Galaxy And Mass Assembly: the 1.4 GHz SFR indicator, SFR-M* relation and predictions for ASKAP-GAMA

We present a robust calibration of the 1.4 GHz radio continuum star formation rate (SFR) using a combination of the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey and the Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty-cm (FIRST) survey. We identify individually detected 1.4 GHz GAMA–FIRST sources and use a late-ty...

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Main Authors: Davies, L., Huynh, M., Hopkins, A., Seymour, Nick, Driver, S., Robotham, A., Baldry, I., Bland-Hawthorn, J., Bourne, N., Bremer, M., Brown, M., Brough, S., Cluver, M., Grootes, M., Jarvis, M., Loveday, J., Moffet, A., Owers, M., Phillipps, S., Sadler, E., Wang, L., Wilkins, S., Wright, A.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Oxford University Press 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/62913
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author Davies, L.
Huynh, M.
Hopkins, A.
Seymour, Nick
Driver, S.
Robotham, A.
Baldry, I.
Bland-Hawthorn, J.
Bourne, N.
Bremer, M.
Brown, M.
Brough, S.
Cluver, M.
Grootes, M.
Jarvis, M.
Loveday, J.
Moffet, A.
Owers, M.
Phillipps, S.
Sadler, E.
Wang, L.
Wilkins, S.
Wright, A.
author_facet Davies, L.
Huynh, M.
Hopkins, A.
Seymour, Nick
Driver, S.
Robotham, A.
Baldry, I.
Bland-Hawthorn, J.
Bourne, N.
Bremer, M.
Brown, M.
Brough, S.
Cluver, M.
Grootes, M.
Jarvis, M.
Loveday, J.
Moffet, A.
Owers, M.
Phillipps, S.
Sadler, E.
Wang, L.
Wilkins, S.
Wright, A.
author_sort Davies, L.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description We present a robust calibration of the 1.4 GHz radio continuum star formation rate (SFR) using a combination of the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey and the Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty-cm (FIRST) survey. We identify individually detected 1.4 GHz GAMA–FIRST sources and use a late-type, non-active galactic nucleus, volume-limited sample from GAMA to produce stellar mass-selected samples. The latter are then combined to produce FIRST-stacked images. This extends the robust parametrization of the 1.4 GHz–SFR relation to faint luminosities. For both the individually detected galaxies and our stacked samples, we compare 1.4 GHz luminosity to SFRs derived from GAMA to determine a new 1.4 GHz luminosity-to-SFR relation with well-constrained slope and normalization. For the first time, we produce the radio SFR–M* relation over 2 decades in stellar mass, and find that our new calibration is robust, and produces a SFR–M* relation which is consistent with all other GAMA SFR methods. Finally, using our new 1.4 GHz luminosity-to-SFR calibration we make predictions for the number of star-forming GAMA sources which are likely to be detected in the upcoming Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder surveys, Evolutionary Map of the Universe and Deep Investigation of Neutral Gas Origins.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2017
publisher Oxford University Press
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-629132018-04-09T02:22:13Z Galaxy And Mass Assembly: the 1.4 GHz SFR indicator, SFR-M* relation and predictions for ASKAP-GAMA Davies, L. Huynh, M. Hopkins, A. Seymour, Nick Driver, S. Robotham, A. Baldry, I. Bland-Hawthorn, J. Bourne, N. Bremer, M. Brown, M. Brough, S. Cluver, M. Grootes, M. Jarvis, M. Loveday, J. Moffet, A. Owers, M. Phillipps, S. Sadler, E. Wang, L. Wilkins, S. Wright, A. We present a robust calibration of the 1.4 GHz radio continuum star formation rate (SFR) using a combination of the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey and the Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty-cm (FIRST) survey. We identify individually detected 1.4 GHz GAMA–FIRST sources and use a late-type, non-active galactic nucleus, volume-limited sample from GAMA to produce stellar mass-selected samples. The latter are then combined to produce FIRST-stacked images. This extends the robust parametrization of the 1.4 GHz–SFR relation to faint luminosities. For both the individually detected galaxies and our stacked samples, we compare 1.4 GHz luminosity to SFRs derived from GAMA to determine a new 1.4 GHz luminosity-to-SFR relation with well-constrained slope and normalization. For the first time, we produce the radio SFR–M* relation over 2 decades in stellar mass, and find that our new calibration is robust, and produces a SFR–M* relation which is consistent with all other GAMA SFR methods. Finally, using our new 1.4 GHz luminosity-to-SFR calibration we make predictions for the number of star-forming GAMA sources which are likely to be detected in the upcoming Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder surveys, Evolutionary Map of the Universe and Deep Investigation of Neutral Gas Origins. 2017 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/62913 10.1093/mnras/stw3080 Oxford University Press restricted
spellingShingle Davies, L.
Huynh, M.
Hopkins, A.
Seymour, Nick
Driver, S.
Robotham, A.
Baldry, I.
Bland-Hawthorn, J.
Bourne, N.
Bremer, M.
Brown, M.
Brough, S.
Cluver, M.
Grootes, M.
Jarvis, M.
Loveday, J.
Moffet, A.
Owers, M.
Phillipps, S.
Sadler, E.
Wang, L.
Wilkins, S.
Wright, A.
Galaxy And Mass Assembly: the 1.4 GHz SFR indicator, SFR-M* relation and predictions for ASKAP-GAMA
title Galaxy And Mass Assembly: the 1.4 GHz SFR indicator, SFR-M* relation and predictions for ASKAP-GAMA
title_full Galaxy And Mass Assembly: the 1.4 GHz SFR indicator, SFR-M* relation and predictions for ASKAP-GAMA
title_fullStr Galaxy And Mass Assembly: the 1.4 GHz SFR indicator, SFR-M* relation and predictions for ASKAP-GAMA
title_full_unstemmed Galaxy And Mass Assembly: the 1.4 GHz SFR indicator, SFR-M* relation and predictions for ASKAP-GAMA
title_short Galaxy And Mass Assembly: the 1.4 GHz SFR indicator, SFR-M* relation and predictions for ASKAP-GAMA
title_sort galaxy and mass assembly: the 1.4 ghz sfr indicator, sfr-m* relation and predictions for askap-gama
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/62913