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Published January 10, 2010 | Published
Journal Article Open

The WHIQII Survey: Metallicities and Spectroscopic Properties of Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies

Abstract

As part of the WIYN High Image Quality Indiana-Irvine (WHIQII) survey, we present 123 spectra of faint emission-line galaxies, selected to focus on intermediate redshift (0.4 ≲ z ≲ 0.8) galaxies with blue colors that appear physically compact on the sky. The sample includes 15 true Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies (LCBGs) and an additional 27 slightly less extreme emission-line systems. These galaxies represent a highly evolving class that may play an important role in the decline of star formation since z ~ 1, but their exact nature and evolutionary pathways remain a mystery. Here, we use emission lines to determine metallicities and ionization parameters, constraining their intrinsic properties and state of star formation. Some LCBG metallicities are consistent with a "bursting dwarf" scenario, while a substantial fraction of others are not, further confirming that LCBGs are a highly heterogeneous population but are broadly consistent with the intermediate redshift field. In agreement with previous studies, we observe overall evolution in the luminosity-metallicity relation at intermediate redshift. Our sample, and particularly the LCBGs, occupies a region in the empirical R_(23)-O_(32) plane that differs from luminous local galaxies and is more consistent with dwarf irregulars at the present epoch, suggesting that cosmic "downsizing" is observable in even the most fundamental parameters that describe star formation. These properties for our sample are also generally consistent with lying between local galaxies and those at high redshift, as expected by this scenario. Surprisingly, our sample exhibits no detectable correlation between compactness and metallicity, strongly suggesting that at these epochs of rapid star formation, the morphology of compact star-forming galaxies is largely transient.

Additional Information

© 2010 American Astronomical Society. Print publication: Issue 2 (2010 January 10); received 2009 June 5; accepted for publication 2009 November 16; published 2009 December 17. We wish to thank Lisa Kewley for extensive and insightful comments; we also thank David Koo, Janice Lee, Alice Shapley, Marla Geha, and the anonymous referee for conversation and helpful suggestions, as well as J. D. Smith for assistance with the imaging observations. This research was supported by NSF grant AST05-06054 and the Center for Cosmology at UC Irvine. The authors wish to recognize and acknowledge the very significant cultural role and reverence that the summit of Mauna Kea has always had within the indigenous Hawaiian community. We are most fortunate to have the opportunity to conduct observations from this mountain. Facilities: WIYN (MiniMo), Keck:I (LRIS)

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