DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20066998
Emission-lines calibrations of the star formation rate from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
B. Argence1, 2 and F. Lamareille1, 31 Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Toulouse-Tarbes, Université de Toulouse, CNRS, 14 avenue Édouard Belin, 31400 Toulouse, France
e-mail: argence@apc.univ-paris7.fr
2 APC, UMR 7164, CNRS, Université Paris 7 Denis Diderot, 10 rue Alice Domon et Léonie Duquet, 75025 Paris Cedex 13, France
3 Osservatorio Astronomico di Bologna, via Ranzani 1, 40127 Bologna, Italy
e-mail: flamare@ast.obs-mip.fr
Received 21 December 2006 / Accepted 6 December 2008
Abstract
Aims. Up to now, the study of the star formation rate in galaxies
has been based mainly on the H
emission-line luminosity.
However, this standard calibration cannot be applied at all redshifts
if there is only one instrumental setup. Surveys based on optical
spectroscopy do not observe the H
emission line at redshifts
higher than z ~ 0.5. Our goal is to study existing star formation
rate calibrations and to provide new ones, still based on emission-line
luminosities, which can be applied for various instrumental setups.
Methods. We
used the SDSS public data release DR4, which gives star formation
rates and emission-line luminosities for more than 100 000 starforming
galaxies observed at low redshifts. We take advantage of this statistically
significant sample in order to study the relations, based on these
data, between the star formation rate and the luminosities of some
well-chosen emission lines. We correct the emission-line measurements
for dust attenuation using the same attenuation curve as the one used
to derive the star formation rates.
Results. We confirm that the best results
are obtained when relating star formation rates to the H
emission-line luminosity, itself corrected for dust attenuation. This
calibration has an uncertainty of 0.17 dex. We show that one has
to carefully check the method used to derive the dust attenuation
and to use the adequate calibration: in some cases, the standard scaling
law has to be replaced by a more general power law. When data are
corrected for dust attenuation but the H
emission line not
observed, the use of the H
emission line, if possible, has
to be preferred to the [OII]
3727 emission line.
In the case of uncorrected data, the correction for dust attenuation
can be assumed as a constant mean value, but we show that such a method
leads to poor results in terms of dispersion and residual slope. Self-consistent
corrections, such as previous studies based on the absolute magnitude,
give better results in terms of dispersion but still suffer from systematic
shifts and/or residual slopes. The best results with data not corrected
for dust attenuation are obtained when using the observed [OII]
3727
and H
emission lines together. This calibration has an uncertainty
of 0.23 dex.
Key words: galaxies: fundamental parameters -- galaxies: statistics -- ISM: HII regions -- ISM: dust, extinction
© ESO 2009
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