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Paul Alexander
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Cavendish Astrophysics

Cosmological Evolution of Star-Forming Galaxies
Determining when and why stars formed on cosmological timescales is one
of the key problems in modern astrophysics. Observations of the local
Universe clearly demonstrate that very active star formation phases (starbursts)
are often associated with interacting and merging galaxies and that in
these systems much of the short wavelength emission is absorbed by dust
and re-emitted in the IR. Earlier work has shown that the mean
star-formation rate in the Universe was higher in the past, but it is the
discovery of extremely luminous dusty objects at high redshift (2-5) which
is challenging models of the cosmological evolution of star formation.
The
discovery of high-redshift galaxies which emit most of their power in the
far-infrared was made possible with the SCUBA instrument on the JCMT.
An early experiment used the natural lensing effects of the mass distribution
in clusters to enhance the detection rate of these very distant sources
Despite their discovery finding out more about these dusty objects is
made difficult because they are very faint at almost all non-IR wavelengths.
Therefore to make progress we must develop detailed models of the IR emission
in order to deduce the properties of the underlying "galaxy".
We are developing a simple hierarchical model of dusty-galaxy evolution,
applying it to both the high-redshift universe (as discovered in the SCUBA cluster
survey) and also to the low redshift populations detected by IRAS, and
ISO. Unfortunately the far-infrared emission is comparatively featureless
and does not discriminate between different heating sources for the dust.
We have therefore started a major observational and theoretical programme
to understand the near-IR emission which is dominated by small grains and
so-called PAH molecules. Observations with Michelle on UKIRT and
Gemini will enable us to understand the processing history of this dust
component and incorporate it in physical models of the evolving population.
A further approach is our on-going survey of the host galaxies of Gamma
Ray Bursts (GRBs) with SCUBA. GRBs are highly energetic explosions
which are thought to be linked to the death of high-mass stars and therefore
to trace star formation throughout the universe.
Last modified: 20/1/2002 |
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