Spectroscopic aperture biases in inside-out evolving early-type galaxies from CALIFA

DOI: 
10.1051/0004-6361/201527312
Publication date: 
01/02/2016
Main author: 
Gomes J.M.
IAA authors: 
Vílchez, J.M.;Kehrig, C.;Iglesias-Páramo, J.;García-Benito, R.;Márquez, I.;Del Olmo, A.;González Delgado, R.M.
Authors: 
Gomes J.M., Papaderos P., Vílchez J.M., Kehrig C., Iglesias-Páramo J., Breda I., Lehnert M.D., Sánchez S.F., Ziegler B., Dos Reis S.N., Bland-Hawthorn J., Galbany L., Bomans D.J., Rosales-Ortega F.F., Walcher C.J., García-Benito R., Márquez I., Del Olmo A., Mollá M., Marino R.A., Catalán-Torrecilla C., González Delgado R.M., López-Sánchez Á.R., CALIFA Collaboration
Journal: 
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Publication type: 
Article
Volume: 
586
Pages: 
Number: 
A22
Abstract: 
Integral field spectroscopy (IFS) studies based on CALIFA survey data have recently revealed ongoing low-level star formation (SF) in the periphery of a small fraction (∼10%) of local early-type galaxies (ETGs), witnessing a still ongoing inside-out galaxy growth process. A distinctive property of the nebular component in these ETGs, classified i+, is a structure with two radial zones, the inner of which displays LINER emission with a Hα equivalent width EW(Hα) ≃ 1 Å, the outer (3 Å <EW(Hα) ≲ 20 Å) HII-region characteristics. Using CALIFA IFS data, we empirically demonstrate that the confinement of nebular emission to the galaxy periphery leads to a strong aperture (or, correspondingly, redshift) bias in spectroscopic single-fiber studies of type i+ ETGs: at low redshift (z ≲ 0.45), SDSS spectroscopy is restricted to the inner (SF-devoid LINER) zone, which causes the galaxies to be erroneously classified as 'retired', that is, systems entirely lacking SF, and whose faint nebular emissionis solely powered by the post-AGB stellar component. The SDSS aperture progressively encompasses the outer SF zone only at higher z, at which the galaxies are unambiguously classified as 'composite SF/LINER'. We also empirically demonstrate that the principal effect of a decreasing spectroscopic aperture on the classification of i+ ETGs through standard [NII]/Hα vs. [OIII]/Hβ emission-line (BPT) ratios consists of a monotonic shift upward and to the right precisely along the upper right wing of the 'seagull' distribution on the BPT plane, that is, along the pathway connecting composite SF/HII galaxies with AGN/LINERs. Motivated by these observational insights, we also investigate theoretically observational biases in aperture-limited studies of inside-out growing galaxies as a function of z. To this end, we devise a simple 1D model that involves an outward-propagating exponentially decreasing SF process since z ∼ 10 and reproduces the radial extent and two-zone EW(Hα) distribution of local i+ ETGs. By simulating the 3″ spectroscopic SDSS aperture in this model, we find that SDSS studies at z ≲ 1 are progressively restricted to the inner (SF-devoid LINER) zone and miss an increasingly larger portion of the Hα-emitting periphery. This leads to the incorrect spectroscopic classification of these inside-out assembling galaxies as retired ETG/LINERs and also to a severe underestimation of their total star formation rate (SFR) in a manner inversely related to z. More specifically, the SFR inferred from the Hα luminosity registered within the SDSS fiber is reduced by 50% at z ∼ 0.86, reaching only 0.1% of its integral value at z = 0.1. We argue that the aperture-driven biases described above pertain to any morphological analog of i+ ETGs (e.g., SF-quiescent bulges within star-forming disks), regardless of whether it is viewed from the perspective of inside-out growth or inside-out SF quenching, and might be of considerable relevance to galaxy taxonomy and studies of the cosmic SFR density as a function of z. © ESO, 2016.
Database: 
SCOPUS
WOK
ADS
SCOPUS
URL: 
https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/#abs/2016A&A...586A..22G/abstract
ADS Bibcode: 
2016A&A...586A..22G
Keywords: 
galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD; galaxies: ISM; galaxies: nuclei; galaxies: star formation