Repository logo
 

Hubble Space Telescope images of submillimeter sources: large, irregular galaxies at high redshift

Date

2003-12

Authors

Chapman, S. C.
Windhorst, R.
Odewahn, S.
Yan, H.
Conselice, C.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Abstract

We present new Hubble Space Telescope STIS, high-resolution optical imaging of a sample of 13 submillimeter (submm) luminous galaxies, for which the optical emission has been pinpointed either through radio-1.4 GHz or millimeter interferometry. We find a predominance of irregular and complex morphologies in the sample, suggesting that mergers are likely common for submm galaxies. The component separation in these objects are on average a factor two larger than local galaxies with similarly high bolometric luminosities. The sizes and star formation rates of the submm galaxies are consistent with the maximal star formation rate densities of 20 Msun kpc^{-2} in local starburst galaxies (Lehnert & Heckman 1996). We derive quantitative morphological information for the optical galaxies hosting the submm emission; total and isophotal magnitudes, Petrosian radius, effective radius, concentration, aspect ratio, surface brightness, and asymmetry. We compare these morphological indices with those of other galaxies lying within the same STIS images. Most strikingly, we find ~70% of the submm galaxies to be extraordinarily large and elongated relative to the field population, regardless of optical magnitude. Comparison of the submm galaxy morphologies with those of optically selected galaxies at z~2-3 reveal the submm galaxies to be a morphologically distinct population, with generally larger sizes, higher concentrations and more prevalent major-merger configurations.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Chapman, S. C., R. Windhorst, S. Odewahn, H. Yan, et al. 2003. "Hubble Space Telescope images of submillimeter sources: large, irregular galaxies at high redshift." The Astrophysical Journal 599(1): 92-104

Collections