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Dive into the research topics where A. Castillo-Morales is active.

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Featured researches published by A. Castillo-Morales.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015

Star formation in the local Universe from the CALIFA sample: I. Calibrating the SFR using integral field spectroscopy data

C. Catalán-Torrecilla; A. Gil de Paz; A. Castillo-Morales; J. Iglesias-Páramo; S. F. Sánchez; Robert C. Kennicutt; P. G. Pérez-González; R. A. Marino; C. J. Walcher; B. Husemann; R. García-Benito; D. Mast; R. M. González Delgado; J. C. Muñoz-Mateos; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; D. J. Bomans; A. del Olmo; L. Galbany; J. M. Gomes; C. Kehrig; A. R. Lopez-Sanchez; M. A. Mendoza; Ana Monreal-Ibero; M. A. Perez-Torres; P. Sánchez-Blázquez; J. M. Vílchez

Context. The star formation rate (SFR) is one of the main parameters used to analyze the evolution of galaxies through time. The need for recovering the light reprocessed by dust commonly requires the use of low spatial resolution far-infrared data. Recombination line luminosities provide an alternative, although uncertain dust-extinction corrections based on narrowband imaging or long-slit spectroscopy have traditionally posed a limit to their applicability. Integral field spectroscopy (IFS) is clearly the way to overcome this kind of limitation. Aims. We obtain integrated Hα, ultraviolet (UV) and infrared (IR)-based SFR measurements for 272 galaxies from the CALIFA survey at 0.005 <z< 0.03 using single-band and hybrid tracers. We aim to determine whether the extinction-corrected Hα luminosities provide a good measure of the SFR and to shed light on the origin of the discrepancies between tracers. Updated calibrations referred to Hα are provided. The well-defined selection criteria and large statistics allow us to carry out this analysis globally and split by properties, including stellar mass and morphological type. Methods. We derive integrated, extinction-corrected Hα fluxes from CALIFA, UV surface and asymptotic photometry from GALEX and integrated WISE 22 μm and IRAS fluxes. Results. We find that the extinction-corrected Hα luminosity agrees with the hybrid updated SFR estimators based on either UV or Hα plus IR luminosity over the full range of SFRs (0.03−20 M_⊙ yr^-1). The coefficient that weights the amount of energy produced by newly-born stars that is reprocessed by dust on the hybrid tracers, a_IR, shows a large dispersion. However, this coefficient does not became increasingly small at high attenuations, as expected if significant highly-obscured Hα emission were missed, i.e., after a Balmer decrement-based attenuation correction is applied. Lenticulars, early-type spirals, and type-2 AGN host galaxies show smaller coefficients because of the contribution of optical photons and AGN to dust heating. Conclusions. In the local Universe, the Hα luminosity derived from IFS observations can be used to measure SFR, at least in statistically-significant, optically-selected galaxy samples, once stellar continuum absorption and dust attenuation effects are accounted for. The analysis of the SFR calibrations by galaxies properties could potentially be used by other works to study the impact of different selection criteria in the SFR values derived, and to disentangle selection effects from other physically motivated differences, such as environmental or evolutionary effects.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

3D spectroscopy of local luminous compact blue galaxies: kinematics of NGC 7673

J. Pérez-Gallego; Rafael Guzman; A. Castillo-Morales; Francisco J. Castander; J. Gallego; C. A. Garland; N. Gruel; D. J. Pisano; S. F. Sánchez; J. Zamorano

The kinematic properties of the ionized gas of local Luminous Compact Blue Galaxy (LCBG) NGC 7673 are presented using three dimensional data taken with the PPAK integral field unit at the 3.5-m telescope in the Centro Astronomico Hispano Aleman. Our data reveal an asymmetric rotating velocity field with a peak to peak difference of 60 km s −1 . The kinematic centre is found to be at the position of a central velocity width maximum (� = 54± 1 km s −1 ), which is consistent with the position of the luminosity-weighted centroid of the entire galaxy. The position angle of the minor rotation axis is 168 � as measured from the orientation of the velocity field contours. At least two decoupled kinematic components are found. The first one is compact and coincides with the position of the second most active star formation region (clump B). The second one is extended and does not have a clear optical counterpart. No evidence of active galactic nuclei activity or supernovae galactic winds powering any of these two components has been found. Our data, however, show evidence in support of a previously proposed minor merger scenario in which a dwarf galaxy, tentatively identified with clump B, is falling into NGC 7673. and triggers the starburst. Finally, it is shown that the dynamical mass of this galaxy may be severely underestimated when using the derived rotation curve or the integrated velocity width, under the assumption of virialization.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

MEGARA: a new generation optical spectrograph for GTC

A. Gil de Paz; J. Gallego; E. Carrasco; J. Iglesias-Páramo; R. Cedazo; J. M. Vílchez; M. L. García-Vargas; X. Arrillaga; M. A. Carrera; A. Castillo-Morales; E. Castillo-Domínguez; M. C. Eliche-Moral; D. Ferrusca; E. González-Guardia; Bertrand Lefort; M. Maldonado; R. A. Marino; I. Martínez-Delgado; I. Morales Durán; Emma Mújica; G. Páez; S. Pascual; A. Pérez-Calpena; A. Sánchez-Penim; E. Sánchez-Blanco; S. Tulloch; Miguel Velázquez; J. Zamorano; A. L. Aguerri; D. Barrado y Navascués

MEGARA (Multi-Espectrógrafo en GTC de Alta Resolución para Astronomía) is an optical Integral-Field Unit (IFU) and Multi-Object Spectrograph (MOS) designed for the GTC 10.4m telescope in La Palma. MEGARA offers two IFU fiber bundles, one covering 12.5x11.3 arcsec2 with a spaxel size of 0.62 arcsec (Large Compact Bundle; LCB) and another one covering 8.5x6.7 arcsec2 with a spaxel size of 0.42 arcsec (Small Compact Bundle; SCB). The MEGARA MOS mode will allow observing up to 100 objects in a region of 3.5x3.5 arcmin2 around the two IFU bundles. Both the LCB IFU and MOS capabilities of MEGARA will provide intermediate-to-high spectral resolutions (RFWHM~6,000, 12,000 and 18,700, respectively for the low-, mid- and high-resolution Volume Phase Holographic gratings) in the range 3650-9700ÅÅ. These values become RFWHM~7,000, 13,500, and 21,500 when the SCB is used. A mechanism placed at the pseudo-slit position allows exchanging the three observing modes and also acts as focusing mechanism. The spectrograph is a collimator-camera system that has a total of 11 VPHs simultaneously available (out of the 18 VPHs designed and being built) that are placed in the pupil by means of a wheel and an insertion mechanism. The custom-made cryostat hosts an E2V231-84 4kx4k CCD. The UCM (Spain) leads the MEGARA Consortium that also includes INAOE (Mexico), IAA-CSIC (Spain), and UPM (Spain). MEGARA is being developed under a contract between GRANTECAN and UCM. The detailed design, construction and AIV phases are now funded and the instrument should be delivered to GTC before the end of 2016.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

Star Formation in the Local Universe from the CALIFA Sample. II. Activation and Quenching Mechanisms in Bulges, Bars, and Disks

C. Catalán-Torrecilla; A. Gil de Paz; A. Castillo-Morales; J. Méndez-Abreu; J. Falcón-Barroso; S. Bekeraite; L. Costantin; A. de Lorenzo-Cáceres; E. Florido; R. García-Benito; B. Husemann; J. Iglesias-Páramo; Robert C. Kennicutt; D. Mast; S. Pascual; T. Ruiz-Lara; L. Sánchez-Menguiano; S. F. Sánchez; C. J. Walcher; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; S. Duarte Puertas; R. A. Marino; J. Masegosa; P. Sánchez-Blázquez

We estimate the current extinction-corrected H


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2007

Discovery of a galactic wind in the central region of M100

J. Jiménez-Vicente; A. Castillo-Morales; Evencio Mediavilla; E. Battaner

\alpha


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2007

Non-circular motion evidence in the circumnuclear region of M100 (NGC 4321)

A. Castillo-Morales; J. Jiménez-Vicente; Evencio Mediavilla; E. Battaner

star formation rate (SFR) of the different morphological components that shape galaxies (bulges, bars, and disks). We use a multi-component photometric decomposition based on SDSS imaging to CALIFA Integral Field Spectroscopy datacubes for a sample of 219 galaxies. This analysis reveals an enhancement of the central SFR and specific SFR (sSFR


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

MEGARA, the new intermediate-resolution optical IFU and MOS for GTC: getting ready for the telescope

A. Gil de Paz; E. Carrasco; J. Gallego; J. Iglesias-Páramo; R. Cedazo; M. L. García Vargas; X. Arrillaga; J. L. Avilés; N. Cardiel; M. A. Carrera; A. Castillo-Morales; E. Castillo-Domínguez; J. M. de la Cruz García; S. Esteban San Román; D. Ferrusca; Pedro Gómez-Álvarez; Rafael Izazaga-Pérez; Bertrand Lefort; J. A. López-Orozco; M. Maldonado; I. Martínez-Delgado; I. Morales Durán; Emma Mújica; G. Páez; S. Pascual; A. Pérez-Calpena; Pablo Picazo; A. Sánchez-Penim; E. Sánchez-Blanco; S. Tulloch

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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

Three-dimensional spectroscopy of local luminous compact blue galaxies: kinematic maps of a sample of 22 objects

J. Pérez-Gallego; Rafael Guzman; A. Castillo-Morales; J. Gallego; Francisco J. Castander; Catherine A. Garland; N. Gruel; D. J. Pisano; J. Zamorano

SFR/


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

Integral field spectroscopy of local LCBGs: NGC 7673, a case study. Physical properties of star-forming regions

A. Castillo-Morales; J. Gallego; J. Pérez-Gallego; Rafael Guzman; J. C. Muñoz-Mateos; J. Zamorano; S. F. Sánchez

M_{\star}


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Blasts and shocks in the disc of NGC 4258

J. Jiménez-Vicente; E. Mediavilla; A. Castillo-Morales; E. Battaner

) in barred galaxies. Along the Main Sequence, we find more massive galaxies in total have undergone efficient suppression (quenching) of their star formation, in agreement with many studies. We discover that more massive disks have had their star formation quenched as well. We evaluate which mechanisms might be responsible for this quenching process. The presence of type-2 AGNs plays a role at damping the sSFR in bulges and less efficiently in disks. Also, the decrease in the sSFR of the disk component becomes more noticeable for stellar masses around 10

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J. Zamorano

Complutense University of Madrid

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J. Gallego

Complutense University of Madrid

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A. Gil de Paz

Complutense University of Madrid

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S. Pascual

Complutense University of Madrid

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N. Gruel

University of Florida

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J. Iglesias-Páramo

Spanish National Research Council

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D. J. Pisano

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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