Starburst99 is a comprehensive set of model predictions for spectrophotometric and related properties of galaxies with active star formation. The models are an improved and extended version of the data set previously published by Leitherer & Heckman (1995). We have upgraded our code by implementing the latest set of stellar evolution models of the Geneva group and the model atmosphere grid compiled by Lejeune et al. (1997). Several predictions which were not included in the previous publication are shown here for the first time. The models are presented in a homogeneous way for five metallicities between Z = 0.040 and 0.001 and three choices of the initial mass function. The age coverage is 10^6 to 10^9 yr. We also show the spectral energy distributions which are used to compute colors and other quantities. The full data set is available for retrieval at http://www.stsci.edu/science/starburst99/. This website allows users to run specific models with non-standard parameters as well. We also make the source code available to the community.Comment: 32 pages, LaTeX. All the Figures and the summary Table are located at http://www.stsci.edu/science/starburst99/, ApJ accepte
Hubble Space Telescope ultraviolet (UV) images of nine starburst galaxies reveal them to be highly irregular, even after excluding compact sources (clusters and resolved stars). Most (7/9) are found to have a similar intrinsic effective surface brightnesses, suggesting that a negative feedback mechanism is setting an upper limit to the star formation rate per unit area. All starbursts in our sample contain UV bright star clusters indicating that cluster formation is an important mode of star formation in starbursts. On average about 20% of the UV luminosity comes from these clusters. The brightest clusters, or super star clusters (SSC), are preferentially found at the very heart of starbursts. The size of the nearest SSCs are consistent with those of Galactic globular clusters. The luminosity function of SSCs is well represented by a power law with a slope alpha ~ -2. There is a strong correlation between the far infrared excess and the UV spectral slope. The correlation is well modeled by a geometry where much of their dust is in a foreground screen near to the starburst, but not by a geometry of well mixed stars and dust.Comment: 47 pages, text only, LaTeX with aaspp.sty (version 3.0), compressed postscript figures available at ftp://eta.pha.jhu.edu/RecentPublications/meurer
We report the results of a systematic study of the vacuum-ultraviolet (λ ≃ 1150 to 2000Å) spectra of a sample of 45 starburst and related galaxies observed with the IUE satellite. These span broad ranges in metallicity (from 0.02 to 3 times solar), bolometric luminosity (∼ 10 7 to 4 × 10 11 L ⊙ ), and galaxy properties (e.g. including low-mass dwarf galaxies, normal disk galaxies, and massive galactic mergers). The projected size of the IUE spectroscopic aperture is typically one to several kpc and therefore usually encompasses the entire starburst and is similar to the aperture-sizes used for spectroscopy of high-redshift galaxies. Our principal conclusion is that local starbursts occupy a very small fractional volume in the multi-dimensional manifold defined by such fundamental parameters as the extinction, metallicity, and vacuum-UV line strengths (both stellar and interstellar) of the starburst and the rotation speed (mass) and absolute magnitude of the starburst's 'host' galaxy. More metal-rich starbursts are redder and more heavily extinguished in the UV, more luminous, have stronger vacuum-UV lines, and occur in more massive and optically-brighter host galaxies. We advocate using these local starbursts as a 'training set' to learn how to better interpret the rest-frame UV spectra of star-forming galaxies at high-redshift, and stress that the degree of similarity between local starbursts and high-redshift galaxies in this multi-dimensional parameter space can already be tested empirically. The results on local starbursts suggest that the high-redshift 'Lyman Drop-Out' galaxies are typically highly reddened and extinguished by dust (average factor of 5 to 10 in the UV), may have moderately high metallicities (0.1 to 1 times solar?), are probably building galaxies with stellar surface-mass-densities similar to present-day ellipticals, and may be suffering substantial losses of metal-enriched -3gas that can 'pollute' the inter-galactic medium.the vacuum-UV contains a wealth of spectral features, including the resonance transitions of most cosmically-abundant ionic species (cf. Morton 1991). These give UV spectroscopy a unique capability for diagnosing the (hot) stellar population and the physical, chemical, and dynamical state of gas in starbursts.Since ground-based optical observations of galaxies at high-redshifts sample the vacuum-UV portion of their rest-frame spectrum, we cannot understand how galaxies evolved without documenting the vacuum-UV properties of galaxies in the present epoch.In particular, a thorough understanding of how to exploit the diagnostic power of the rest-frame UV spectral properties of local starbursts will give astronomers powerful tools with which to study star-formation and galaxy-evolution in the early universe. Accordingly, we have undertaken an analysis of the vacuum-UV spectroscopic properties of a sample of 45 starburst and related galaxies in the local universe using the IUE archives. In section 2, we describe our analysis of these data. In section 3 we use the data to docum...
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