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The Nature of Compact Galaxies at z=0.2-1.3: Implications for Galaxy Evolution and the Star Formation History of the Universe

arXiv:astro-ph/9703093

Abstract

We study the global scaling-laws of 51 compact field galaxies with redshifts z = 0.2-1.3 and apparent magnitudes I<23.74 in the flanking fields of the Hubble Deep Field. Roughly 60% of the 45 compact emission-line galaxies have sizes, surface brightnesses, luminosities, velocity widths, excitations, star formation rates (SFR), and mass-to-light ratios characteristic of young star-forming HII galaxies. The remaining 40% form a more heterogeneous class of evolved starbursts, similar to local disk starburst galaxies. Without additional star formation, HII-like distant compacts will most likely fade to resemble today's spheroidal galaxies such as NGC 205. Our sample implies a lower limit for the global comoving SFR density of 0.004 M/yr/Mpc^3 at z = 0.55, and 0.008 M/yr/Mpc^3 at z = 0.85. These values, when compared to a similar sample of local galaxies, support a history of the universe in which the SFR density declines by a factor 10 from z = 1 to today. From the comparison with the SFR densities derived from previous data sets, we conclude that compact emission-line galaxies, though only 20% of the general field population, may contribute as much as 45% to the global SFR of the universe at 0.4 < z < 1.

6 pages, LaTeX (needs lamuphys.sty, included), 6 figures. To appear in the proceedings of the 3rd ESO-VLT Workshop on ``Galaxy Scaling Relations'', eds. da Costa et al., Springer. Also available at http://www.ucolick.org/~deep/papers/papers.html