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Published byKassandra Wimberley Modified over 9 years ago
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Star-formation histories Sorour Shamshiri with Peter Thomas and thanks to Bruno Henriques Rita Tojiero
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Star- Formation Histories Outline: VESPA What is VESPA What is the result? Evolution of star-formation history time-bins Comparison SFH between SAMs and VESPA For different redshits Conclusions
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What is VESPA An analysis to the Sloan Digital Sky Survey final spectroscopic data release of MGS and LRG sample. The result is a catalogue of star formation and metallicity histories, dust content and stellar masses of nearly 800,000 galaxies. VESPA is intrinsically model dependent, including the SSP modeling, IMF or dust modeling.
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Method VESPA solves the following problem: S λ (t,Z) is the luminosity per unit wavelength of a single stellar population of age t and metallicity Z, per unit mass.
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VESPA’s bins In HR bin, it is assumed a constant star formation rate For low-resolution, a decaying star formation history is used.
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Model Initial mass function – BC03 models: a Chabrier initial mass function – Maraston (M05): with a Kroupa initial mass function Dust model: – One_parameter – Two_parameter T BC = 0.03Gyr
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VESPA: BC03 vs M05
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VESPA: dust models
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Evolution of star-formation history time-bins Picture credit: Rob Yates
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L-Galaxies: evolution of star-formation history time-bins Picture credit: Rob Yates
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Comparison of models with VESPA
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SFH for different redshifts
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Conclusions We presented Star-Formation Histories for two different versions of the L-Galaxies SA model and compared them with observations from VESPA. The Guo11 and HWT12 models bracket the VESPA results: HWT12 forms fewer stars at early times (ie high redshift) but a higher star- formation rate at all subsequent times.
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