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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View1 Claus Leitherer (STScI) A Far-Ultraviolet View of Starburst Galaxies Claus Leitherer (STScI)
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View2 Kinney et al. (1994): 1200 – 10,000 Å
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View3 Leitherer et al. (2002): 900 – 1200 Å
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View4 Outline Stellar Populations Dust Obscuration Gas: Hot and Cold Phases Gas: Lyman Continuum
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View5 Stellar Populations Far-UV lines: Age-IMF degeneracy Far-UV continuum: Age-Reddening degeneracy
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View6 Robert et al. (2003): Synthetic far-UV spectrum of SSP Strongest lines: O VI 1035; C III 1175 C III: radiative O VI: non-radiative O VI decoupled from stellar parameters O VI constant with T eff for T eff > 30,000 K
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View7 Robert et al. (2003): Trade between age and IMF IMF slopes with = 3.3, 2.35, 1.5 C III varies, O VI is constant Changing M affects L more than T eff C III, a radiative wind line, scales with L
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View8 Leitherer et al. (2002): Trade between age and reddening HUT spectrum, synth. line spectrum, synth. continuum Age from Si IV+C IV Reddening from 1500 Å slope Use far-UV reddening law Predict galaxy spectrum down to Lyman limit
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View9 Dust Obscuration Reddening shortward of 1200 Å studied by Voyager, HUT, ORFEUS, and FUSE (+ sounding rockets) Extragalactic studies: HUT: Leitherer et al. (2002) FUSE: Buat et al. (2002)
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View10 Buat et al. (2002): 950 – 1175 Å reddening law is flatter than Galactic law Extension of “Calzetti” curve Agrees with model for clumps + shell geometry Most stars totally hidden; light comes from few stars with little attenuation
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View11 Gas: Hot and Cold Phases The spectral region 912 – 1200 Å includes includes transitions of the hottest (10 5 K) and coldest (10 2 K) gas Coronal gas traced by O VI Molecular gas traced by rotational/vibrational transitions of H 2
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View12 Heckman et al. (2001): NGC 1705 with FUSE
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View13 Detection of broad (100 km s –1 ), blueshifted (–77 km s –1 ) O VI Formation in a blow-out from expanding superbubble N(O VI) consistent with shock-heated gas cooling radiatively Cooling rate << supernova heating rate Radiative losses are negligible and wind continues to expand Implications for IGM enrichment
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View14 Hoopes et al. (2004): H 2 in starburst galaxies
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View15 Weak H 2 absorption detected in two out of five starburst galaxies Upper limit of total M(H 2 ) 10 M Therefore, most of the molecular gas is missed by the FUSE sightlines Diffuse ISM has little H 2, probably because of the destructive UV radiation H 2 located in dense clouds with covering factor < 1 clumpy ISM
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View16 Gas: Lyman Continuum Star-forming galaxies are the dominant contributor to the non-ionizing radiation field Are starburst galaxies a significant component of the ionizing background? Local tests: need far-UV observations High-z galaxies: IGM radiative transfer
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View17 Deharveng et al. (2001): Mrk 54 with FUSE
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View18 Malkan et al. (2003): 11 blue galaxies with STIS
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View19 Attempts to detect Lyman continuum radiation Leitherer et al. (1995)HUT4 galaxies; z 0< 3 % Hurwitz et al. (1997)HUT4 galaxies; z 0< 19% Deharveng et al. (1997) H /UV LF in local universe< 1% Deharveng et al. (2001)FUSEMrk 54; z 0< 5% Giallongo et al. (2002)FORS2z = 2.96, 3.32< 16% Fernández-Soto et al. (2003)WFPC2HDF; 1.9 < z < 3.5< 4% Malkan et al. (2003)STIS1.1 < z < 1.4< 1% Steidel et al. (2001)Keck29 galaxies; z = 3.4100%
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9/7/04Claus Leitherer: A Far-UV View20 Steidel et al. (2001) Haehnelt et al. (2001)
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