low average star formation and correspondingly low HI surface density. Their mean SFRα/MHI and SFR α/M* are of the order of 10− 9.9 yr− 1. We conclude that while the large-scale underdense environment must play some role in galaxy formation and growth through accretion, we find that even with respect to other galaxies in the more mildly underdense regions, the increase in star formation rate is only marginal

Sustainable Development Goals

Description

Citation

Beygu, B. et al. 2016. The void galaxy survey: star formation properties. Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 458(1):394-409. [https://academic.oup.com/mnras]

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By