Low-ionization galaxies and evolution in a pilot survey up to z = 1

Abstract

We present galaxy spectroscopic data on a pencil beam of 10.75' ×7.5' centered on the X-ray cluster RXJ0054.0-2823 at z = 0.29. We study the spectral evolution of galaxies from z=1 down to the cluster redshift in a magnitude-limited sample at R≤23, for which the statistical properties of the sample are well understood. We divide emission-line galaxies in star-forming galaxies, LINERs, and Seyferts by using emission-line ratios of [OII], Hβ, and [OIII], and derive stellar fractions from population synthesis models. We focus our analysis on absorption and low-ionization galaxies. For absorption-line galaxies we recover the well known result that these galaxies have had no detectable evolution since z0.6-0.7, but we also find that in the range z=0.65-1 at least 50% of the stars in bright absorption systems are younger than 2.5Gyr. Faint absorption-line galaxies in the cluster at z = 0.29 also had significant star formation during the previous 2-3Gyr, while their brighter counterparts seem to be composed only of old stars. At z0.8, our dynamically young cluster had a truncated red-sequence. This result seems to be consistent with a scenario where the final assembly of E/S0 took place at z<1. In the volume-limited range 0.35≤ z≤0.65 we find that 23% of the early-type galaxies have LINER-like spectra with Hβ in absorption and a significant component of A stars. The vast majority of LINERs in our sample have significant populations of young and intermediate-aged stars and are thus not related to AGN, but to the population of `retired galaxies' recently identified by Cid-Fernandes et al. (2010) in the SDSS. Early-type LINERs with various fractions of A stars, and E+A galaxies appear to play an important role in the formation of the red sequence.

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