Science-advisor
REGISTER info/FAQ
Login
username
password
     
forgot password?
register here
 
Research articles
  search articles
  reviews guidelines
  reviews
  articles index
My Pages
my alerts
  my messages
  my reviews
  my favorites
 
 
Stat
Members: 3645
Articles: 2'503'724
Articles rated: 2609

24 April 2024
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/9812182

 Article overview


Cosmic Histories of Stars, Gas, Heavy Elements, and Dust
Yichuan C. Pei ; S. Michael Fall ; Michael G. Hauser ;
Date 9 Dec 1998
Subject astro-ph
AffiliationSTScI
AbstractWe present a set of coupled equations that relate the stellar, gaseous, chemical, and radiation constituents of the universe averaged over the whole galaxy population. Using as input the available data from quasar absorption-line surveys, optical imaging and redshift surveys, and the COBE DIRBE and FIRAS extragalactic infrared background measurements, we obtain solutions for the cosmic histories of stars, interstellar gas, heavy elements, dust, and radiation from stars and dust in galaxies. Our solutions reproduce remarkably well a wide variety of observations that were not used as input, including the integrated background light from galaxy counts, the optical and near-infrared emissivities from galaxy surveys, the local infrared emissivities from the IRAS survey, the mean abundance of heavy elements from surveys of damped Lyman-alpha systems, and the global star formation rates from H$alpha$ surveys and submillimeter observations. The solutions presented here suggest that the process of galaxy formation appears to have undergone an early period of substantial inflow to assemble interstellar gas at $zgtrsim3$, a subsequent period of intense star formation and chemical enrichment at $1lesssim zlesssim3$, and a recent period of rapid decline in the gas content, star formation rate, optical stellar emissivity, and infrared dust emission at $zlesssim1$. [abridged version]
Source arXiv, astro-ph/9812182
Services Forum | Review | PDF | Favorites   
 
Visitor rating: did you like this article? no 1   2   3   4   5   yes

No review found.
 Did you like this article?

This article or document is ...
important:
of broad interest:
readable:
new:
correct:
Global appreciation:

  Note: answers to reviews or questions about the article must be posted in the forum section.
Authors are not allowed to review their own article. They can use the forum section.

browser Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)






ScienXe.org
» my Online CV
» Free


News, job offers and information for researchers and scientists:
home  |  contact  |  terms of use  |  sitemap
Copyright © 2005-2024 - Scimetrica