Triggered or Self-Regulated Star Formation within Intermediate Redshift Luminous Infrared Galaxies (I). Morphologies and Spatially Resolved Spectral Energy Distributions
J. Melbourne, M. Ammons, S. A. Wright, A. Metevier, E. Steinbring, C., Max, D. C. Koo, J. E. Larkin, and M. Barczys

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution imaging to analyze the morphologies and star formation patterns of intermediate redshift luminous infrared galaxies, revealing that most are disk galaxies with distributed dusty star formation, similar to large present-day disks but at higher rates.
Contribution
First detailed spatially resolved study combining optical and near-infrared imaging of intermediate redshift LIRGs, revealing their morphologies and star formation distribution.
Findings
Two thirds of LIRGs are disk galaxies.
Most LIRG disks lack prominent bars.
LIRGs exhibit distributed dusty star formation, especially in cores.
Abstract
We imaged a set of 15 intermediate redshift (z~0.8) luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs) with the Keck Laser Guide Star (LGS) AO facility. These galaxies were selected from the GOODS-S field, allowing us to combine the high spatial resolution HST optical (B, V, i, and z-bands) images with our near-infrared (K'-band) images to study the LIRG morphologies and spatially resolved spectral energy distributions (SEDs). Two thirds of the LIRGs are disk galaxies, with only one third showing some evidence for interactions, minor, or major mergers. In contrast with local LIRG disks (which are primarily barred systems), only 10% of the LIRG disks in our sample contain a prominent bar. While the optical bands tend to show significant point-like substructure, indicating distributed star formation, the AO K-band images tend to be smooth. The SEDs of the LIRGs are consistent with distributed dusty star…
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