Lessons on the high-z Universe from local Laboratories: Extreme Environments in Blueberry Galaxies [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1806.10149


A population of so-called “blueberry” dwarf galaxies with extremely blue colors, low-metallicities, and enormous ionization ratios, has recently been found by \cite{Yang17}. As a pilot study of these blueberries, we investigate two new blueberry candidates, RGG\,B and RGG\,5, which have Hubble Space Telescope high-resolution images.~We find that RGG\,B and RGG\,5 are likely to be merging dwarf galaxies; RGG\,B may have a close merging companion, and RGG\,5 presents shell-like outskirts.~Yet the current evidence still cannot exclude the possibility that RGG~B is just disturbed by in-situ star formation through, e.g., outflows, rather than undergoing a merger.~All of the blueberries, including RGG\,B and RGG\,5, are located close to the theoretical maximum-starburst-line in the BPT diagram, have very high ionization parameters, and relatively low hardness ionizing radiation fields, exhibit nitrogen overabundances, and show extremely red mid-IR colors, and reside in the so-called “ULIRGs/LINERs/Obscured AGN” region.~Their specific star formation rates (sSFR) range among the most extreme and compare with those of extreme starbursts at high redshifts.~The blueberry galaxies may not harbor AGN, which may be due to their very early phases of the galaxy merging process.

Read this paper on arXiv…

Y. Rong, H. Yang, H. Zhang, et. al.
Thu, 28 Jun 18
41/60

Comments: 10 pages, 7 figures, 1 table; submitted to ApJ