Guinevere Kauffmann
Max Planck Society
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Publication
Featured researches published by Guinevere Kauffmann.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2004
Christy A. Tremonti; Timothy M. Heckman; Guinevere Kauffmann; Jarle Brinchmann; S. Charlot; Simon D. M. White; Mark Harry Seibert; Eric W. Peng; David J. Schlegel; Alan Uomoto; Masataka Fukugita; J. Brinkmann
We utilize Sloan Digital Sky Survey imaging and spectroscopy of ~53,000 star-forming galaxies at z ~ 0.1 to study the relation between stellar mass and gas-phase metallicity. We derive gas-phase oxygen abundances and stellar masses using new techniques that make use of the latest stellar evolutionary synthesis and photoionization models. We find a tight (?0.1 dex) correlation between stellar mass and metallicity spanning over 3 orders of magnitude in stellar mass and a factor of 10 in metallicity. The relation is relatively steep from 108.5 to 1010.5 M? h, in good accord with known trends between luminosity and metallicity, but flattens above 1010.5 M?. We use indirect estimates of the gas mass based on the H? luminosity to compare our data to predictions from simple closed box chemical evolution models. We show that metal loss is strongly anticorrelated with baryonic mass, with low-mass dwarf galaxies being 5 times more metal depleted than L* galaxies at z ~ 0.1. Evidence for metal depletion is not confined to dwarf galaxies but is found in galaxies with masses as high as 1010 M?. We interpret this as strong evidence of both the ubiquity of galactic winds and their effectiveness in removing metals from galaxy potential wells.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2003
Guinevere Kauffmann; Timothy M. Heckman; Christy A. Tremonti; Jarle Brinchmann; S. Charlot; Simon D. M. White; Susan E. Ridgway; J. Brinkmann; Masataka Fukugita; Patrick B. Hall; Željko Ivezić; Gordon T. Richards; Donald P. Schneider
We examine the properties of the host galaxies of 22,623 narrow-line AGN with 0.02<z<0.3 selected from a complete sample of 122,808 galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We focus on the luminosity of the [OIII]
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2004
Jarle Brinchmann; S. Charlot; Simon D. M. White; Christy A. Tremonti; Guinevere Kauffmann; Timothy M. Heckman; J. Brinkmann
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2003
Guinevere Kauffmann; Timothy M. Heckman; Simon D. M. White; S. Charlot; Christy A. Tremonti; Jarle Brinchmann; Gustavo Bruzual; Eric W. Peng; Mark Harry Seibert; Mariangela Bernardi; Michael R. Blanton; J. Brinkmann; Francisco J. Castander; István Csabai; Masataka Fukugita; Zeljko Ivezic; Jeffrey A. Munn; Robert C. Nichol; Nikhil Padmanabhan; Aniruddha R. Thakar; David H. Weinberg; Donald G. York
5007 emission line as a tracer of the strength of activity in the nucleus. We study how AGN host properties compare to those of normal galaxies and how they depend on L[OIII]. We find that AGN of all luminosities reside almost exclusively in massive galaxies and have distributions of sizes, stellar surface mass densities and concentrations that are similar to those of ordinary early-type galaxies in our sample. The host galaxies of low-luminosity AGN have stellar populations similar to normal early-types. The hosts of high- luminosity AGN have much younger mean stellar ages. The young stars are not preferentially located near the nucleus of the galaxy, but are spread out over scales of at least several kiloparsecs. A significant fraction of high- luminosity AGN have strong H
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2001
Volker Springel; Simon D. M. White; Giuseppe Tormen; Guinevere Kauffmann
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2006
Lisa J. Kewley; Brent Groves; Guinevere Kauffmann; Timothy M. Heckman
absorption-line equivalent widths, indicating that they experienced a burst of star formation in the recent past. We have also examined the stellar populations of the host galaxies of a sample of broad-line AGN. We conclude that there is no significant difference in stellar content between type 2 Seyfert hosts and QSOs with the same [OIII] luminosity and redshift. This establishes that a young stellar population is a general property of AGN with high [OIII] luminosities.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2003
Guinevere Kauffmann; Timothy M. Heckman; Simon D. M. White; S. Charlot; Christy A. Tremonti; Eric W. Peng; Mark Harry Seibert; J. Brinkmann; Robert C. Nichol; Mark SubbaRao; D. G. York
We present a comprehensive study of the physical properties of ∼ 10 5 galaxies with measurable star formation in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). By comparing physical information extracted from the emission lines with continuum properties, we build up a picture of the nature of star-forming galaxies at z < 0.2. We develop a method for aperture correction using resolved imaging and show that our method takes out essentially all aperture bias in the star formation rate (SFR) estimates, allowing an accurate estimate of the total SFRs in galaxies. We determine the SFR density to be 1.915 +0.02 −0.01 (random) +0.14
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2004
Guinevere Kauffmann; Simon D. M. White; Timothy M. Heckman; Brice Ménard; Jarle Brinchmann; S. Charlot; Christy A. Tremonti; J. Brinkmann
We develop a new method to constrain the star formation histories, dust attenuation and stellar masses of galaxies. It is based on two stellar absorption-line indices, the 4000-A break strength and the Balmer absorption-line index Hδ A . Together, these indices allow us to constrain the mean stellar ages of galaxies and the fractional stellar mass formed in bursts over the past few Gyr. A comparison with broad-band photometry then yields estimates of dust attenuation and of stellar mass. We generate a large library of Monte Carlo realizations of different star formation histories, including starbursts of varying strength and a range of metallicities. We use this library to generate median likelihood estimates of burst mass fractions, dust attenuation strengths, stellar masses and stellar mass-to-light ratios for a sample of 122 808 galaxies drawn from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The typical 95 per cent confidence range in our estimated stellar masses is ′40 per cent. We study how the stellar mass-to-light ratios of galaxies vary as a function of absolute magnitude, concentration index and photometric passband and how dust attenuation varies as a function of absolute magnitude and 4000-A break strength. We also calculate how the total stellar mass of the present Universe is distributed over galaxies as a function of their mass, size, concentration, colour, burst mass fraction and surface mass density. We find that most of the stellar mass in the local Universe resides in galaxies that have, to within a factor of approximately 2, stellar masses ∼5 x 10 1 0 M O ., half-light radii ∼3 kpc and half-light surface mass densities ∼10 9 M O .kpc - 2 . The distribution of D n (4000) is strongly bimodal, showing a clear division between galaxies dominated by old stellar populations and galaxies with more recent star formation.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 1999
Guinevere Kauffmann; Joerg M. Colberg; Antonaldo Diaferio; Simon D. M. White
ABSTRA C T We simulate the assembly of a massive rich cluster and the formation of its constituent galaxies in a flat, low-density universe. Our most accurate model follows the collapse, the star formation history and the orbital motion of all galaxies more luminous than the Fornax dwarf spheroidal, while dark halo structure is tracked consistently throughout the cluster for all galaxies more luminous than the SMC. Within its virial radius this model contains about 2 10 7 dark matter particles and almost 5000 distinct dynamically resolved galaxies. Simulations of this same cluster at a variety of resolutions allow us to check explicitly for numerical convergence both of the dark matter structures produced by our new parallel N-body and substructure identification codes, and of the galaxy populations produced by the phenomenological models we use to follow cooling, star formation, feedback and stellar aging. This baryonic modelling is tuned so that our simulations reproduce the observed properties of isolated spirals outside clusters. Without further parameter adjustment our simulations then produce a luminosity function, a mass-to-light ratio, luminosity, number and velocity dispersion profiles, and a morphology ‐radius relation which are similar to those observed in real clusters. In particular, since our simulations follow galaxy merging explicitly, we can demonstrate that it accounts quantitatively for the observed cluster population of bulges and elliptical galaxies.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011
Qi Guo; Simon D. M. White; Michael Boylan-Kolchin; Gabriella De Lucia; Guinevere Kauffmann; Gerard Lemson; Cheng Li; Volker Springel; Simone M. Weinmann
We present an analysis of the host properties of 85224 emission-line galaxies selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We show that Seyferts and LINERs form clearly separated branches on the standard optical diagnostic diagrams. We derive a new empirical classification scheme which cleanly separates star-forming galaxies, composite AGN-H ii galaxies, Seyferts and LINERs and we study the host galaxy properties of these different classes of objects. LINERs are older, more massive, less dusty and more concentrated, and they and have higher velocity dispersions and lower [OIII] luminosities than Seyfert galaxies. Seyferts and LINERs are most strongly distinguished by their [OIII] luminosities. We then consider the quantity L[OIII]/σ 4 , which is an indicator of the black hole accretion rate relative to the Eddington rate. Remarkably, we find that at fixed L[OIII]/σ 4 , all differences between Seyfert and LINER host properties disappear. LINERs and Seyferts form a continuous sequence, with LINERs dominant at low L/LEDD and Seyferts dominant at high L/LEDD . These results suggest that the majority of LINERs are AGN and that the Seyfert/LINER dichotomy is analogous to the high/low-state transition for X-ray binary systems. We apply theoretical photo-ionization models and show that pure LINERs require a harder ionizing radiation field with lower ionization parameter than Seyfert galaxies, consistent with the low and high X-ray binary states.