The nature of dusty starburst galaxies in a rich cluster at z=0.4: the progenitors of lenticulars?
J. E. Geach (Durham), Ian Smail (Durham), Sean M. Moran (Johns, Hopkins), Tommaso Treu (UCSB), Richard S. Ellis (Oxford/Caltech)

TL;DR
This study reveals a significant population of obscured starburst galaxies in a z=0.4 cluster, suggesting they are progenitors of lenticular galaxies through an evolutionary transition involving intense star formation.
Contribution
First infrared spectroscopic survey of 24um-selected LIRGs in a rich cluster at z=0.4, identifying their starburst nature and potential role in galaxy evolution.
Findings
Most LIRGs show PAH emission indicating high SFRs of 30-60 M_sun/yr
Less than 10% show evidence of active galactic nuclei
Obscured starbursts may transform gas-rich spirals into lenticulars
Abstract
We present the results of a Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) survey of 24um-selected luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs, L_IR > 10^11 L_sun) in the rich cluster Cl0024+16 at z=0.4. Optically, these LIRGs resemble unremarkable spiral galaxies with e(a)/e(c) spectral classifications and [Oii]-derived star formation rates (SFRs) of <2 M_sun/yr, generally indistinguishable from the 'quiescent' star forming population in the cluster. Our IRS spectra show that the majority of the 24um-detected galaxies exhibit polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission with implied SFRs ~30-60 M_sun/yr, with only one (<10%) of the sample displaying unambiguous evidence of an active galactic nucleus in the mid-infrared. This confirms the presence of a large population of obscured starburst galaxies in distant clusters, which comprise the bulk of the star formation occurring in these environments at…
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