Galaxy Zoo Green Peas: Discovery of A Class of Compact Extremely Star-Forming Galaxies
Carolin N. Cardamone, Kevin Schawinski, Marc Sarzi, Steven P. Bamford,, Nicola Bennert, C. M. Urry, Chris Lintott, William C. Keel, John Parejko,, Robert C. Nichol, Daniel Thomas, Dan Andreescu, Phil Murray, M. Jordan, Raddick, Anze Slosar, Alex Szalay, Jan VandenBerg

TL;DR
This paper identifies and characterizes a class of compact, highly star-forming galaxies called Green Peas, which serve as local analogs to high-redshift starburst galaxies, providing insights into extreme star formation processes.
Contribution
It presents a well-defined sample of Green Pea galaxies, detailing their properties and highlighting their significance as local laboratories for studying high-redshift galaxy formation.
Findings
Green Peas are low mass, high star formation rate galaxies.
They have high specific star formation rates and low metallicities.
They resemble high-redshift UV-luminous galaxies in properties.
Abstract
We investigate a class of rapidly growing emission line galaxies, known as "Green Peas", first noted by volunteers in the Galaxy Zoo project because of their peculiar bright green colour and small size, unresolved in SDSS imaging. Their appearance is due to very strong optical emission lines, namely [O III] 5007 A, with an unusually large equivalent width of up to ~1000 A. We discuss a well-defined sample of 251 colour-selected objects, most of which are strongly star forming, although there are some AGN interlopers including 8 newly discovered narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxies. The star-forming Peas are low mass galaxies (M~10^8.5 - 10^10 M_sun) with high star formation rates (~10 M_sun/yr), low metallicities (log[O/H] + 12 ~ 8.7) and low reddening (E(B-V) < 0.25) and they reside in low density environments. They have some of the highest specific star formation rates (up to ~10^{-8}…
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