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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

A Bare Molecular Cloud At Z ~ 0.45*, Therese M. Jones, Toru Misawa, Jane C. Charlton, Andrew C. Mshar, Gary J. Ferland Jun 2010

A Bare Molecular Cloud At Z ~ 0.45*, Therese M. Jones, Toru Misawa, Jane C. Charlton, Andrew C. Mshar, Gary J. Ferland

Physics and Astronomy Faculty Publications

Several neutral species (Mg I, Si I, Ca I, Fe I) have been detected in a weak Mg II absorption line system (Wr (2796) ~ 0.15 Å) at z ~ 0.45 along the sightline toward HE0001-2340. These observations require extreme physical conditions, as noted in D'Odorico. We place further constraints on the properties of this system by running a wide grid of photoionization models, determining that the absorbing cloud that produces the neutral absorption is extremely dense (~100-1000 cm-3), cold (< 100 K), and has significant molecular content (~72%-94%). Structures of this size and temperature have been detected in Milky Way CO surveys and have been predicted in hydrodynamic simulations of turbulent gas. In order to explain the observed line profiles in all neutral and singly ionized chemical transitions, the lines must suffer from unresolved saturation and/or the absorber must partially cover the broad emission line region of the background quasar. In addition to this highly unusual cloud, three other ordinary weak Mg II clouds (within densities of ~0.005 cm-3 and temperatures of ~10, 000 K) lie within 500 km s-1 along the …


A Z=1.82 Analog Of Local Ultra-Massive Elliptical Galaxies, M Onodera, E Daddi, R Gobat, M Cappellari, N Arimoto, A Renzini, Y Yamada, Hj Mccracken, C Mancini, P Capak, M Carollo, A Cimatti, M Giavalisco, O Ilbert, X Kong, S Lilly, K Motohara, K Ohta, Db Sanders, N Scoville, N Tamura, Y Taniguchi Jan 2010

A Z=1.82 Analog Of Local Ultra-Massive Elliptical Galaxies, M Onodera, E Daddi, R Gobat, M Cappellari, N Arimoto, A Renzini, Y Yamada, Hj Mccracken, C Mancini, P Capak, M Carollo, A Cimatti, M Giavalisco, O Ilbert, X Kong, S Lilly, K Motohara, K Ohta, Db Sanders, N Scoville, N Tamura, Y Taniguchi

Astronomy Department Faculty Publication Series

We present observations of a very massive galaxy at z = 1.82 that show that its morphology, size, velocity dispersion, and stellar population properties are fully consistent with those expected for passively evolving progenitors of today's giant ellipticals. These findings are based on a deep optical rest-frame spectrum obtained with the Multi-Object InfraRed Camera and Spectrograph on the Subaru Telescope of a high-z passive galaxy candidate (pBzK) from the COSMOS field, for which we accurately measure its redshift of z = 1.8230 and obtain an upper limit on its velocity dispersion σ⋆ < 326  km s−1. By detailed stellar population modeling of both the galaxy broadband spectral energy distribution and the rest-frame optical spectrum, we derive a star formation-weighted age and formation redshift of tsf ≃ 1–2 Gyr and z …


The Nature Of Submillimetre Galaxies In Cosmological Hydrodynamic Simulations, R Dave, K Finlator, Bd Oppenheimer, M Fardal, N Katz, D Keres, Dh Weinberg Jan 2010

The Nature Of Submillimetre Galaxies In Cosmological Hydrodynamic Simulations, R Dave, K Finlator, Bd Oppenheimer, M Fardal, N Katz, D Keres, Dh Weinberg

Astronomy Department Faculty Publication Series

We study the nature of rapidly star-forming galaxies at z= 2 in cosmological hydrodynamic simulations, and compare their properties to observations of submillimetre galaxies (SMGs). We identify simulated SMGs as the most rapidly star-forming systems that match the observed number density of SMGs. In our models, SMGs are massive galaxies sitting at the centres of large potential wells, being fed by smooth infall and gas-rich satellites at rates comparable to their star formation rates (SFRs). They are not typically undergoing major mergers that significantly boost their quiescent SFR, but they still often show complex gas morphologies and kinematics. Our …


Mid-Infrared Spectroscopy Of Candidate Active Galactic Nuclei-Dominated Submillimeter Galaxies, K Coppin, A Pope, K Menendez-Delmestre, Dm Alexander, Js Dunlop, E Egami, J Gabor, E Ibar, Rj Ivison, Je Austermann, Aw Blain, Sc Chapman, Dl Clements, L Dunne, S Dye, D Farrah, Dh Hughes, Amj Mortier, Mj Page, M Rowan-Robinson, D Scott, C Simpson, I Smail, Am Swinbank, M Vaccari, Min Yun Jan 2010

Mid-Infrared Spectroscopy Of Candidate Active Galactic Nuclei-Dominated Submillimeter Galaxies, K Coppin, A Pope, K Menendez-Delmestre, Dm Alexander, Js Dunlop, E Egami, J Gabor, E Ibar, Rj Ivison, Je Austermann, Aw Blain, Sc Chapman, Dl Clements, L Dunne, S Dye, D Farrah, Dh Hughes, Amj Mortier, Mj Page, M Rowan-Robinson, D Scott, C Simpson, I Smail, Am Swinbank, M Vaccari, Min Yun

Astronomy Department Faculty Publication Series

Spitzer spectroscopy has revealed that 80% of submm galaxies (SMGs) are starburst (SB)-dominated in the mid-infrared. Here we focus on the remaining 20% that show signs of harboring powerful active galactic nuclei (AGNs). We have obtained Spitzer-InfraRed Spectrograph spectroscopy of a sample of eight SMGs that are candidates for harboring powerful AGNs on the basis of IRAC color selection (S 8 μm/S 4.5 μm>2, i.e., likely power-law mid-infrared spectral energy distributions). SMGs with an AGN dominating (50%) their mid-infrared emission could represent the "missing link" sources in an evolutionary sequence involving a major merger. First …


Origins Of The Extragalactic Background At 1mm From A Combined Analysis Of The Aztec And Mambo Data In Goods-N, Kyle Penner, Alexandra Pope, Edward L. Chapin, Thomas R. Greve, Frank Bertoldi, Mark Brodwin, Ranga-Ram Chary, Christopher J, Conselice, Kristen Coppin, Mauro Giavalisco, David H. Hughes, Rob J. Ivison, Thushara Perera, Douglas Scott, Kimberly Scott, Grant Wilson Jan 2010

Origins Of The Extragalactic Background At 1mm From A Combined Analysis Of The Aztec And Mambo Data In Goods-N, Kyle Penner, Alexandra Pope, Edward L. Chapin, Thomas R. Greve, Frank Bertoldi, Mark Brodwin, Ranga-Ram Chary, Christopher J, Conselice, Kristen Coppin, Mauro Giavalisco, David H. Hughes, Rob J. Ivison, Thushara Perera, Douglas Scott, Kimberly Scott, Grant Wilson

Mauro Giavalisco

We present a study of the cosmic infrared background, which is a measure of the dust obscured activity in all galaxies in the Universe. We venture to isolate the galaxies responsible for the background at 1mm; with spectroscopic and photometric redshifts we constrain the redshift distribution of these galaxies. We create a deep 1.16mm map (sigma ~ 0.5mJy) by combining the AzTEC 1.1mm and MAMBO 1.2mm datasets in GOODS-N. This combined map contains 41 secure detections, 13 of which are new. By averaging the 1.16mm flux densities of individually undetected galaxies with 24um flux densities > 25uJy, we resolve 31--45 per …


A Spectroscopic Search For Leaking Lyman Continuum At Z~0.7, Carrie R. Bridge, Harry I. Teplitz, Brian Siana, Claudia Scarlata, Christopher J. Conselice, Henry C. Ferguson, Thomas M. Brown, Mara Salvato, Gwen C. Rudie, Duilia F. De Mello, James Colbert, Jonathan P. Gardner, Mauro Giavalisco, Lee Armus Jan 2010

A Spectroscopic Search For Leaking Lyman Continuum At Z~0.7, Carrie R. Bridge, Harry I. Teplitz, Brian Siana, Claudia Scarlata, Christopher J. Conselice, Henry C. Ferguson, Thomas M. Brown, Mara Salvato, Gwen C. Rudie, Duilia F. De Mello, James Colbert, Jonathan P. Gardner, Mauro Giavalisco, Lee Armus

Mauro Giavalisco

We present the results of rest-frame, UV slitless spectroscopic observations of a sample of 32 z~0.7 Lyman break galaxy (LBG) analogs in the COSMOS field. The spectroscopic search was performed with the Solar Blind Channel (SBC) on Hubble Space Telescope. We report the detection of leaking Lyman continuum (LyC) radiation from an AGN-starburst composite. While we find no direct detections of LyC emission in the remainder of our sample, we achieve individual lower limits (3 sigma) of the observed non-ionizing UV to LyC flux density ratios, f_{nu}(1500A)/f_{nu}(830A) of 20 to 204 (median of 73.5) and 378.7 for the stack. Assuming …


Improving The Estimation Of Star Formation Rates And Stellar Population Ages Of High-Redshift Galaxies From Broadband Photometry, Seong-Kook Lee, Henry C. Ferguson, Rachel S. Somerville, Tommy Wiklind, Mauro Giavalisco Jan 2010

Improving The Estimation Of Star Formation Rates And Stellar Population Ages Of High-Redshift Galaxies From Broadband Photometry, Seong-Kook Lee, Henry C. Ferguson, Rachel S. Somerville, Tommy Wiklind, Mauro Giavalisco

Mauro Giavalisco

We explore methods to improve the estimates of star formation rates and mean stellar population ages from broadband photometry of high redshift star-forming galaxies. We use synthetic spectral templates with a variety of simple parametric star formation histories to fit broadband spectral energy distributions. These parametric models are used to infer ages, star formation rates and stellar masses for a mock data set drawn from a hierarchical semi-analytic model of galaxy evolution. Traditional parametric models generally assume an exponentially declining rate of star-formation after an initial instantaneous rise. Our results show that star formation histories with a much more gradual …


The Bright End Of The Z ~ 7 Uv Luminosity Function From A Wide And Deep Hawk-I Survey, M. Castellano, A. Fontana, D. Paris, A. Grazian, L. Pentericci, K. Boutsia, P. Santini, V. Testa, M. Dickinson, Mauro Giavalisco, R. Bouwens, J.-G. Cuby, F. Mannucci, B. Clément, S. Cristiani, F. Fiore, S. Gallozzi, E. Giallongo, R. Maiolino, N. Menci, A. Moorwood, N. Nonino, A. Renzini, P. Rosati, S. Salimbeni, E. Vanzella Jan 2010

The Bright End Of The Z ~ 7 Uv Luminosity Function From A Wide And Deep Hawk-I Survey, M. Castellano, A. Fontana, D. Paris, A. Grazian, L. Pentericci, K. Boutsia, P. Santini, V. Testa, M. Dickinson, Mauro Giavalisco, R. Bouwens, J.-G. Cuby, F. Mannucci, B. Clément, S. Cristiani, F. Fiore, S. Gallozzi, E. Giallongo, R. Maiolino, N. Menci, A. Moorwood, N. Nonino, A. Renzini, P. Rosati, S. Salimbeni, E. Vanzella

Mauro Giavalisco

(Abridged) We present here the second half of an ESO Large Programme, which exploits the unique combination of area and sensitivity provided in the near-IR by the camera Hawk-I at the VLT. We have obtained - 30 observing hours with Hawk-I in the Y-band of two high galactic latitude fields. We combined the Y-band data with deep J and K Hawk-I observations, and with FORS1/FORS2 U, B, V, R, I, and Z observations to select z-drop galaxies having Z - Y > 1, no optical detection and flat Y - J and Y - K colour terms. We detect 8 high-quality …


A Critical Analysis Of The Uv Luminosity Function At Redshift~7 From Deep Wfc3 Data, A. Grazian, M. Castellano, A. M. Koekemoer, A. Fontana, L. Pentericci, V. Testa, K. Boutsia, E. Giallongo, Mauro Giavalisco, P. Santini Jan 2010

A Critical Analysis Of The Uv Luminosity Function At Redshift~7 From Deep Wfc3 Data, A. Grazian, M. Castellano, A. M. Koekemoer, A. Fontana, L. Pentericci, V. Testa, K. Boutsia, E. Giallongo, Mauro Giavalisco, P. Santini

Mauro Giavalisco

The study of the Luminosity Function (LF) of Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) at z=7 is important for ascertaining their role in the reionization of the Universe. We perform a detailed and critical analysis of the statistical and systematic errors in the z~7 LF determination: we have assembled a large sample of candidate LBGs at z~7 from different surveys, spanning a large variety of areas and depths. In particular, we have combined data from the deep (J<27.4) and ultradeep (J<29.2) surveys recently acquired with the new WFC3 NIR camera on HST, over the GOODS-ERS and the HUDF fields, with ground based surveys in wide and shallow areas from VLT and Subaru. We have used public ACS images in the z-band to select z-dropout galaxies, and other public data both in the blue (BVI) and in the red bands to reject possible low-redshift interlopers. We have compared our results with extensive simulations to quantify the observational effects of our selection criteria as well as the effects of photometric scatter, color selections or the morphology of the candidates. We have found that the number density of faint LBGs at z~7 is only marginally sensitive to the color selection adopted, but it is strongly dependent from the assumption made on the half light distributions of the simulated galaxies, used to correct the observed sample for incompleteness. The slope of the faint end of the LBGs LF has thus a rather large uncertainty, due to the unknown distribution of physical sizes of the z~7 LBGs. We conclude that galaxies at z~7 are unable to reionize the Universe unless there is a significant evolution in the clumpiness of the IGM or in the escape fraction of ionising photons or, alternatively, there is a large population of z~7 LBGs with large physical dimensions but still not detected by the present observations.


A Z=1.82 Analog Of Local Ultra-Massive Elliptical Galaxies, M. Onodera, E. Daddi, R. Gobat, M. Cappellari, N. Arimoto, A. Renzini, Y. Yamada, H. J. Mccracken, C. Mancini, P. Capak, M. Carollo, A. Cimatti, Mauro Giavalisco, O. Ilbert, X. Kong, S. Lilly, K. Motohara, K. Ohta, D. B. Sanders, N. Scoville, N. Tamura, Y. Taniguchi Jan 2010

A Z=1.82 Analog Of Local Ultra-Massive Elliptical Galaxies, M. Onodera, E. Daddi, R. Gobat, M. Cappellari, N. Arimoto, A. Renzini, Y. Yamada, H. J. Mccracken, C. Mancini, P. Capak, M. Carollo, A. Cimatti, Mauro Giavalisco, O. Ilbert, X. Kong, S. Lilly, K. Motohara, K. Ohta, D. B. Sanders, N. Scoville, N. Tamura, Y. Taniguchi

Mauro Giavalisco

We present observations of a very massive galaxy at z=1.82 which show that its morphology, size, velocity dispersion and stellar population properties that are fully consistent with those expected for passively evolving progenitors of today's giant ellipticals. These findings are based on a deep optical rest-frame spectrum obtained with the Multi-Object InfraRed Camera and Spectrograph (MOIRCS) on the Subaru telescope of a high-z passive galaxy candidate (pBzK) from the COSMOS field, for which we accurately measure its redshift of z=1.8230 and obtain an upper limit on its velocity dispersion sigma_star<326 km/s. By detailed stellar population modeling of both the galaxy broad-band SED and the rest-frame optical spectrum we derive a star-formation-weighted age and formation redshift of t_sf~1-2 Gyr and z_form~2.5-4, and a stellar mass of M_star~(3-4)x10^{11} M_sun. This is in agreement with a virial mass limit of M_vir<7x10^{11}M_sun, derived from the measured sigma_star value and stellar half-light radius, as well as with the dynamical mass limit based on the Jeans equations. In contrast with previously reported super-dense passive galaxies at z~2, the present galaxy at z=1.82 appears to have both size and velocity dispersion similar to early-type galaxies in the local Universe with similar stellar mass. This suggests that z~2 massive and passive galaxies may exhibit a wide range of properties, then possibly following quite different evolutionary histories from z~2 to z=0.


A Detailed Study Of Photometric Redshifts For Goods-South Galaxies, Tomas Dahlen, Bahram Mobasher, Mark Dickinson, Henry C. Ferguson, Mauro Giavalisco, Norman A. Grogin, Yicheng Guo, Anton Koekemoer, Kyoung-Soo Lee, Seong-Kook Lee, Mario Nonino, Adam G. Reiss, Sara Salimbeni Jan 2010

A Detailed Study Of Photometric Redshifts For Goods-South Galaxies, Tomas Dahlen, Bahram Mobasher, Mark Dickinson, Henry C. Ferguson, Mauro Giavalisco, Norman A. Grogin, Yicheng Guo, Anton Koekemoer, Kyoung-Soo Lee, Seong-Kook Lee, Mario Nonino, Adam G. Reiss, Sara Salimbeni

Mauro Giavalisco

We use the deepest and the most comprehensive photometric data currently available for GOODS-South galaxies to measure their photometric redshifts. The photometry includes VLT/VIMOS (U-band), HST/ACS (F435W, F606W, F775W, and F850LP bands), VLT/ISAAC (J-, H-, and Ks-bands), and four Spitzer/IRAC channels (3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8.0 micron). The catalog is selected in the z-band (F850LP) and photometry in each band is carried out using the recently completed TFIT algorithm, which performs PSF matched photometry uniformly across different instruments and filters, despite large variations in PSFs and pixel scales. Photometric redshifts are derived using the GOODZ code, which is based on …


The Rising Star-Formation Histories Of Distant Galaxies And Implications For Gas Accretion With Time, Casey Papovich, Steven L. Finkelstein, Henry C. Ferguson, Jennifer M. Lotz, Mauro Giavalisco Jan 2010

The Rising Star-Formation Histories Of Distant Galaxies And Implications For Gas Accretion With Time, Casey Papovich, Steven L. Finkelstein, Henry C. Ferguson, Jennifer M. Lotz, Mauro Giavalisco

Mauro Giavalisco

Distant galaxies show correlations between their current star-formation rates (SFRs) and stellar masses, implying that their star-formation histories (SFHs) are highly similar. Moreover, observations show that the UV luminosities and stellar masses grow from z=8 to 3, implying that the SFRs increase with time. We compare the cosmologically averaged evolution in galaxies at 3 < z < 8 at constant comoving number density, n = 2 x 10^-4 Mpc^-3. This allows us to study the evolution of stellar mass and star formation in the galaxy predecessors and descendants in ways not possible using galaxies selected at constant stellar mass or SFR, quantities that evolve strongly in time. We show that the average SFH of these galaxies increase smoothly from z=8 to 3 as SFR ~ t^alpha with alpha = 1.7 +/- 0.2. This conflicts with assumptions that the SFR is either constant or declines exponentially in time. We show that the stellar mass growth in these galaxies is consistent with this derived SFH. This provides evidence that the slope of the high-mass end of the IMF is approximately Salpeter unless the duty cycle of star formation is much less than unity. We argue that these relations follow from gas accretion (either through accretion or delivered by mergers) coupled with galaxy disk growth under the assumption that the SFR depends on the local gas surface density. This predicts that gas fractions decrease from z=8 to 3 on average as f_gas ~ (1+z)^0.9 for galaxies with this number density. The implied galaxy gas accretion rates at z > 4 are as fast and may even exceed the SFR: this is the "gas accretion epoch". At z < 4 the SFR overtakes the implied gas accretion rate, indicating a period where galaxies consume gas faster than it is acquired. At z < 3, galaxies with this number density depart from these relations implying that star formation and gas accretion are slowed at later times.


The Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey: Constraints On The Lyman Continuum Escape Fraction Distribution Of Lyman--Break Galaxies At 3.4, E. Vanzella, Mauro Giavalisco, A. Inoue, M. Nonino, F. Fontanot, S. Cristiani, A. Grazian, M. Dickinson, D. Stern, P. Tozzi, E. Giallongo, H. Ferguson, H. Spinrad, K. Boutsia, A. Fontana, P. Rosati Jan 2010

The Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey: Constraints On The Lyman Continuum Escape Fraction Distribution Of Lyman--Break Galaxies At 3.4, E. Vanzella, Mauro Giavalisco, A. Inoue, M. Nonino, F. Fontanot, S. Cristiani, A. Grazian, M. Dickinson, D. Stern, P. Tozzi, E. Giallongo, H. Ferguson, H. Spinrad, K. Boutsia, A. Fontana, P. Rosati

Mauro Giavalisco

We use ultra-deep ultraviolet VLT/VIMOS intermediate-band and VLT/FORS1 narrow-band imaging in the GOODS Southern field to derive limits on the distribution of the escape fraction (f_esc) of ionizing radiation for L >~ L*(z=3) Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) at redshift 3.4--4.5. Only one LBG, at redshift z=3.795, is detected in its Lyman continuum (LyC; S/N~5.5), the highest redshift galaxy currently known with a direct detection. Its ultraviolet morphology is quite compact (R_eff=0.8, kpc physical). Three out of seven AGN are also detected in their LyC, including one at redshift z=3.951 and z850 = 26.1. From stacked data (LBGs) we set an …


Color-Magnitude Relation And Morphology Of Low-Redshift Ulirgs In Sloan Digital Sky Survey, Yuxi Chen, James D. Lowenthal, Min S. Yun Jan 2010

Color-Magnitude Relation And Morphology Of Low-Redshift Ulirgs In Sloan Digital Sky Survey, Yuxi Chen, James D. Lowenthal, Min S. Yun

Astronomy: Faculty Publications

We present color-magnitude and morphological analysis of 54 low-redshift ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs; 0.018 < z < 0.265 with z = 0.151), a subset of the Infrared Astronomical Satellite 1Jy sample, in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The ULIRGs are both bright and blue: they are on average 1mag brighter in than the SDSS galaxies within the same redshift range, and 0.2mag bluer in g - r. They form a group in the color-magnitude diagram distinct from both the red sequence and the blue cloud formed by the SDSS galaxies: 24 out of the 52 unsaturated objects (46%) lie outside the 90% level number density contour of the SDSS galaxies. The majority (47, or 87%) have the colors typical of the blue cloud, and only four (7%) sources are located in the red sequence. While ULIRGs are popularly thought to be precursors to a QSO phase, we find few (three, or 6%) in the "green valley" where the majority of the X-ray- and IR-selected active galactic nuclei (AGNs) are found. Moreover, none of the AGN-host ULIRGs are found in the green valley. For the 14 previously spectroscopic identified AGNs (28%), we perform point-spread function subtractions and find that on average the central point sources contribute less than one-third to the total luminosity, and that their high optical luminosities and overall blue colors are apparently the result of star formation activity of the host galaxies. Visual inspection of the SDSS images reveals a wide range of morphologies including many close pairs, tidal tails, and otherwise disturbed profiles, in strong support of previous studies and the general view of ULIRGs as major mergers of gas-rich disk galaxies. A detailed morphology analysis using Gini and M coefficients shows that slightly less than one-half (42% in g band) of the ULIRGs are located in the merger region defined by morphology studies of local galaxies, while the remaining sources are located in the region of late-type and irregular galaxies. The heterogeneous distribution of ULIRGs in the G-M space is qualitatively consistent with the results found by numerical simulations of disk-disk mergers, and our study also shows that the measured morphological parameters are systematically affected by the signal-to-noise ratio and thus the merging galaxies can appear in various regions of the G-M parameter space. We briefly discuss the origins of the uncertainties and note that the morphology measurements should be implemented with caution for low physical resolution images. In general, our results reinforce the view that ULIRGs contain young stellar populations and are mergers in progress, but we do not observe the concentration of ULIRGs/AGN in the green valley as found by other studies. Our study provides a uniform comparison sample for studying dusty starbursts at higher redshifts such as Spitzer MIPS 24 μm-selected ULIRGs at z = 1-2 or submillimeter galaxies.


Origins Of The Extragalactic Background At 1mm From A Combined Analysis Of The Aztec And Mambo Data In Goods-N, Kyle Penner, Alexandra Pope, Edward Chapin, Thomas Greve, Frank Bertoldi, Mark Brodwin, Ranga-Ram Chary, Christopher Conselice, Kristen Coppin, Mauro Giavalisco, David Hughes, Rob Ivison, Thushara Perera, Douglas Scott, Kimberly Scott, Grant Wilson Jan 2010

Origins Of The Extragalactic Background At 1mm From A Combined Analysis Of The Aztec And Mambo Data In Goods-N, Kyle Penner, Alexandra Pope, Edward Chapin, Thomas Greve, Frank Bertoldi, Mark Brodwin, Ranga-Ram Chary, Christopher Conselice, Kristen Coppin, Mauro Giavalisco, David Hughes, Rob Ivison, Thushara Perera, Douglas Scott, Kimberly Scott, Grant Wilson

Scholarship

We present a study of the cosmic infrared background, which is a measure of the dust obscured activity in all galaxies in the Universe. We venture to isolate the galaxies responsible for the background at 1mm; with spectroscopic and photometric redshifts we constrain the redshift distribution of these galaxies. We create a deep 1.16mm map (sigma ~ 0.5mJy) by combining the AzTEC 1.1mm and MAMBO 1.2mm datasets in GOODS-N. This combined map contains 41 secure detections, 13 of which are new. By averaging the 1.16mm flux densities of individually undetected galaxies with 24um flux densities > 25uJy, we resolve 31--45 per …


Aztec Half Square Degree Survey Of The Shades Fields - I. Maps, Catalogues And Source Counts, J. E. Austermann, J. S. Dunlop, T. A. Perera, K. S. Scott, G. W. Wilson, I. Aretxaga, D. H. Hughes, O. Almaini, E. L. Chapin, S. C. Chapman, M. Cirasuolo, D. L. Clements, K. E.K. Coppin, L. Dunne, S. Dye, S. A. Eales, E. Egami, D. Farrah, D. Ferrusca, S. Flynn, D. Haig, M. Halpern, E. Ibar, R. J. Ivison, E. Van Kampen, Y. Kang, S. Kim, C. Lacey, James D. Lowenthal, P. D. Mauskopf, R. J. Mclure, A. M.J. Mortier Jan 2010

Aztec Half Square Degree Survey Of The Shades Fields - I. Maps, Catalogues And Source Counts, J. E. Austermann, J. S. Dunlop, T. A. Perera, K. S. Scott, G. W. Wilson, I. Aretxaga, D. H. Hughes, O. Almaini, E. L. Chapin, S. C. Chapman, M. Cirasuolo, D. L. Clements, K. E.K. Coppin, L. Dunne, S. Dye, S. A. Eales, E. Egami, D. Farrah, D. Ferrusca, S. Flynn, D. Haig, M. Halpern, E. Ibar, R. J. Ivison, E. Van Kampen, Y. Kang, S. Kim, C. Lacey, James D. Lowenthal, P. D. Mauskopf, R. J. Mclure, A. M.J. Mortier

Astronomy: Faculty Publications

We present the first results from the largest deep extragalactic mm-wavelength survey undertaken to date. These results are derived from maps covering over 0.7 deg , made at λ = 1.1 mm, using the AzTEC continuum camera mounted on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. The maps were made in the two fields originally targeted at λ = 850 μm with the Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) in the SCUBA Half-Degree Extragalactic Survey (SHADES) project, namely the Lockman Hole East (mapped to a depth of 0.9-1.3 mJy rms) and the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field (mapped to a depth of 1.0-1.7 mJy rms). …


Deep 1.1 Mm-Wavelength Imaging Of The Goods-S Field By Aztec/Aste - I. Source Catalogue And Number Counts, Ks Scott, Min Yun, Gw Wilson, Je Austermann, E Aguilar, I Aretxaga, H Ezawa, D Ferrusca, B Hatsukade, Dh Hughes, D Iono, M Giavalisco, R Kawabe, K Kohno, Pd Mauskopf, T Oshima, Ta Perera, J Rand, Y Tamura, T Tosaki, M Velazquez, Cc Williams, M Zeballos Jan 2010

Deep 1.1 Mm-Wavelength Imaging Of The Goods-S Field By Aztec/Aste - I. Source Catalogue And Number Counts, Ks Scott, Min Yun, Gw Wilson, Je Austermann, E Aguilar, I Aretxaga, H Ezawa, D Ferrusca, B Hatsukade, Dh Hughes, D Iono, M Giavalisco, R Kawabe, K Kohno, Pd Mauskopf, T Oshima, Ta Perera, J Rand, Y Tamura, T Tosaki, M Velazquez, Cc Williams, M Zeballos

Astronomy Department Faculty Publication Series

We present the first results from a confusion-limited map of the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey-South (GOODS-S) taken with the AzTEC camera on the Atacama Submillimeter Telescope Experiment. We imaged a field to a 1σ depth of 0.48–0.73 mJy beam−1, making this one of the deepest blank-field surveys at mm-wavelengths ever achieved. Although by traditional standards our GOODS-S map is extremely confused due to a sea of faint underlying sources, we demonstrate through simulations that our source identification and number counts analyses are robust, and the techniques discussed in this paper are relevant for other deeply confused surveys. …


Evidence Of A Fast Evolution Of The Uv Luminosity Function Beyond Redshift 6 From A Deep Hawk-I Survey Of The Goods-S Field, M Castellano, A Fontana, K Boutsia, A Grazian, L Pentericci, R Bouwens, M Dickinson, M Giavalisco, P Santini, S Cristiani, Et. Al. Jan 2010

Evidence Of A Fast Evolution Of The Uv Luminosity Function Beyond Redshift 6 From A Deep Hawk-I Survey Of The Goods-S Field, M Castellano, A Fontana, K Boutsia, A Grazian, L Pentericci, R Bouwens, M Dickinson, M Giavalisco, P Santini, S Cristiani, Et. Al.

Astronomy Department Faculty Publication Series

No abstract provided.


The Unusual N Iv]-Emitter Galaxy Gds J033218.92-275302.7: Star Formation Or Agn-Driven Winds From A Massive Galaxy At Z=5.56, E Vanzella, A Grazian, M Hayes, L Pentericci, D Schaerer, M Dickinson, S Cristiani, M Giavalisco, A Verhamme, M Nonino, P Rosati Jan 2010

The Unusual N Iv]-Emitter Galaxy Gds J033218.92-275302.7: Star Formation Or Agn-Driven Winds From A Massive Galaxy At Z=5.56, E Vanzella, A Grazian, M Hayes, L Pentericci, D Schaerer, M Dickinson, S Cristiani, M Giavalisco, A Verhamme, M Nonino, P Rosati

Astronomy Department Faculty Publication Series

Aims. We investigate the nature of the source GDS J033218.92-275302.7 at redshift 5.56.
Methods. The spectral energy distribution of the source is well-sampled by 16 bands photometry from UV-optical (HST and VLT), near infrared, near infrared (VLT) to mid-infrared (Spitzer). The detection of a signal in the mid-infrared Spitzer/IRAC bands 5.8, 8.0 - where the nebular emission contribution is less effective - suggests that there is a Balmer break, the signature of an underlying stellar population formed at earlier epochs. The high-quality VLT/FORS2 spectrum shows a clear Ly emission line, together with semi-forbidden N IV] 1483.3-1486.5 also …


Aztec Half Square Degree Survey Of The Shades Fields - I. Maps, Catalogues And Source Counts, Je Austermann, Min Yun, Et. Al. Jan 2010

Aztec Half Square Degree Survey Of The Shades Fields - I. Maps, Catalogues And Source Counts, Je Austermann, Min Yun, Et. Al.

Astronomy Department Faculty Publication Series

We present the first results from the largest deep extragalactic mm-wavelength survey undertaken to date. These results are derived from maps covering over 0.7 deg2, made at λ= 1.1 mm, using the AzTEC continuum camera mounted on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. The maps were made in the two fields originally targeted at λ= 850 μm with the Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) in the SCUBA Half-Degree Extragalactic Survey (SHADES) project, namely the Lockman Hole East (mapped to a depth of 0.9–1.3 mJy rms) and the Subaru/XMM–Newton Deep Field (mapped to a depth of 1.0–1.7 mJy rms). …


Origins Of The Extragalactic Background At 1mm From A Combined Analysis Of The Aztec And Mambo Data In Goods-N, Kyle Penner, Alexandra Pope, Edward L. Chapin, Thomas R. Greve, Frank Bertoldi, Mark Brodwin, Ranga-Ram Chary, Christopher J, Conselice, Kristen Coppin, Mauro Giavalisco, David H. Hughes, Rob J. Ivison, Thushara Perera, Douglas Scott, Kimberly Scott, Grant Wilson Dec 2009

Origins Of The Extragalactic Background At 1mm From A Combined Analysis Of The Aztec And Mambo Data In Goods-N, Kyle Penner, Alexandra Pope, Edward L. Chapin, Thomas R. Greve, Frank Bertoldi, Mark Brodwin, Ranga-Ram Chary, Christopher J, Conselice, Kristen Coppin, Mauro Giavalisco, David H. Hughes, Rob J. Ivison, Thushara Perera, Douglas Scott, Kimberly Scott, Grant Wilson

Thushara A. Perera

We present a study of the cosmic infrared background, which is a measure of the dust obscured activity in all galaxies in the Universe. We venture to isolate the galaxies responsible for the background at 1mm; with spectroscopic and photometric redshifts we constrain the redshift distribution of these galaxies. We create a deep 1.16mm map (sigma ~ 0.5mJy) by combining the AzTEC 1.1mm and MAMBO 1.2mm datasets in GOODS-N. This combined map contains 41 secure detections, 13 of which are new. By averaging the 1.16mm flux densities of individually undetected galaxies with 24um flux densities > 25uJy, we resolve 31--45 per …