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The central spectra of massive star-forming galaxies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 June 2025

Jaimie Rose Sheil*
Affiliation:
School of Physics & Astronomy, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, Australia
Michael Brown
Affiliation:
School of Physics & Astronomy, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, Australia
Virginia A. Kilborn
Affiliation:
Department of Physics & Astronomy, Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
Michelle Cluver
Affiliation:
Department of Physics & Astronomy, Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
Thomas Jarrett
Affiliation:
Institute for Astronomy, University of Hawaii at Hilo, Hilo, HI, USA Department of Astronomy, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, Cape Town, South Africa
*
Corresponding author: Jaimie Rose Sheil; Email: jaimiersheil@gmail.com
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Abstract

We have examined the nuclear spectra of very massive star-forming galaxies at $z \sim 0$ to understand how they differ from other galaxies with comparable masses, which are typically passive. We selected a sample of 126 nearby massive star-forming galaxies ($\lt100\,\textrm{Mpc}$, $10^{11.3}\,\mathrm{M_\odot} \leq M_\textrm{stellar} \leq 10^{11.7}\,\mathrm{M_\odot}$, $1 \,\mathrm{M_\odot\,yr^{-1}}\lt \textrm{SFR} \lt13 \,\mathrm{M_\odot\,yr^{-1}}$) from the 2MRS-Bright WXSC catalogue. LEDA morphologies indicate at least 63% of our galaxies are spirals, while visual inspection of Dark Energy Survey images reveals 75% of our galaxies to be spirals with the remainder being lenticular. Of our sample 59 have archival nuclear spectra, which we have modelled and subsequently measured emission lines ([NII]${\lambda 6583}$, H$\alpha{\lambda 6563}$, [OIII]${\lambda 5008}$, and H$\beta{\lambda 4863}$), classifying galaxies as star-forming, LINERs or AGNs. Using a BPT diagram we find $83 \pm 6$% of our galaxies, with sufficient signal-to-noise to measure all 4 emission lines, to be LINERs. Using the [NII]${\lambda 6583}$/H$\alpha{\lambda 6563}$ emission line ratio alone we find that $79 \pm 6$% of the galaxies (46 galaxies) with archival spectra are LINERs, whereas just $\sim 30\%$ of the overall massive galaxy population are LINERs (Belfiore et al. 2016, MNRAS, 461, 3111). Our sample can be considered a local analogue of the Ogle et al. (2019, VizieR Online Data Catalog, p. J/ApJS/243/14; 2016, ApJ, 817, 109) sample of $z \sim 0.22$ massive star-forming galaxies in terms of selection criteria, and we find 64% of their galaxies are LINERs using SDSS spectra. The high frequency of LINER emission in these massive star-forming galaxies indicates that LINER emission in massive galaxies may be linked to the presence of gas that fuels star formation.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Astronomical Society of Australia
Figure 0

Figure 1. The SDSS spectrum of the super spiral 2MASX J07404205+4332412, which was identified by Ogle et al. (2016); Ogle et al. (2019). The redshifted H$\alpha{\lambda 6563}$ and [NII]${\lambda 6583}$ are evident and are comparable in strength, which identifies this galaxy as a LINER.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Our BPT diagram of 6dF galaxies along with commonly used galaxy classification criteria from the literature (Baldwin, Phillips, & Terlevich 1981). The green line from Kewley et al. (2006) separates star-forming galaxies from Seyferts and LINERs, while the black dotted line from Schawinski et al. (2007) separates Seyferts and LINERs. The Kauffmann criteria shows alternative cuts to classify galaxies with and the emission line ratios required for LINER classification in red, [NII]${\lambda 6583}$/H$\alpha{\lambda 6563} \gt 0.6$ and [OIII]${\lambda 5008}$/H$\beta{\lambda 4863} \lt3$ (Kauffmann et al. 2003b). The different criteria are motivated by theory and observation, producing samples with varying completeness and contamination.

Figure 2

Figure 3. The WISE colour-colour diagram for all 2MRS-Bright galaxies (grey) and for our local, massive, star-forming sample of galaxies (coloured). Our sample lies in the spiral region of the $W_{1}-W_{2}$ against $W_{2}-W_{3}$ plot, which reflects that these galaxies have some star-formation present, as we selected for. We do not have an AGN locus for this plot currently as it is part of the ongoing work by Jarrett et al. (in preparation). There is one Seyfert shown in this plot in purple, classified by emission line width, MRK1239, and one galaxy, 2MASX J22444577+3327381, which lies below the rest of our sample due to a star contaminating the $W_{1}-W_{2}$ colour. However, with these two exceptions, the local sample of massive, star-forming galaxies have very uniform colours and fall just below the star-forming main sequence (SFMS) (Chang et al. 2015).

Figure 3

Figure 4. The sample for this paper consists of 126 galaxies with $M_{\textrm{stellar}} \geq10^{11.3} \mathrm{M_\odot}$, SFR $\gt1 \mathrm{M_{\odot}} \mathrm{{yr}^{-1}}$, and distance $ \lt100$ Mpc (red), selected from the 2MRS-Bright < 100 Mpc sample (purple). The region the sample space populates against the wider selection of galaxies can be seen, with our sample being both massive and star-forming, which distinguishes them from typical galaxies and makes them the local analogue to the Ogle et al. (2016, 2019) sample. We also show the $\sim 47\%$ of galaxies that have archival spectra (blue) and the remaining galaxies in the sample for which there is no available spectra.

Figure 4

Table 1. Table of aperture radii at 100 Mpc for our sample which is sourced from SDSS, 6dFGS, 2MRS FAST and Ho et al. (1995). As 100 Mpc is the upper limit of distance for our sample these are also the upper limit of aperture radii. We may be more likely to detect faint AGN nuclei with our small aperture sizes compared to Ogle et al. (2016).

Figure 5

Table 2. The sources of each of the spectra used to study our sample of local galaxies. Together, they provide an inhomogeneous sample of nearby, massive, star-forming galaxies for which we can measure emission lines.

Figure 6

Figure 5. An example of the corrections and fits applied to archival spectra of galaxies in our local sample. The top panel, shows the original spectra in red, at wavelengths surrounding the redshifted emission lines H$\alpha{\lambda 6563}$ and [NII]${\lambda 6583}$. The Bruzual & Charlot (2003) model is shown in green and the scaled model is then subtracted from the original spectra, resulting in the spectra shown in blue. In the bottom panel the corrected spectra is modelled using three Gaussians and hence the emission line ratios can be measured.

Figure 7

Figure 6. The corrections and fits applied to archival spectra for H$\beta{\lambda 4863}$ and [OIII]${\lambda 5008}$ emission lines. The top panel, shows the original spectra in green, the scaled Bruzual & Charlot (2003) is shown in black and the subtracted spectra is shown in purple. The corrected spectra are then modelled using Gaussians as shown in the bottom panel, and hence the emission line ratios can be measured.

Figure 8

Table 3. Example of available data table – the data table provides information for all 126 galaxies in the local sample. This data includes, RA, DEC, redshift, star-formation rate and the associated error, mass in stars, distance in Mpc, $W_{1}$ flux, $W_{2}$ flux, $W3_{PaH}$ flux, $W4_{dust}$ flux, $W_{1}-W_{2}$, $W_{2}-W_{3}$, $M_{W_{1}}$, the LEDA morphologies, the source of the available spectra, the [NII]/H$\alpha$ ratio, the [OIII]/H$\beta$ ratio, and the resulting classification. This example table shows a selection of galaxies and their key data. The error in the galaxy mass (in log scale) predominantly comes from the calibration as these are bright nearby galaxies, the resulting error is $\sim 0.11$ for each galaxy. The 67 galaxies with no available archival spectra are also shown in this table with the spectral class NA. *MRK1239 has broad emission lines and so is classified as a Seyfert 1 and excluded from the BPT diagram.

Figure 9

Figure 7. The BPT diagram for the 35 galaxies in our sample that have measurable emission lines from the available spectra. The black dashed line is the Kewley et al. (2006) criteria and the dotted thin black line shows the criteria from Kauffmann et al. (2003b), both of which separate HII galaxies from Seyferts and LINERs. The black dotted line separates Seyferts from LINERs from Schawinski et al. (2007). As can be seen in the diagram, 29 of the galaxies in our sample are LINERs and there are only 5 star-forming and 1 Seyfert galaxies.

Figure 10

Figure 8. Our sample of galaxies against the wider galaxy population with our local sample divided into those with and without spectra and then further into those with that are LINERs. The LINERs clearly make up the majority of those galaxies with spectra. The SFMS by Whitaker et al. (2012) is shown in pink in the Figure and demonstrates that, as expected, our galaxies largely fall below the SFMS. We also show the Pović et al. (2016) LINERs which have far lower masses than our sample and the Ogle et al. (2019) sample of galaxies which we compare our sample to. Interestingly in all three samples the LINERs largely sit below the star-forming main sequence.

Figure 11

Figure 9. The distribution of [NII]${\lambda 6583}$ to H$\alpha{\lambda 6563}$ ratio that we use to classify LINERs is shown as well as the breakdown of this ratio based on the survey they originated from. As can be seen, the emission line ratio has no strong dependence on the survey from which the spectra is from, as expected, due to the corrections applied to all spectra. We can also see that the majority of galaxies have [NII]${\lambda 6583}$/H$\alpha{\lambda 6563} \geq 0.6$, making them LINERs.

Figure 12

Figure 10. The available Dark Energy Survey (DES) images of galaxies in our sample with LEDA morphologies sourced by Jarrett et al. (in preparation). As can be seen these galaxies are largely disc galaxies with spiral structure and do not show signs of major mergers. The galaxy in the final panel is cropped as it sits on the edge of the DES visible field.