A. de Lorenzo-Cáceres
University of La Laguna
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by A. de Lorenzo-Cáceres.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012
S. F. Sánchez; Robert C. Kennicutt; A. Gil de Paz; G. van de Ven; J. M. Vílchez; Lutz Wisotzki; C. J. Walcher; D. Mast; J. A. L. Aguerri; S. Albiol-Pérez; A. Alonso-Herrero; J. Alves; J. Bakos; T. Bartáková; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; A. Boselli; D. J. Bomans; A. Castillo-Morales; C. Cortijo-Ferrero; A. de Lorenzo-Cáceres; A. del Olmo; R.-J. Dettmar; Angeles I. Díaz; Simon C. Ellis; J. Falcón-Barroso; H. Flores; Anna Gallazzi; B. García-Lorenzo; R. M. González Delgado; N. Gruel
The final product of galaxy evolution through cosmic time is the population of galaxies in the local universe. These galaxies are also those that can be studied in most detail, thus providing a stringent benchmark for our understanding of galaxy evolution. Through the huge success of spectroscopic single-fiber, statistical surveys of the Local Universe in the last decade, it has become clear, however, that an authoritative observational description of galaxies will involve measuring their spatially resolved properties over their full optical extent for a statistically significant sample. We present here the Calar Alto Legacy Integral Field Area (CALIFA) survey, which has been designed to provide a first step in this direction. We summarize the survey goals and design, including sample selection and observational strategy. We also showcase the data taken during the first observing runs (June/July 2010) and outline the reduction pipeline, quality control schemes and general characteristics of the reduced data. This survey is obtaining spatially resolved spectroscopic information of a diameter selected sample of similar to 600 galaxies in the Local Universe (0.005 < z < 0.03). CALIFA has been designed to allow the building of two-dimensional maps of the following quantities: (a) stellar populations: ages and metallicities; (b) ionized gas: distribution, excitation mechanism and chemical abundances; and (c) kinematic properties: both from stellar and ionized gas components. CALIFA uses the PPAK integral field unit (IFU), with a hexagonal field-of-view of similar to 1.3 square, with a 100% covering factor by adopting a three-pointing dithering scheme. The optical wavelength range is covered from 3700 to 7000 angstrom, using two overlapping setups (V500 and V1200), with different resolutions: R similar to 850 and R similar to 1650, respectively. CALIFA is a legacy survey, intended for the community. The reduced data will be released, once the quality has been guaranteed. The analyzed data fulfill the expectations of the original observing proposal, on the basis of a set of quality checks and exploratory analysis: (i) the final datacubes reach a 3 sigma limiting surface brightness depth of similar to 23.0 mag/arcsec(2) for the V500 grating data (similar to 22.8 mag/arcsec(2) for V1200); (ii) about similar to 70% of the covered field-of-view is above this 3 sigma limit; (iii) the data have a blue-to-red relative flux calibration within a few percent in most of the wavelength range; (iv) the absolute flux calibration is accurate within similar to 8% with respect to SDSS; (v) the measured spectral resolution is similar to 85 km s(-1) for V1200 (similar to 150 km s(-1) for V500); (vi) the estimated accuracy of the wavelength calibration is similar to 5 km s(-1) for the V1200 data (similar to 10 km s(-1) for the V500 data); (vii) the aperture matched CALIFA and SDSS spectra are qualitatively and quantitatively similar. Finally, we show that we are able to carry out all measurements indicated above, recovering the properties of the stellar populations, the ionized gas and the kinematics of both components. The associated maps illustrate the spatial variation of these parameters across the field, reemphasizing the redshift dependence of single aperture spectroscopic measurements. We conclude from this first look at the data that CALIFA will be an important resource for archaeological studies of galaxies in the Local Universe.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012
B. Husemann; Knud Jahnke; S. F. Sánchez; D. Barrado; S. Bekeraite; D. J. Bomans; A. Castillo-Morales; Cristina Catalán-Torrecilla; R. Cid Fernandes; J. Falcón-Barroso; R. García-Benito; R. M. González Delgado; J. Iglesias-Páramo; Benjamin D. Johnson; D. Kupko; R. Lopez-Fernandez; Mariya Lyubenova; R. A. Marino; D. Mast; Arpad Miskolczi; A. Monreal-Ibero; A. Gil de Paz; Enrique Pérez; Isabel Pérez; F. F. Rosales-Ortega; T. Ruiz-Lara; U. Schilling; G. van de Ven; J. Walcher; J. Alves
We present the Calar Alto Legacy Integral Field Area survey (CALIFA). CALIFAs main aim is to obtain spatially resolved spectroscopic information for ~600 galaxies of all Hubble types in the Local Universe (0.005< z <0.03). The survey has been designed to allow three key measurements to be made: (a) Two-dimensional maps of stellar populations (star formation histories, chemical elements); (b) The distribution of the excitation mechanism and element abundances of the ionized gas; and (c) Kinematic properties (velocity ?elds, velocity dispersion), both from emission and from absorption lines. To cover the full optical extension of the target galaxies (i.e. out to a 3sigma depth of ~23 mag/arcsec2), CALIFA uses the exceptionally large ?eld of view of the PPAK/PMAS IFU at the 3.5m telescope of the Calar Alto observatory. We use two grating setups, one covering the wavelength range between 3700 and 5000 AA at a spectral resolution R~1650, and the other covering 4300 to 7000 AA at R~850. The survey was allocated 210 dark nights, distributed in 6 semesters and starting in July 2010 and is carried out by the CALIFA collaboration, comprising ~70 astronomers from 8 di?erent countries. As a legacy survey, the fully reduced data will be made publically available, once their quality has been veri?ed. We showcase here early results obtained from the data taken so far (21 galaxies).
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013
S. F. Sánchez; F. F. Rosales-Ortega; Bruno Jungwiert; J. Iglesias-Páramo; J. M. Vílchez; R. A. Marino; C. J. Walcher; B. Husemann; D. Mast; A. Monreal-Ibero; R. Cid Fernandes; Emmanuelle Perez; R. M. González Delgado; R. García-Benito; L. Galbany; G. van de Ven; Knud Jahnke; H. Flores; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; A. R. Lopez-Sanchez; V. Stanishev; Daniel Miralles-Caballero; Angeles I. Díaz; P. Sánchez-Blázquez; M. Mollá; Anna Gallazzi; P. Papaderos; J. M. Gomes; N. Gruel; Isabel Pérez
We studied the global and local ℳ-Z relation based on the first data available from the CALIFA survey (150 galaxies). This survey provides integral field spectroscopy of the complete optical extent of each galaxy (up to 2−3 effective radii), with a resolution high enough to separate individual Hu2009II regions and/or aggregations. About 3000 individual Hu2009II regions have been detected. The spectra cover the wavelength range between [OII]3727 and [SII]6731, with a sufficient signal-to-noise ratio to derive the oxygen abundance and star-formation rate associated with each region. In addition, we computed the integrated and spatially resolved stellar masses (and surface densities) based on SDSS photometric data. We explore the relations between the stellar mass, oxygen abundance and star-formation rate using this dataset. We derive a tight relation between the integrated stellar mass and the gas-phase abundance, with a dispersion lower than the one already reported in the literature (σ_Δlogu2009(O/H) = 0.07 dex). Indeed, this dispersion is only slightly higher than the typical error derived for our oxygen abundances. However, we found no secondary relation with the star-formation rate other than the one induced by the primary relation of this quantity with the stellar mass. The analysis for our sample of ~3000 individual Hu2009II regions confirms (i) a local mass-metallicity relation and (ii) the lack of a secondary relation with the star-formation rate. The same analysis was performed with similar results for the specific star-formation rate. Our results agree with the scenario in which gas recycling in galaxies, both locally and globally, is much faster than other typical timescales, such like that of gas accretion by inflow and/or metal loss due to outflows. In essence, late-type/disk-dominated galaxies seem to be in a quasi-steady situation, with a behavior similar to the one expected from an instantaneous recycling/closed-box model.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013
J. Iglesias-Páramo; J. M. Vílchez; S. Bekeraite; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Cristina Catalán-Torrecilla; A. L. de Amorim; A. de Lorenzo-Cáceres; Simon C. Ellis; J. Falcón-Barroso; H. Flores; E. Florido; Anna Gallazzi; L. Galbany; J. M. Gomes; R. M. González Delgado; Tim Haines; J. D Hernández-Fernández; C. Kehrig; A. R. Lopez-Sanchez; Mariya Lyubenova; R. A. Marino; M. Mollá; A. Monreal-Ibero; S. F. Sánchez; Ana Mourao; P. Papaderos; M. Rodrigues; P. Sánchez-Blázquez; Kristine Spekkens; Stanishev
This work investigates the effect of the aperture size on derived galaxy properties for which we H alpha ve spatially-resolved optical spectra. We focus on some indicators of star formation activity and dust attenuation for spiral galaxies that have been widely used in previous work on galaxy evolution. We investigated 104 spiral galaxies from the CALIFA survey for which 2D spectroscopy with complete spatial coverage is available. From the 3D cubes we derived growth curves of the most conspicuous Balmer emission lines (H alpha, H beta) for circular apertures of different radii centered at the galaxys nucleus after removing the underlying stellar continuum. We find that the H alpha flux (f(H alpha)) growth curve follows a well-defined sequence with aperture radius that shows a low dispersion around the median value. From this analysis, we derived aperture corrections for galaxies in different magnitude and redshift intervals. Once stellar absorption is properly accounted for, the f (H alpha)/f(H beta) ratio growth curve shows a smooth decline, pointing toward the absence of differential dust attenuation as a function of radius. Aperture corrections as a function of the radius are provided in the interval [0.3, 2.5]R-50. Finally, the H alpha equivalent-width (EW(H alpha)) growth curve increases with the size of the aperture and shows a very high dispersion for small apertures. This prevents us from using reliable aperture corrections for this quantity. In addition, this result suggests that separating star-forming and quiescent galaxies based on observed EW(H alpha) through small apertures will probably result in low EW(H alpha) star-forming galaxies begin classified as quiescent.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013
A. de Lorenzo-Cáceres; J. Falcón-Barroso; A. Vazdekis
Numerical simulations of double-barred galaxies predict the build-up of different structural components (e.g. bulges, inner discs) in the central regions of disc galaxies. In those simulations, inner bars have a prominent role in the internal secular evolution of their host galaxies. The development of bulges and inner discs is, however, poorly understood observationally due to the small number of studies focusing on the stellar populations of these systems. In order to provide constraints on the relevant processes inducing the creation of these components in the presence of inner bars, we have carried out a detailed kinematical and stellar population analysis in a sample of four double-barred galaxies, ranging from SB0 to SBb, observed with integral-field spectroscopy. We find that the inner bars present distinct stellar population properties, being younger and more metal-rich than the surrounding bulges and outer bars. While we detect signatures of gas inflow through the inner bars, we find no evidence of associated star-forming regions or newly formed structures around them. This result suggests that, regardless of their formation scenario, at present these inner bars are playing a moderate or even a minor role in the morphological evolution of this sample of double-barred galaxies.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012
A. de Lorenzo-Cáceres; A. Vazdekis; J. A. L. Aguerri; E. M. Corsini; Victor P. Debattista
Double-barred galaxies are common in the local Universe, with approximately one-third of barred spirals hosting a smaller, inner bar. Nested bars have been proposed as a mechanism to transport gas to the very central regions of the galaxy, trigger star formation and contribute to the growth of the bulge. To test this idea, we perform for the first time a detailed analysis of the photometry, kinematics and stellar populations of a double-barred galaxy: NGCxa0357. We find that this galaxy is either hosting a pseudo-bulge or a classical bulge together with an inner disc. We compare the relative mean luminosity-weighted age, metallicity and α-enhancement between the (pseudo-)bulge, inner bar and outer bar, finding that the three structures are nearly coeval and old. Moreover, the bulge and inner bar present the same metallicity and overabundance, whereas the outer bar tends to be less metal rich and more α-enhanced. These results point out that, rather than the classical secular scenario in which gas and star formation play a major role, the redistribution of the existing stars is driving the formation of the inner structures.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
S. Zibetti; Anna Gallazzi; Y. Ascasibar; S. Charlot; L. Galbany; R. García Benito; C. Kehrig; A. de Lorenzo-Cáceres; Mariya Lyubenova; R. A. Marino; I. Márquez; S. F. Sánchez; G. van de Ven; C. J. Walcher; L. Wisotzki
Galaxies in the local Universe are known to follow bimodal distributions in the global stellar population properties. We analyse the distribution of the local average stellar population ages of 654 053 sub-galactic regions resolved on ˜1 kpc scales in a volume-corrected sample of 394 galaxies, drawn from the Calar Alto Legacy Integral Field Area (CALIFA) DR3 integral-field-spectroscopy survey and complemented by Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) imaging. We find a bimodal local-age distribution, with an old and a young peak primarily due to regions in early-type galaxies and star-forming regions of spirals, respectively. Within spiral galaxies, the older ages of bulges and interarm regions relative to spiral arms support an internal age bimodality. Although regions of higher stellar mass surface density, μ*, are typically older, μ* alone does not determine the stellar population age and a bimodal distribution is found at any fixed μ*. We identify an old ridge of regions of age ˜9 Gyr, independent of μ*, and a young sequence of regions with age increasing with μ* from 1-1.5 to 4-5 Gyr. We interpret the former as regions containing only old stars, and the latter as regions where the relative contamination of old stellar populations by young stars decreases as μ* increases. The reason why this bimodal age distribution is not inconsistent with the unimodal shape of the cosmic-averaged star formation history is that (I) the dominating contribution by young stars biases the age low with respect to the average epoch of star formation, and (II) the use of a single average age per region is unable to represent the full time extent of the star formation history of young sequence regions.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017
L. Sánchez-Menguiano; S. F. Sánchez; I. Pérez; Victor P. Debattista; T. Ruiz-Lara; E. Florido; O. Cavichia; L. Galbany; R. A. Marino; D Mast; P. Sánchez-Blázquez; J. Méndez-Abreu; A. de Lorenzo-Cáceres; C. Catalán-Torrecilla; M. Cano-Díaz; I. Márquez; Daniel H. McIntosh; Y. Ascasibar; R. García-Benito; R. M. González Delgado; C. Kehrig; A. R. Lopez-Sanchez; M. Mollá; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; C. J. Walcher; L. Costantin
Spiral arms are the most singular features in disc galaxies. These structures can exhibit different patterns, namely grand design and flocculent arms, with easily distinguishable characteristics. However, their origin and the mechanisms shaping them are unclear. The overall role of spirals in the chemical evolution of disc galaxies is another unsolved question. In particular, it has not been fully explored if the H ii regions of spiral arms present different properties from those located in the interarm regions. Here we analyse the radial oxygen abundance gradient of the arm and interarm star forming regions of 63 face-on spiral galaxies using CALIFA Integral Field Spectroscopy data. We focus the analysis on three characteristic parameters of the profile: slope, zero-point, and scatter. The sample is morphologically separated into flocculent versus grand design spirals and barred versus unbarred galaxies. We find subtle but statistically significant differences betweenthe arm and interarm distributions for flocculent galaxies, suggesting that the mechanisms generating the spiral structure in these galaxies may be different to those producing grand design systems, for which no significant differences are found. We also find small differences in barred galaxies, not observed in unbarred systems, hinting that bars may affect the chemical distribution of these galaxies but not strongly enough as to be reflected in the overall abundance distribution. In light of these results, we propose bars and flocculent structure as two distinct mechanisms inducing differences in the abundance distribution between arm and interarm star forming regions.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
I. Pérez; Inma Martinez-Valpuesta; T. Ruiz-Lara; A. de Lorenzo-Cáceres; J. Falcón-Barroso; E. Florido; R. M. González Delgado; Mariya Lyubenova; R. A. Marino; S. F. Sánchez; P. Sánchez-Blázquez; G. van de Ven; A. Zurita
Boxy/peanut bulges are considered to be part of the same stellar structure as bars and both could be linked through the buckling instability. The Milky Way is our closest example. The goal of this Letter is to determine if the mass assembly of the different components leaves an imprint in their stellar populations allowing the estimation the time of bar formation and its evolution. To this aim, we use integral field spectroscopy to derive the stellar age distributions, SADs, along the bar and disc of NGC 6032. The analysis clearly shows different SADs for the different bar areas. There is an underlying old (≥12 Gyr) stellar population for the whole galaxy. The bulge shows star formation happening at all times. The inner bar structure shows stars of ages older than 6 Gyr with a deficit of younger populations. The outer bar region presents an SAD similar to that of the disc. To interpret our results, we use a generic numerical simulation of a barred galaxy. Thus, we constrain, for the first time, the epoch of bar formation, the buckling instability period and the posterior growth from disc material. We establish that the bar of NGC 6032 is old, formed around 10 Gyr ago while the buckling phase possibly happened around 8 Gyr ago. All these results point towards bars being long-lasting even in the presence of gas.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017
T. Ruiz-Lara; I. Pérez; E. Florido; P. Sánchez-Blázquez; J. Méndez-Abreu; L. Sánchez-Menguiano; S. F. Sánchez; Mariya Lyubenova; J. Falcón-Barroso; G. van de Ven; R. A. Marino; A. de Lorenzo-Cáceres; C. Catalán-Torrecilla; L. Costantin; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; L. Galbany; R. García-Benito; B. Husemann; C. Kehrig; I. Márquez; D. Mast; C. J. Walcher; S. Zibetti; Bodo L. Ziegler
Context. According to numerical simulations, stars are not always kept at their birth galactocentric distances but they have a tendency to migrate. The importance of this radial migration in shaping galactic light distributions is still unclear. However, if radial migration is indeed important, galaxies with different surface brightness (SB) profiles must display differences in their stellar population properties. Aims: We investigate the role of radial migration in the light distribution and radial stellar content by comparing the inner colour, age, and metallicity gradients for galaxies with different SB profiles. We define these inner parts, avoiding the bulge and bar regions and up to around three disc scale lengths (type I, pure exponential) or the break radius (type II, downbending; type III, upbending). Methods: We analysed 214 spiral galaxies from the CALIFA survey covering different SB profiles. We made use of GASP2D and SDSS data to characterise the light distribution and obtain colour profiles of these spiral galaxies. The stellar age and metallicity profiles were computed using a methodology based on full-spectrum fitting techniques (pPXF, GANDALF, and STECKMAP) to the Integral Field Spectroscopic CALIFA data. Results: The distributions of the colour, stellar age, and stellar metallicity gradients in the inner parts for galaxies displaying different SB profiles are unalike as suggested by Kolmogorov-Smirnov and Anderson-Darling tests. We find a trend in which type II galaxies show the steepest profiles of all, type III show the shallowest, and type I display an intermediate behaviour. Conclusions: These results are consistent with a scenario in which radial migration is more efficient for type III galaxies than for type I systems, where type II galaxies present the lowest radial migration efficiency. In such a scenario, radial migration mixes the stellar content, thereby flattening the radial stellar properties and shaping different SB profiles. However, in light of these results we cannot further quantify the importance of radial migration in shaping spiral galaxies, and other processes, such as recent star formation or satellite accretion, might play a role. Based on observations collected at the Centro Astronomico Hispano Aleman (CAHA) at Calar Alto, operated jointly by the Max-Planck Institut fur Astronomie and the Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalucia (CSIC).Table 1 is only available at the CDS via anonymous ftp to http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (http://130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/qcat?J/A+A/604/A4