Free access article
| Issue |
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A&A
Volume 437,
Number 3,
July III 2005
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Page(s)
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883 - 897 |
| Section |
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Extragalactic astronomy |
| DOI |
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10.1051/0004-6361:20042434 |
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A&A 437, 883-897 (2005)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20042434
The K20 survey
VII. The spectroscopic catalogue: Spectral
properties and evolution of the galaxy population
M. Mignoli1, A. Cimatti2, G. Zamorani1, L. Pozzetti1, E. Daddi3, A. Renzini3, T. Broadhurst4, S. Cristiani5, S. D'Odorico3, A. Fontana6, E. Giallongo6, R. Gilmozzi3, N. Menci6 and P. Saracco7 1
Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica, Osservatorio Astronomico
di Bologna, via Ranzani 1, 40127 Bologna, Italy
e-mail: marco.mignoli@bo.astro.it
2
Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica, Osservatorio Astrofisico
di Arcetri, Largo E.Fermi 5, 50125 Firenze, Italy
3
European Southern Observatory, Karl-Schwarzschild-Str. 2,
85748 Garching, Germany
4
Racah Institute for Physics,
The Hebrew University, Jerusalem 91904, Israel
5
Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica, Osservatorio Astronomico
di Trieste, via Tiepolo 11, 34131 Trieste, Italy
6
Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica, Osservatorio Astronomico
di Roma, via dell'Osservatorio 2, Monteporzio, Italy
7
Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica, Osservatorio Astronomico
di Brera, via E. Bianchi 46, Merate, Italy
(Received 25 November 2004 / Accepted 29 March 2005 )
Abstract
The K20 survey is a near infrared-selected, deep (
)
redshift survey targeting galaxies
in two independent regions of the sky, the Chandra Deep Field South and
the field around the quasar
0055-2659, for a total area of 52 arcmin2.
The total
-selected sample includes 545 objects.
Low-resolution (
) optical spectra for 525 of them
have been obtained with the FORS1/FORS2 spectrographs at the ESO/VLT,
providing 501 spectroscopic identifications
(including 12 type-1 AGN and 45 stars);
consequently, we were able to measure redshifts and identify stars in 96% of the observed objects, whereas the spectroscopic completeness with
respect to the total photometrically selected sample is 92% (501/545).
The K20 survey is therefore the most complete spectroscopic survey
of a near infrared-selected sample to date.
The K20 survey contains 444 spectroscopically identified galaxies,
covering a redshift range of
0.05 < z < 2.73, with a mean redshift
; excluding the 32 "low-quality" redshifts does not
significantly change these values.
This paper describes the final K20 spectroscopic catalogue, along with
the technique used to determine redshifts, measure the spectral
features and characterize the spectra. The classification of the galaxy
spectra has been performed according to a simple parametric recipe that
uses the equivalent widths of the two main emission lines
([OII]

3727 and H

+[NII]) and two continuum indices
(the 4000 Å break index, D4000, and a near-UV color index, ).
We defined three main spectroscopic classes: red early-type galaxies,
blue emission-line galaxies and the intermediate galaxies,
which show emission lines but a red continuum. More than 95% of
the examined galaxies is included in one of these spectral types and
a composite spectrum is built for each of the three galaxy classes.
The full spectroscopic catalogue, the reduced individual spectra and
the composite spectra are released to the community through
the K20 web page (http://www.arcetri.astro.it/~k20/).
The blue emission-line and the early-type galaxies
have been divided in redshift bins, and the corresponding composite
spectra have been built, in order to investigate the evolution
of the spectral properties of the K20 galaxies with redshift.
The early-type average spectra are remarkable in their
similarity, showing only subtle but systematic differences in
the D4000 index, which are consistent with the ageing of the stellar
population. Conversely, the star-forming galaxies present
a significant "blueing" of the optical/near-UV continuum
with redshift, although the [OII] equivalent width remains
constant (~33 Å) in the same redshift intervals.
We reproduce the observed properties with simple, dust-free population
synthesis models, suggesting that the high-redshift galaxies are
younger and more active than those detected at lower redshift,
whilst the equivalent width of the emission lines apparently
require a lower metallicity for the low-redshift objects.
This may be consistent with the metallicity-luminosity
relationship locally observed for star-forming galaxies.
Key words: galaxies: evolution
-- galaxies: distances and redshifts
SIMBAD Objects
Tables at the CDS
© ESO 2005
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