Bibcode
Beckman, J. E.; Giammanco, C.
Referencia bibliográfica
Memorie della Società Astronomica Italiana, v.81, p.460 (2010)
Fecha de publicación:
2010
Número de citas
1
Número de citas referidas
1
Descripción
Long duration gamma ray bursts (GRB's) have been identified as
originating in type II SNa explosions, produced during the late stage
evolution of massive stars. As the lifetimes of their progenitors are so
short the GRB rate per unit (comoving) volume of space, on scales which
include significant numbers of galaxies, could be proportional to the
star formation rate (SFR), at least to the formation rate of massive
stars. Unfortunately both theory and observation imply that those SNe
which give rise to gamma ray bursts occur in stars of low metallicity,
less than half an order of magnitude lower than solar. Here we examine
the evidence and show that although some workers believe that it is
possible to use local galaxies with GRB's to calibrate the SFR in more
distant galaxies others claim that this may be possible given
independent ways of determining the metallicities of the distant
galaxies, while others suggest that it is too difficult, at least with
present measurements, to use GRB's to determine the SFR at values of
redshift higher than 5. We conclude that although their intrinsic power
gives GRB's the facility to guide observers towards star forming
galaxies, only by also using complementary indicators will we be able to
make plausible determinations of the SFR as a function of epoch beyond z
= 5, i.e. during the first 2 Gyr after the Big Bang.
Proyectos relacionados
Estudios Cinemáticos, Estructurales y de Composición, de los Medios Interestelares e Intergalácticos
El objetivo básico del proyecto es investigar la evolución de las galaxias mediante el entendimiento de la interacción del medio interestelar y las estrellas. La técnica principal que utilizamos es la cinemática bidimensional de galaxias enteras observada por nuestro instrumento GHaFaS, un interferometro Fabry Perot en el telescopio William
Prof.
John E. Beckman