UV+IR Star Formation Rates: Hickson Compact Groups with Swift and Spitzer

Abstract

We present Swift UVOT (1600-3000A) 3-band photometry for 41 galaxies in 11 nearby (<4500km/s) Hickson Compact Groups (HCGs) of galaxies. We use the uvw2-band (2000A) to estimate the dust-unobscured component, SFRUV, of the total star-formation rate, SFRT. We use Spitzer MIPS 24-micron photometry to estimate SFRIR, the dust-obscured component of SFRT. We obtain SFRT=SFRUV+SFRIR. Using 2MASS Ks band based stellar mass, M*, estimates, we calculate specific SFRs, SSFR=SFRT/M*. SSFR values show a clear and significant bimodality, with a gap between low (<~3.2x10-11 / yr) and high SSFR (>~1.2x10-10 / yr) systems. All galaxies with MIR activity index aIRAC <= 0 (>0) are in the high- (low-) SSFR locus, as expected if high levels of star-formation power MIR emission from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon molecules and a hot dust continuum. All elliptical/S0 galaxies are in the low-SSFR locus, while 22 out of 24 spirals/irregulars are in the high-SSFR locus, with two borderline cases. We divide our sample into three subsamples (I, II and III) according to decreasing HI-richness of the parent galaxy group to which a galaxy belongs. Consistent with the SSFR and aIRAC bimodality, 12 out of 15 type-I (11 out of 12 type-III) galaxies are in the high- (low-) SSFR locus, while type II galaxies span almost the full range of SSFR values. Unlike HCG galaxies, galaxies in a comparison quiescent SINGS sub-sample are continuously distributed both in SSFR and aIRAC. Any uncertainties can only further enhance the SSFR bimodality. These results suggest that an environment characterized by high galaxy number-densities and low galaxy velocity-dispersions, such as the one found in compact groups, plays a key role in accelerating galaxy evolution by enhancing star-formation processes in galaxies and favoring a fast transition to quiescence.(abridged)

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