Bibcode
Cerviño, M.; Bongiovanni, A.; Hidalgo, S.
Bibliographical reference
Highlights on Spanish Astrophysics IX, Proceedings of the XII Scientific Meeting of the Spanish Astronomical Society held on July 18-22, 2016, in Bilbao, Spain, ISBN 978-84-606-8760-3. S. Arribas, A. Alonso-Herrero, F. Figueras, C. Hernández-Monteagudo, A. Sánchez-Lavega, S. Pérez-Hoyos (eds.), p. 278-278
Advertised on:
3
2017
Citations
0
Refereed citations
0
Description
Star Formation Rate (SFR) inferences are based in the so-called constant
SFR approximation, where synthesis models are require to provide a
calibration; we aims to study the key points of such approximation to
produce accurate SFR inferences. We use the intrinsic algebra used in
synthesis models, and we explore how SFR can be inferred from the
integrated light without any assumption about the underling Star
Formation history (SFH). We show that the constant SFR approximation is
actually a simplified expression of more deeper characteristics of
synthesis models: It is a characterization of the evolution of single
stellar populations (SSPs), acting the SSPs as sensitivity curve over
different measures of the SFH can be obtained. As results, we find that
(1) the best age to calibrate SFR indices is the age of the observed
system (i.e. about 13 Gyr for z = 0 systems); (2) constant SFR and
steady-state luminosities are not requirements to calibrate the SFR ;
(3) it is not possible to define a SFR single time scale over which the
recent SFH is averaged, and we suggest to use typical SFR indices
(ionizing flux, UV fluxes) together with no typical ones (optical/IR
fluxes) to correct the SFR from the contribution of the old component of
the SFH, we show how to use galaxy colors to quote age ranges where the
recent component of the SFH is stronger/softer than the older component.
Particular values of SFR calibrations are (almost) not affect by this
work, but the meaning of what is obtained by SFR inferences does. In our
framework, results as the correlation of SFR time scales with galaxy
colors, or the sensitivity of different SFR indices to sort and long
scale variations in the SFH, fit naturally. In addition, the present
framework provides a theoretical guideline to optimize the available
information from data/numerical experiments to improve the accuracy of
SFR inferences. More info en Cerviño, Bongiovanni &
Hidalgo A&A 588, 108C (2016)