697 results on '"Scarlata, Claudia"'
Search Results
152. The Impact of Cosmic Variance on Inferences of Global Neutral Fraction Derived from Lyα Luminosity Functions during Reionization
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Bruton, Sean, primary, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Haardt, Francesco, additional, Hayes, Matthew J., additional, Mason, Charlotte, additional, Morales, Alexa M., additional, and Mesinger, Andrei, additional
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- 2023
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153. Introducing the Texas Euclid Survey for Lyα (TESLA) Survey: Initial Study Correlating Galaxy Properties to Lyα Emission
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Chávez Ortiz, Óscar A., primary, Finkelstein, Steven L., additional, Davis, Dustin, additional, Leung, Gene, additional, Mentuch Cooper, Erin, additional, Bagley, Micaela, additional, Larson, Rebecca, additional, Casey, Caitlin M., additional, McCarron, Adam P., additional, Gebhardt, Karl, additional, Guo, Yuchen, additional, Liu, Chenxu, additional, Laseter, Isaac, additional, Rhodes, Jason, additional, Bender, Ralf, additional, Fabricius, Max, additional, Sánchez, Ariel G., additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Capak, Peter, additional, Zalesky, Lukas, additional, Sanders, David, additional, Szapudi, Istvan, additional, Baxter, Eric, additional, McPartland, Conor, additional, Weaver, John R., additional, Toft, Sune, additional, Mobasher, Bahram, additional, Suzuki, Nao, additional, and Chartab, Nima, additional
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- 2023
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154. A Spatially Resolved Analysis of Star Formation Burstiness by Comparing UV and Hα in Galaxies at z ∼ 1 with UVCANDELS
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Mehta, Vihang, primary, Teplitz, Harry I., additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Wang, Xin, additional, Alavi, Anahita, additional, Colbert, James, additional, Rafelski, Marc, additional, Grogin, Norman, additional, Koekemoer, Anton, additional, Prichard, Laura, additional, Windhorst, Rogier, additional, Barber, Justin M., additional, Conselice, Christopher J., additional, Dai, Y. Sophia, additional, Gardner, Jonathan P., additional, Gawiser, Eric, additional, Guo, Yicheng, additional, Hathi, Nimish, additional, Haro, Pablo Arrabal, additional, Hayes, Matthew, additional, Iyer, Kartheik G., additional, Jansen, Rolf A., additional, Ji, Zhiyuan, additional, Kurczynski, Peter, additional, Kuschel, Maxwell, additional, Lucas, Ray A., additional, Mantha, Kameswara, additional, O’Connell, Robert W., additional, Ravindranath, Swara, additional, Robertson, Brant E., additional, Rutkowski, Michael, additional, Siana, Brian, additional, and Yung, L. Y. Aaron, additional
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- 2023
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155. Early Results from GLASS-JWST. XXII. Rest-frame UV–Optical Spectral Properties of Lyα Emitting Galaxies at 3 < z < 6
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Roy, Namrata, primary, Henry, Alaina, additional, Treu, Tommaso, additional, Jones, Tucker, additional, Prieto-Lyon, Gonzalo, additional, Mason, Charlotte, additional, Heckman, Tim, additional, Nanayakkara, Themiya, additional, Pentericci, Laura, additional, Mascia, Sara, additional, Bradač, Maruša, additional, Vanzella, Eros, additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Boyett, Kit, additional, Trenti, Michele, additional, and Wang, Xin, additional
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- 2023
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156. Fraction of Clumpy Star-forming Galaxies at 0.5 ≤ z ≤ 3 in UVCANDELS: Dependence on Stellar Mass and Environment
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Sattari, Zahra, primary, Mobasher, Bahram, additional, Chartab, Nima, additional, Kelson, Daniel D., additional, Teplitz, Harry I., additional, Rafelski, Marc, additional, Grogin, Norman A., additional, Koekemoer, Anton M., additional, Wang, Xin, additional, Windhorst, Rogier A., additional, Alavi, Anahita, additional, Prichard, Laura, additional, Sunnquist, Ben, additional, Gardner, Jonathan P., additional, Gawiser, Eric, additional, Hathi, Nimish P., additional, Hayes, Matthew J., additional, Ji, Zhiyuan, additional, Mehta, Vihang, additional, Robertson, Brant E., additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Yung, L. Y. Aaron, additional, Conselice, Christopher J., additional, Dai, Y. Sophia, additional, Guo, Yicheng, additional, Lucas, Ray A., additional, Martin, Alec, additional, and Ravindranath, Swara, additional
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- 2023
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157. Low-metallicity Galaxies from the Dark Energy Survey
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Lin, Yu-Heng, primary, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Mehta, Vihang, additional, Skillman, Evan, additional, Hayes, Matthew, additional, McQuinn, Kristen B. W., additional, Fortson, Lucy, additional, Chworowsky, Katherine, additional, and Clarke, Leonardo, additional
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- 2023
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158. HST Imaging of Star-forming Clumps in Six GASP Ram-pressure-stripped Galaxies
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Giunchi, Eric, primary, Gullieuszik, Marco, additional, Poggianti, Bianca M., additional, Moretti, Alessia, additional, Werle, Ariel, additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Zanella, Anita, additional, Vulcani, Benedetta, additional, and Calzetti, Daniela, additional
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- 2023
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159. Searching for Intragroup Light in Deep U-band Imaging of the COSMOS Field
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McCabe, Tyler, primary, Redshaw, Caleb, additional, Otteson, Lillian, additional, Windhorst, Rogier A., additional, Jansen, Rolf A., additional, Cohen, Seth H., additional, Carleton, Timothy, additional, Borthakur, Sanchayeeta, additional, Ashcraft, Teresa A., additional, Koekemoer, Anton M., additional, Ryan, Russell E., additional, Nonino, Mario, additional, Paris, Diego, additional, Grazian, Andrea, additional, Fontana, Adriano, additional, Giallongo, Emanuele, additional, Speziali, Roberto, additional, Testa, Vincenzo, additional, Boutsia, Konstantina, additional, O’Connell, Robert W., additional, Rutkowski, Michael J., additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Teplitz, Harry I., additional, Wang, Xin, additional, Rafelski, Marc, additional, Grogin, Norman A., additional, and Lucas, Ray A., additional
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- 2023
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160. The Universe is at Most 88% Neutral at z = 10.6
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Bruton, Sean, primary, Lin, Yu-Heng, additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, and Hayes, Matthew J., additional
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- 2023
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161. On the evolution of the size of Lyman alpha halos across cosmic time: no change in the circumgalactic gas distribution when probed by line emission
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Runnholm, Axel, primary, Hayes, Matthew J, additional, Lin, Yu-Heng, additional, Melinder, Jens, additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Adamo, Angela, additional, Augustin, Ramona, additional, Bik, Arjan, additional, Blaizot, Jérémy, additional, Cannon, John M, additional, Cantalupo, Sebastiano, additional, Garel, Thibault, additional, Gronke, Max, additional, Herenz, Edmund C, additional, Leclercq, Floriane, additional, Östlin, Göran, additional, Peroux, Celine, additional, Rasekh, Armin, additional, Rutkowski, Michael J, additional, Verhamme, Anne, additional, and Wisotzki, Lutz, additional
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- 2023
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162. A magnified compact galaxy at redshift 9.51 with strong nebular emission lines
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Williams, Hayley, primary, Kelly, Patrick L., additional, Chen, Wenlei, additional, Brammer, Gabriel, additional, Zitrin, Adi, additional, Treu, Tommaso, additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Koekemoer, Anton M., additional, Oguri, Masamune, additional, Lin, Yu-Heng, additional, Diego, Jose M., additional, Nonino, Mario, additional, Hjorth, Jens, additional, Langeroodi, Danial, additional, Broadhurst, Tom, additional, Rogers, Noah, additional, Perez-Fournon, Ismael, additional, Foley, Ryan J., additional, Jha, Saurabh, additional, Filippenko, Alexei V., additional, Strolger, Lou, additional, Pierel, Justin, additional, Poidevin, Frederick, additional, and Yang, Lilan, additional
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- 2023
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163. Investigating the Dominant Environmental Quenching Process in UVCANDELS/COSMOS Groups
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Kuschel, Maxwell, primary, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Mehta, Vihang, additional, Teplitz, Harry I., additional, Rafelski, Marc, additional, Wang, Xin, additional, Sunnquist, Ben, additional, Prichard, Laura, additional, Grogin, Norman, additional, Koekemoer, Anton, additional, Windhorst, Rogier, additional, Rutkowski, Michael, additional, Alavi, Anahita, additional, Chartab, Nima, additional, Conselice, Christopher J., additional, Dai, Y. Sophia, additional, Gawiser, Eric, additional, Giavalisco, Mauro, additional, Haro, Pablo Arrabal, additional, Hathi, Nimish, additional, Jansen, Rolf A., additional, Ji, Zhiyuan, additional, Lucas, Ray A., additional, Mantha, Kameswara, additional, Mobasher, Bahram, additional, O’Connell, Robert W., additional, Robertson, Brant, additional, Sattari, Zahra, additional, Yung, L. Y. Aaron, additional, Davé, Romeel, additional, DeMello, Duilia, additional, Dickinson, Mark, additional, Ferguson, Henry, additional, Finkelstein, Steven L., additional, Hayes, Matt, additional, Howell, Justin, additional, Kaviraj, Sugata, additional, Mackenty, John W., additional, and Siana, Brian, additional
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- 2023
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164. UV and Hα HST Observations of Six GASP Jellyfish Galaxies
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Gullieuszik, Marco, primary, Giunchi, Eric, additional, Poggianti, Bianca M., additional, Moretti, Alessia, additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Calzetti, Daniela, additional, Werle, Ariel, additional, Zanella, Anita, additional, Radovich, Mario, additional, Bellhouse, Callum, additional, Bettoni, Daniela, additional, Franchetto, Andrea, additional, Fritz, Jacopo, additional, Jaffé, Yara L., additional, McGee, Sean L., additional, Mingozzi, Matilde, additional, Omizzolo, Alessandro, additional, Tonnesen, Stephanie, additional, Verheijen, Marc, additional, and Vulcani, Benedetta, additional
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- 2023
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165. Fraction of Clumpy Star-forming Galaxies at 0.5 ≤ z ≤ 3 in UVCANDELS : Dependence on Stellar Mass and Environment
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Sattari, Zahra, Mobasher, Bahram, Chartab, Nima, Kelson, Daniel D., Teplitz, Harry I., Rafelski, Marc, Grogin, Norman A., Koekemoer, Anton M., Wang, Xin, Windhorst, Rogier A., Alavi, Anahita, Prichard, Laura, Sunnquist, Ben, Gardner, Jonathan P., Gawiser, Eric, Hathi, Nimish P., Hayes, Matthew J., Ji, Zhiyuan, Mehta, Vihang, Robertson, Brant E., Scarlata, Claudia, Yung, L. Y. Aaron, Conselice, Christopher J., Dai, Y. Sophia, Guo, Yicheng, Lucas, Ray A., Martin, Alec, Ravindranath, Swara, Sattari, Zahra, Mobasher, Bahram, Chartab, Nima, Kelson, Daniel D., Teplitz, Harry I., Rafelski, Marc, Grogin, Norman A., Koekemoer, Anton M., Wang, Xin, Windhorst, Rogier A., Alavi, Anahita, Prichard, Laura, Sunnquist, Ben, Gardner, Jonathan P., Gawiser, Eric, Hathi, Nimish P., Hayes, Matthew J., Ji, Zhiyuan, Mehta, Vihang, Robertson, Brant E., Scarlata, Claudia, Yung, L. Y. Aaron, Conselice, Christopher J., Dai, Y. Sophia, Guo, Yicheng, Lucas, Ray A., Martin, Alec, and Ravindranath, Swara
- Abstract
High-resolution imaging of galaxies in rest-frame UV has revealed the existence of giant star-forming clumps prevalent in high-redshift galaxies. Studying these substructures provides important information about their formation and evolution and informs theoretical galaxy evolution models. We present a new method to identify clumps in galaxies' high-resolution rest-frame UV images. Using imaging data from CANDELS and UVCANDELS, we identify star-forming clumps in an HST/F160W ≤ 25 AB mag sample of 6767 galaxies at 0.5 ≤ z ≤ 3 in four fields, GOODS-N, GOODS-S, EGS, and COSMOS. We use a low-passband filter in Fourier space to reconstruct the background image of a galaxy and detect small-scale features (clumps) on the background-subtracted image. Clumpy galaxies are defined as those having at least one off-center clump that contributes a minimum of 10% of the galaxy's total rest-frame UV flux. We measure the fraction of clumpy galaxies (fclumpy) as a function of stellar mass, redshift, and galaxy environment. Our results indicate that fclumpy increases with redshift, reaching ∼65% at z ∼ 1.5. We also find that fclumpy in low-mass galaxies () is 10% higher compared to that of their high-mass counterparts (
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- 2023
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166. Investigating the Dominant Environmental Quenching Process in UVCANDELS/COSMOS Groups
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Kuschel, Maxwell, Scarlata, Claudia, Mehta, Vihang, Teplitz, Harry I., Rafelski, Marc, Wang, Xin, Sunnquist, Ben, Prichard, Laura, Grogin, Norman, Koekemoer, Anton, Windhorst, Rogier, Rutkowski, Michael, Alavi, Anahita, Chartab, Nima, Conselice, Christopher J., Dai, Y. Sophia, Gawiser, Eric, Giavalisco, Mauro, Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Hathi, Nimish, Jansen, Rolf A., Ji, Zhiyuan, Lucas, Ray A., Mantha, Kameswara, Mobasher, Bahram, O'Connell, Robert W., Robertson, Brant, Sattari, Zahra, Yung, L. Y. Aaron, Davé, Romeel, DeMello, Duilia, Dickinson, Mark, Ferguson, Henry, Finkelstein, Steven L., Hayes, Matthew J., Howell, Justin, Kaviraj, Sugata, Mackenty, John W., Siana, Brian, Kuschel, Maxwell, Scarlata, Claudia, Mehta, Vihang, Teplitz, Harry I., Rafelski, Marc, Wang, Xin, Sunnquist, Ben, Prichard, Laura, Grogin, Norman, Koekemoer, Anton, Windhorst, Rogier, Rutkowski, Michael, Alavi, Anahita, Chartab, Nima, Conselice, Christopher J., Dai, Y. Sophia, Gawiser, Eric, Giavalisco, Mauro, Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Hathi, Nimish, Jansen, Rolf A., Ji, Zhiyuan, Lucas, Ray A., Mantha, Kameswara, Mobasher, Bahram, O'Connell, Robert W., Robertson, Brant, Sattari, Zahra, Yung, L. Y. Aaron, Davé, Romeel, DeMello, Duilia, Dickinson, Mark, Ferguson, Henry, Finkelstein, Steven L., Hayes, Matthew J., Howell, Justin, Kaviraj, Sugata, Mackenty, John W., and Siana, Brian
- Abstract
We explore how the fraction of quenched galaxies changes in groups of galaxies with respect to the distance to the center of the group, redshift, and stellar mass to determine the dominant process of environmental quenching in 0.2 < z < 0.8 groups. We use new UV data from the UVCANDELS project in addition to existing multiband photometry to derive new galaxy physical properties of the group galaxies from the zCOSMOS 20 k group catalog. Limiting our analysis to a complete sample of log (M*/M⊙) > 10.56 group galaxies, we find that the probability of being quenched increases slowly with decreasing redshift, diverging from the stagnant field galaxy population. A corresponding analysis on how the probability of being quenched increases with time within groups suggests that the dominant environmental quenching process is characterized by slow (∼Gyr) timescales. We find a quenching time of approximately Gyr, consistent with the slow processes of strangulation and delayed-then-rapid quenching although more data are needed to confirm this result.
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- 2023
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167. A magnified compact galaxy at redshift 9.51 with strong nebular emission lines
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National Science Foundation (US), Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Christopher R. Redlich Fund, David and Lucile Packard Foundation, Danish National Research Foundation, United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation, Villum Fonden, Ministry of Science and Technology (Israel), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Collaborative Research Fund (Hong Kong), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Williams, Hayley, Kelly, Patrick L., Chen, Wenlei, Brammer, Gabriel, Zitrin, Adi, Treu, Tommaso, Scarlata, Claudia, Koekemoer, Anton M., Oguri, Masamune, Lin, Yu-Heng, Diego, José María, Nonino, Mario, Hjorth, Jens, Langeroodi, Danial, Broadhurst, Tom, Rogers, Noah, Pèrez-Fournon, Ismael, Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh W., Filippenko, Alexei V., Strolger, Lou G., Pierel, Justin, Poidevin, Frédérick, Yang, Lilan, National Science Foundation (US), Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Christopher R. Redlich Fund, David and Lucile Packard Foundation, Danish National Research Foundation, United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation, Villum Fonden, Ministry of Science and Technology (Israel), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Collaborative Research Fund (Hong Kong), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Williams, Hayley, Kelly, Patrick L., Chen, Wenlei, Brammer, Gabriel, Zitrin, Adi, Treu, Tommaso, Scarlata, Claudia, Koekemoer, Anton M., Oguri, Masamune, Lin, Yu-Heng, Diego, José María, Nonino, Mario, Hjorth, Jens, Langeroodi, Danial, Broadhurst, Tom, Rogers, Noah, Pèrez-Fournon, Ismael, Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh W., Filippenko, Alexei V., Strolger, Lou G., Pierel, Justin, Poidevin, Frédérick, and Yang, Lilan
- Abstract
Ultraviolet light from early galaxies is thought to have ionized gas in the intergalactic medium. However,there are few observational constraints on this epoch because of the faintness of those galaxies andthe redshift of their optical light into the infrared. We report the observation, in JWST imaging, of adistant galaxy that is magnified by gravitational lensing. JWST spectroscopy of the galaxy, at rest-frameoptical wavelengths, detects strong nebular emission lines that are attributable to oxygen and hydrogen.The measured redshift isz= 9.51 ± 0.01, corresponding to 510 million years after the Big Bang. Thegalaxy has a radius of 16:2þ4:6 7:2parsecs, which is substantially more compact than galaxies withequivalent luminosity atz~ 6 to 8, leading to a high star formation rate surface density.
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- 2023
168. Evolution of the mass-metallicity relation from redshift z ≈ 8 to the local universe
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National Aeronautics and Space Administration (US), Villum Fonden, National Science Foundation (US), United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, David and Lucile Packard Foundation, Langeroodi, Danial, Hjorth, Jens, Chen, Wenlei, Kelly, Patrick L., Williams, Hayley, Lin, Yu-Heng, Scarlata, Claudia, Zitrin, Adi, Broadhurst, Tom, Diego, José María, Huang, Xiaosheng, Filippenko, Alexei V., Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh W., Koekemoer, Anton M., Oguri, Masamune, Pèrez-Fournon, Ismael, Pierel, Justin, Poidevin, Frédérick, Strolger, Lou G., National Aeronautics and Space Administration (US), Villum Fonden, National Science Foundation (US), United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, David and Lucile Packard Foundation, Langeroodi, Danial, Hjorth, Jens, Chen, Wenlei, Kelly, Patrick L., Williams, Hayley, Lin, Yu-Heng, Scarlata, Claudia, Zitrin, Adi, Broadhurst, Tom, Diego, José María, Huang, Xiaosheng, Filippenko, Alexei V., Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh W., Koekemoer, Anton M., Oguri, Masamune, Pèrez-Fournon, Ismael, Pierel, Justin, Poidevin, Frédérick, and Strolger, Lou G.
- Abstract
A tight positive correlation between the stellar mass and the gas-phase metallicity of galaxies has been observed at low redshifts. The redshift evolution of this correlation can strongly constrain theories of galaxy evolution. The advent of JWST allows probing the mass–metallicity relation at redshifts far beyond what was previously accessible. Here we report the discovery of two emission line galaxies at redshifts 8.15 and 8.16 in JWST NIRCam imaging and NIRSpec spectroscopy of targets gravitationally lensed by the cluster RX J2129.4+0005. We measure their metallicities and stellar masses along with nine additional galaxies at 7.2 < zspec < 9.5 to report the first quantitative statistical inference of the mass–metallicity relation at z ≈ 8. We measure ∼0.9 dex evolution in the normalization of the mass–metallicity relation from z ≈ 8 to the local universe; at a fixed stellar mass, galaxies are 8 times less metal enriched at z ≈ 8 compared to the present day. Our inferred normalization is in agreement with the predictions of FIRE simulations. Our inferred slope of the mass–metallicity relation is similar to or slightly shallower than that predicted by FIRE or observed at lower redshifts. We compare the z ≈ 8 galaxies to extremely low-metallicity analog candidates in the local universe, finding that they are generally distinct from extreme emission line galaxies or "green peas," but are similar in strong emission line ratios and metallicities to "blueberry galaxies." Despite this similarity, at a fixed stellar mass, the z ≈ 8 galaxies have systematically lower metallicities compared to blueberry galaxies.
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- 2023
169. An empirical reionization history model inferred from the low-redshift Lyman continuum survey and the star-forming galaxies at z > 8
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Lin, Yu-heng, Scarlata, Claudia, Williams, Hayley, Chen, Wenlei, Kelly, Patrick, Langeroodi, Danial, Hjorth, Jens, Chisholm, John, Koekemoer, Anton M, Zitrin, Adi, Diego, Jose M, Lin, Yu-heng, Scarlata, Claudia, Williams, Hayley, Chen, Wenlei, Kelly, Patrick, Langeroodi, Danial, Hjorth, Jens, Chisholm, John, Koekemoer, Anton M, Zitrin, Adi, and Diego, Jose M
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- 2023
170. Evolution of the Mass–Metallicity Relation from Redshift z ≈ 8 to the Local Universe
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Langeroodi, Danial, Hjorth, Jens, Chen, Wenlei, Kelly, Patrick L., Williams, Hayley, Lin, Yu-heng, Scarlata, Claudia, Zitrin, Adi, Broadhurst, Tom, Diego, Jose M., Huang, Xiaosheng, Filippenko, Alexei V., Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh, Koekemoer, Anton M., Oguri, Masamune, Perez-fournon, Ismael, Pierel, Justin, Poidevin, Frederick, Strolger, Lou, Langeroodi, Danial, Hjorth, Jens, Chen, Wenlei, Kelly, Patrick L., Williams, Hayley, Lin, Yu-heng, Scarlata, Claudia, Zitrin, Adi, Broadhurst, Tom, Diego, Jose M., Huang, Xiaosheng, Filippenko, Alexei V., Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh, Koekemoer, Anton M., Oguri, Masamune, Perez-fournon, Ismael, Pierel, Justin, Poidevin, Frederick, and Strolger, Lou
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- 2023
171. A magnified compact galaxy at redshift 9.51 with strong nebular emission lines
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Williams, Hayley, Kelly, Patrick L., Chen, Wenlei, Brammer, Gabriel, Zitrin, Adi, Treu, Tommaso, Scarlata, Claudia, Koekemoer, Anton M., Oguri, Masamune, Lin, Yu-heng, Diego, Jose M., Nonino, Mario, Hjorth, Jens, Langeroodi, Danial, Broadhurst, Tom, Rogers, Noah, Perez-fournon, Ismael, Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh, Filippenko, Alexei V., Strolger, Lou, Pierel, Justin, Poidevin, Frederick, Yang, Lilan, Williams, Hayley, Kelly, Patrick L., Chen, Wenlei, Brammer, Gabriel, Zitrin, Adi, Treu, Tommaso, Scarlata, Claudia, Koekemoer, Anton M., Oguri, Masamune, Lin, Yu-heng, Diego, Jose M., Nonino, Mario, Hjorth, Jens, Langeroodi, Danial, Broadhurst, Tom, Rogers, Noah, Perez-fournon, Ismael, Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh, Filippenko, Alexei V., Strolger, Lou, Pierel, Justin, Poidevin, Frederick, and Yang, Lilan
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- 2023
172. An Empirical reionization history model inferred from star-forming galaxies at $z>8$
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Lin, Yu-Heng, Scarlata, Claudia, Williams, Hayley, Chen, Wenlei, Kelly, Patrick, Langeroodi, Danial, Hjorth, Jens, Chisholm, John, Koekemoer, Anton M., Zitrin, Adi, and Diego, Jose M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a new analysis of the rest-frame UV and optical spectra of a sample of three $z>8$ galaxies discovered behind the gravitational lensing cluster RX J2129.4+0009. We combine these observations with those of a sample of $z>7.5$ galaxies from the literature, for which similar measurements are available. As already pointed out in other studies, the high [OIII]$\lambda$5007/[OII]$\lambda$3727 ratios ($O_{32}$) and steep UV continuum slopes ( $\beta$ ) are consistent with the values observed for low redshift Lyman continuum emitters, suggesting that such galaxies contribute to the ionizing budget of the intergalactic medium. We construct a logistic regression model to estimate the probability of a galaxy being a Lyman continuum emitter based on the measured $M_{UV}$, $\beta$, and $O_{32}$ values. Using this probability together with the UV luminosity function, we construct an empirical model that estimates the contribution of high redshift galaxies to reionization based on these observable quantities. Our analysis shows that at $z\sim8$, the average escape fraction of the galaxy population (i.e., including both LyC emitters and non-emitters) varies with $M_{UV}$, with brighter galaxies having larger $f_{esc}$. For $M_{UV}$ $< -$19 we find an average escape fraction of 20$\%$, decreasing to almost zero for $M_{UV}$$>-16$. Galaxies with intermediate UV luminosity ($-19, Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures
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- 2023
173. Spectral shapes of the Ly α emission from galaxies – II. The influence of stellar properties and nebular conditions on the emergent Ly α profiles
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Hayes, Matthew J, primary, Runnholm, Axel, additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Gronke, Max, additional, and Rivera-Thorsen, T Emil, additional
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- 2023
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174. Deep Large Binocular Camera r-band Observations of the GOODS-N Field
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Ashcraft, Teresa A., primary, McCabe, Tyler, additional, Redshaw, Caleb, additional, Windhorst, Rogier A., additional, Jansen, Rolf A., additional, Cohen, Seth H., additional, Carleton, Timothy, additional, Ganzel, Kris, additional, Koekemoer, Anton M., additional, Ryan, Russell E., additional, Nonino, Mario, additional, Paris, Diego, additional, Grazian, Andrea, additional, Fontana, Adriano, additional, Giallongo, Emanuele, additional, Speziali, Roberto, additional, Testa, Vincenzo, additional, Boutsia, Konstantina, additional, O’Connell, Robert W., additional, Rutkowski, Michael J., additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Teplitz, Harry I., additional, Wang, Xin, additional, Rafelski, Marc, additional, and Grogin, Norman A., additional
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- 2023
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175. Galaxy Zoo: Clump Scout Star formation, Surveys and Citizen Science
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Dickinson, Hugh, Adams, Nico, Vihang Mehta, Fortson, Lucy, Scarlata, Claudia, and Serjeant, Stephen
- Abstract
Presentation given at the REINFORCELarge Research Infrastructures Citizen Science event workshop of the 1st and 2nd of September, 2022.
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- 2022
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176. Detection of early-universe gravitational-wave signatures and fundamental physics
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Caldwell, Robert, primary, Cui, Yanou, additional, Guo, Huai-Ke, additional, Mandic, Vuk, additional, Mariotti, Alberto, additional, No, Jose Miguel, additional, Ramsey-Musolf, Michael J., additional, Sakellariadou, Mairi, additional, Sinha, Kuver, additional, Wang, Lian-Tao, additional, White, Graham, additional, Zhao, Yue, additional, An, Haipeng, additional, Bian, Ligong, additional, Caprini, Chiara, additional, Clesse, Sebastien, additional, Cline, James M., additional, Cusin, Giulia, additional, Fornal, Bartosz, additional, Jinno, Ryusuke, additional, Laurent, Benoit, additional, Levi, Noam, additional, Lyu, Kun-Feng, additional, Martinez, Mario, additional, Miller, Andrew L., additional, Redigolo, Diego, additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Sevrin, Alexander, additional, Haghi, Barmak Shams Es, additional, Shu, Jing, additional, Siemens, Xavier, additional, Steer, Danièle A., additional, Sundrum, Raman, additional, Tamarit, Carlos, additional, Weir, David J., additional, Xie, Ke-Pan, additional, Yang, Feng-Wei, additional, and Zhou, Siyi, additional
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- 2022
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177. On the Triggering of Extreme Starburst Events in Low-metallicity Galaxies: A Deep Search for Companions of Green Peas
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Laufman, Lauren, primary, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Hayes, Matthew, additional, and Skillman, Evan, additional
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- 2022
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178. Galaxy Zoo: Clump Scout – Design and first application of a two-dimensional aggregation tool for citizen science
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Dickinson, Hugh, primary, Adams, Dominic, additional, Mehta, Vihang, additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Fortson, Lucy, additional, Serjeant, Stephen, additional, Krawczyk, Coleman, additional, Kruk, Sandor, additional, Lintott, Chris, additional, Mantha, Kameswara Bharadwaj, additional, Simmons, Brooke D, additional, and Walmsley, Mike, additional
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- 2022
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179. Early Results from GLASS-JWST. I: Confirmation of Lensed z ≥ 7 Lyman-break Galaxies behind the Abell 2744 Cluster with NIRISS
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Roberts-Borsani, Guido, primary, Morishita, Takahiro, additional, Treu, Tommaso, additional, Brammer, Gabriel, additional, Strait, Victoria, additional, Wang, Xin, additional, Bradac, Marusa, additional, Acebron, Ana, additional, Bergamini, Pietro, additional, Boyett, Kristan, additional, Calabró, Antonello, additional, Castellano, Marco, additional, Fontana, Adriano, additional, Glazebrook, Karl, additional, Grillo, Claudio, additional, Henry, Alaina, additional, Jones, Tucker, additional, Malkan, Matthew, additional, Marchesini, Danilo, additional, Mascia, Sara, additional, Mason, Charlotte, additional, Mercurio, Amata, additional, Merlin, Emiliano, additional, Nanayakkara, Themiya, additional, Pentericci, Laura, additional, Rosati, Piero, additional, Santini, Paola, additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Trenti, Michele, additional, Vanzella, Eros, additional, Vulcani, Benedetta, additional, and Willott, Chris, additional
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- 2022
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180. The Impact of Cosmic Variance on Inferences of Global Neutral Fraction Derived from Ly α Luminosity Functions during Reionization.
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Bruton, Sean, Scarlata, Claudia, Haardt, Francesco, Hayes, Matthew J., Mason, Charlotte, Morales, Alexa M., and Mesinger, Andrei
- Subjects
INTERSTELLAR medium ,LUMINOSITY ,DARK matter ,REDSHIFT ,GALACTIC redshift ,UNIVERSE - Abstract
We investigate the impact of field-to-field variation, deriving from cosmic variance, in measured Ly α emitter (LAE) luminosity functions (LFs) and this variation's impact on inferences of the neutral fraction of the intergalactic medium (IGM) during reionization. We post-process a z = 7 IGM simulation to populate the dark matter halos with LAEs. These LAEs have realistic UV magnitudes, Ly α fluxes, and Ly α line profiles. We calculate the attenuation of Ly α emission in universes with varying IGM neutral fraction, x ¯ H I . In a x ¯ H I = 0.3 simulation, we perform 100 realizations of a mock 2 deg
2 survey with a redshift window Δ z = 0.5 and flux limit fLy α > 1 × 10−17 erg s−1 cm−2 ; such a survey is typical in depth and volume of the largest LAE surveys conducted today. For each realization, we compute the LAE LF and use it to recover the input x ¯ H I . Comparing the inferred values of x ¯ H I across the ensemble of the surveys, we find that cosmic variance, deriving from large-scale structure and variation in the neutral gas along the sightline, imposes a floor in the uncertainty of Δ x ¯ H I ∼ 0.2 when x ¯ H I = 0.3. We explore mitigation strategies to decrease this uncertainty, such as increasing the volume, decreasing the flux limit, or probing the volume with many independent fields. Increasing the area and/or depth of the survey does not mitigate the uncertainty, but composing a survey with many independent fields is effective. This finding highlights the best strategy for LAE surveys aiming at constraining the x ¯ H I of the universe during reionization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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181. Tracing Lyα and LyC Escape in Galaxies with Mg ii Emission
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Xu, Xinfeng, primary, Henry, Alaina, additional, Heckman, Timothy, additional, Chisholm, John, additional, Worseck, Gábor, additional, Gronke, Max, additional, Jaskot, Anne, additional, McCandliss, Stephan R., additional, Flury, Sophia R., additional, Giavalisco, Mauro, additional, Ji, Zhiyuan, additional, Amorín, Ricardo O., additional, Berg, Danielle A., additional, Borthakur, Sanchayeeta, additional, Bouche, Nicolas, additional, Carr, Cody, additional, Erb, Dawn K., additional, Ferguson, Harry, additional, Garel, Thibault, additional, Hayes, Matthew, additional, Makan, Kirill, additional, Marques-Chaves, Rui, additional, Rutkowski, Michael, additional, Östlin, Göran, additional, Rafelski, Marc, additional, Saldana-Lopez, Alberto, additional, Scarlata, Claudia, additional, Schaerer, Daniel, additional, Trebitsch, Maxime, additional, Tremonti, Christy, additional, Verhamme, Anne, additional, and Wang, Bingjie, additional
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- 2022
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182. The COS Legacy Archive Spectroscopy Survey (CLASSY) Treasury Atlas
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Berg, Danielle A, Berg, Danielle A, James, Bethan L, King, Teagan, McDonald, Meaghan, Chen, Zuyi, Chisholm, John, Heckman, Timothy, Martin, Crystal L, Stark, Dan P, Aloisi, Alessandra, Amorin, Ricardo O, Arellano-Cordova, Karla Z, Bayliss, Matthew, Bordoloi, Rongmon, Brinchmann, Jarle, Charlot, Stephane, Chevallard, Jacopo, Clark, Ilyse, Erb, Dawn K, Feltre, Anna, Gronke, Max, Hayes, Matthew, Henry, Alaina, Hernandez, Svea, Jaskot, Anne, Jones, Tucker, Kewley, Lisa J, Kumari, Nimisha, Leitherer, Claus, Llerena, Mario, Maseda, Michael, Mingozzi, Matilde, Nanayakkara, Themiya, Ouchi, Masami, Plat, Adele, Pogge, Richard W, Ravindranath, Swara, Rigby, Jane R, Sanders, Ryan, Scarlata, Claudia, Senchyna, Peter, Skillman, Evan D, Steidel, Charles C, Strom, Allison L, Sugahara, Yuma, Wilkins, Stephen M, Wofford, Aida, Xu, Xinfeng, Berg, Danielle A, Berg, Danielle A, James, Bethan L, King, Teagan, McDonald, Meaghan, Chen, Zuyi, Chisholm, John, Heckman, Timothy, Martin, Crystal L, Stark, Dan P, Aloisi, Alessandra, Amorin, Ricardo O, Arellano-Cordova, Karla Z, Bayliss, Matthew, Bordoloi, Rongmon, Brinchmann, Jarle, Charlot, Stephane, Chevallard, Jacopo, Clark, Ilyse, Erb, Dawn K, Feltre, Anna, Gronke, Max, Hayes, Matthew, Henry, Alaina, Hernandez, Svea, Jaskot, Anne, Jones, Tucker, Kewley, Lisa J, Kumari, Nimisha, Leitherer, Claus, Llerena, Mario, Maseda, Michael, Mingozzi, Matilde, Nanayakkara, Themiya, Ouchi, Masami, Plat, Adele, Pogge, Richard W, Ravindranath, Swara, Rigby, Jane R, Sanders, Ryan, Scarlata, Claudia, Senchyna, Peter, Skillman, Evan D, Steidel, Charles C, Strom, Allison L, Sugahara, Yuma, Wilkins, Stephen M, Wofford, Aida, and Xu, Xinfeng
- Abstract
Far-ultraviolet (FUV; ∼1200–2000 Å) spectra are fundamental to our understanding of star-forming galaxies, providing a unique window on massive stellar populations, chemical evolution, feedback processes, and reionization. The launch of the James Webb Space Telescope will soon usher in a new era, pushing the UV spectroscopic frontier to higher redshifts than ever before; however, its success hinges on a comprehensive understanding of the massive star populations and gas conditions that power the observed UV spectral features. This requires a level of detail that is only possible with a combination of ample wavelength coverage, signal-to-noise, spectral-resolution, and sample diversity that has not yet been achieved by any FUV spectral database. We present the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph Legacy Spectroscopic Survey (CLASSY) treasury and its first high-level science product, the CLASSY atlas. CLASSY builds on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) archive to construct the first high-quality (S/N1500 Å ≳ 5/resel), high-resolution (R ∼ 15,000) FUV spectral database of 45 nearby (0.002 < z < 0.182) star-forming galaxies. The CLASSY atlas, available to the public via the CLASSY website, is the result of optimally extracting and coadding 170 archival+new spectra from 312 orbits of HST observations. The CLASSY sample covers a broad range of properties including stellar mass (6.2 < log M ⋆(M ⊙) < 10.1), star formation rate (−2.0 < log SFR (M ⊙ yr−1) < +1.6), direct gas-phase metallicity (7.0 < 12+log(O/H) < 8.8), ionization (0.5 < O32 < 38.0), reddening (0.02 < E(B − V) < 0.67), and nebular density (10 < n e (cm−3) < 1120). CLASSY is biased to UV-bright star-forming galaxies, resulting in a sample that is consistent with the z ∼ 0 mass–metallicity relationship, but is offset to higher star formation rates by roughly 2 dex, similar to z ≳ 2 galaxies. This unique set of properties makes the CLASSY atlas the benchmark training set fo
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- 2022
183. A peculiar Type II QSO identified via broad-band detection of extreme nebular line emission
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Lin, Yu-Heng, Scarlata, Claudia, Hayes, Matthew J., Feltre, Anna, Charlot, Stephane, Bongiorno, Angela, Väisänen, Petri, Mogotsi, Moses, Lin, Yu-Heng, Scarlata, Claudia, Hayes, Matthew J., Feltre, Anna, Charlot, Stephane, Bongiorno, Angela, Väisänen, Petri, and Mogotsi, Moses
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- 2022
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184. Early Results from GLASS-JWST. I:Confirmation of Lensed z >= 7 Lyman-break Galaxies behind the Abell 2744 Cluster with NIRISS
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Roberts-Borsani, Guido, Morishita, Takahiro, Treu, Tommaso, Brammer, Gabriel, Strait, Victoria, Wang, Xin, Bradac, Marusa, Acebron, Ana, Bergamini, Pietro, Boyett, Kristan, Calabro, Antonello, Castellano, Marco, Fontana, Adriano, Glazebrook, Karl, Grillo, Claudio, Henry, Alaina, Jones, Tucker, Malkan, Matthew, Marchesini, Danilo, Mascia, Sara, Mason, Charlotte, Mercurio, Amata, Merlin, Emiliano, Nanayakkara, Themiya, Pentericci, Laura, Rosati, Piero, Santini, Paola, Scarlata, Claudia, Trenti, Michele, Vanzella, Eros, Vulcani, Benedetta, Willott, Chris, Roberts-Borsani, Guido, Morishita, Takahiro, Treu, Tommaso, Brammer, Gabriel, Strait, Victoria, Wang, Xin, Bradac, Marusa, Acebron, Ana, Bergamini, Pietro, Boyett, Kristan, Calabro, Antonello, Castellano, Marco, Fontana, Adriano, Glazebrook, Karl, Grillo, Claudio, Henry, Alaina, Jones, Tucker, Malkan, Matthew, Marchesini, Danilo, Mascia, Sara, Mason, Charlotte, Mercurio, Amata, Merlin, Emiliano, Nanayakkara, Themiya, Pentericci, Laura, Rosati, Piero, Santini, Paola, Scarlata, Claudia, Trenti, Michele, Vanzella, Eros, Vulcani, Benedetta, and Willott, Chris
- Abstract
We present the first search for z >= 7, continuum-confirmed Lyman break sources with NIRISS/WFS spectroscopy over the Abell 2744 Frontier Fields cluster, as part of the GLASS-JWST-ERS survey. With similar to 15 hr of preimaging and multiangle grism exposures in the F115W, F150W, and F200W filters, we describe the general data handling (i.e., reduction, cleaning, modeling, and extraction processes) and analysis for the GLASS-JWST survey. We showcase the power of JWST to peer deep into reionization, when most intergalactic hydrogen is neutral, by confirming two galaxies at z = 8.04 +/- 0.15 and z = 7.90 +/- 0.13 by means of their Lyman breaks. Fainter continuum spectra are observed in both the F150W and F200W bands, indicative of blue (-1.69 and -1.33) UV slopes and moderately bright absolute magnitudes (-20.37 and -19.68 mag). We do not detect strong Ly alpha in either galaxy, but do observe tentative (similar to 2.7-3.8 sigma) He ii lambda 1640 angstrom, O iii]lambda lambda 1661,1666 angstrom, and N iii]lambda lambda 1747,1749 angstrom line emission in one, suggestive of low-metallicity, star-forming systems with possible nonthermal contributions. These novel observations provide a first look at the extraordinary potential of JWST/NIRISS for confirming representative samples of bright z >= 7 sources in the absence of strong emission lines, and gain unprecedented insight into their contributions toward cosmic reionization.
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- 2022
185. Galaxy Zoo: Clump Scout - Design and first application of a two-dimensional aggregation tool for citizen science
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Dickinson, Hugh, Adams, Dominic, Mehta, Vihang, Scarlata, Claudia, Fortson, Lucy, Serjeant, Stephen, Krawczyk, Coleman, Kruk, Sandor, Lintott, Chris, Mantha, Kameswara, Simmons, Brooke D, Walmsley, Mike, Dickinson, Hugh, Adams, Dominic, Mehta, Vihang, Scarlata, Claudia, Fortson, Lucy, Serjeant, Stephen, Krawczyk, Coleman, Kruk, Sandor, Lintott, Chris, Mantha, Kameswara, Simmons, Brooke D, and Walmsley, Mike
- Abstract
Galaxy Zoo: Clump Scout is a web-based citizen science project designed to identify and spatially locate giant star forming clumps in galaxies that were imaged by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Legacy Survey. We present a statistically driven software framework that is designed to aggregate two-dimensional annotations of clump locations provided by multiple independent Galaxy Zoo: Clump Scout volunteers and generate a consensus label that identifies the locations of probable clumps within each galaxy. The statistical model our framework is based on allows us to assign false-positive probabilities to each of the clumps we identify, to estimate the skill levels of each of the volunteers who contribute to Galaxy Zoo: Clump Scout and also to quantitatively assess the reliability of the consensus labels that are derived for each subject. We apply our framework to a dataset containing 3,561,454 two-dimensional points, which constitute 1,739,259 annotations of 85,286 distinct subjects provided by 20,999 volunteers. Using this dataset, we identify 128,100 potential clumps distributed among 44,126 galaxies. This dataset can be used to study the prevalence and demographics of giant star forming clumps in low-redshift galaxies. The code for our aggregation software framework is publicly available at: https://github.com/ou-astrophysics/BoxAggregator
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- 2022
186. Galaxy Zoo: Clump Scout: Surveying the Local Universe for Giant Star-forming Clumps
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Adams, Dominic, Mehta, Vihang, Dickinson, Hugh, Scarlata, Claudia, Fortson, Lucy, Kruk, Sandor, Simmons, Brooke, Lintott, Chris, Adams, Dominic, Mehta, Vihang, Dickinson, Hugh, Scarlata, Claudia, Fortson, Lucy, Kruk, Sandor, Simmons, Brooke, and Lintott, Chris
- Abstract
Massive, star-forming clumps are a common feature of high-redshift star-forming galaxies. How they formed, and why they are so rare at low redshift, remains unclear. In this paper we identify the largest sample yet of clumpy galaxies (7050) at low redshift using data from the citizen science project Galaxy Zoo: Clump Scout, in which volunteers classified 58,550 Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) galaxies spanning redshift 0.02 < z < 0.15. We apply a robust completeness correction by comparing with simulated clumps identified by the same method. Requiring that the ratio of clump to galaxy flux in the SDSS u band be greater than 8% (similar to clump definitions used by other works), we estimate the fraction of local star-forming galaxies hosting at least one clump (f clumpy) to be 3.22−0.34+0.38% . We also compute the same fraction with a less stringent relative flux cut of 3% ( 12.68−0.88+1.38% ), as the higher number count and lower statistical noise of this fraction permit finer comparison with future low-redshift clumpy galaxy studies. Our results reveal a sharp decline in f clumpy over 0 < z < 0.5. The minor merger rate remains roughly constant over the same span, so we suggest that minor mergers are unlikely to be the primary driver of clump formation. Instead, the rate of galaxy turbulence is a better tracer for f clumpy over 0 < z < 1.5 for galaxies of all masses, which supports the idea that clump formation is primarily driven by violent disk instability for all galaxy populations during this period.
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- 2022
187. Gems of the Galaxy Zoos—A Wide-ranging Hubble Space Telescope Gap-filler Program*
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Keel, William C., Tate, Jean, Wong, O. Ivy, Banfield, Julie K., Lintott, Chris J., Masters, Karen L., Simmons, Brooke D., Scarlata, Claudia, Cardamone, Carolin, Smethurst, Rebecca, Fortson, Lucy, Shanahan, Jesse, Kruk, Sandor, Garland, Izzy L., Hancock, Colin, O’Ryan, David, Keel, William C., Tate, Jean, Wong, O. Ivy, Banfield, Julie K., Lintott, Chris J., Masters, Karen L., Simmons, Brooke D., Scarlata, Claudia, Cardamone, Carolin, Smethurst, Rebecca, Fortson, Lucy, Shanahan, Jesse, Kruk, Sandor, Garland, Izzy L., Hancock, Colin, and O’Ryan, David
- Abstract
We describe the Gems of the Galaxy Zoos (Zoo Gems) project, a gap-filler project using short windows in the Hubble Space Telescope's schedule. As with previous snapshot programs, targets are taken from a pool based on position; we combine objects selected by volunteers in both the Galaxy Zoo and Radio Galaxy Zoo citizen-science projects. Zoo Gems uses exposures with the Advanced Camera for Surveys to address a broad range of topics in galaxy morphology, interstellar-medium content, host galaxies of active galactic nuclei, and galaxy evolution. Science cases include studying galaxy interactions, backlit dust in galaxies, post-starburst systems, rings and peculiar spiral patterns, outliers from the usual color–morphology relation, Green Pea compact starburst systems, double radio sources with spiral host galaxies, and extended emission-line regions around active galactic nuclei. For many of these science categories, final selection of targets from a larger list used public input via a voting process. Highlights to date include the prevalence of tightly wound spiral structure in blue, apparently early-type galaxies, a nearly complete Einstein ring from a group lens, redder components at lower surface brightness surrounding compact Green Pea starbursts, and high-probability examples of spiral galaxies hosting large double radio sources.
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- 2022
188. Evolution of the Mass-Metallicity Relation from Redshift $z\approx8$ to the Local Universe
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Langeroodi, Danial, Hjorth, Jens, Chen, Wenlei, Kelly, Patrick L., Williams, Hayley, Lin, Yu-Heng, Scarlata, Claudia, Zitrin, Adi, Broadhurst, Tom, Diego, Jose M., Huang, Xiaosheng, Filippenko, Alexei V., Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh, Koekemoer, Anton M., Oguri, Masamune, Perez-Fournon, Ismael, Pierel, Justin, Poidevin, Frederick, Strolger, Lou, Langeroodi, Danial, Hjorth, Jens, Chen, Wenlei, Kelly, Patrick L., Williams, Hayley, Lin, Yu-Heng, Scarlata, Claudia, Zitrin, Adi, Broadhurst, Tom, Diego, Jose M., Huang, Xiaosheng, Filippenko, Alexei V., Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh, Koekemoer, Anton M., Oguri, Masamune, Perez-Fournon, Ismael, Pierel, Justin, Poidevin, Frederick, and Strolger, Lou
- Abstract
A tight positive correlation between the stellar mass and the gas-phase metallicity of galaxies has been observed at low redshifts. The redshift evolution of this correlation can strongly constrain theories of galaxy evolution. The advent of JWST allows probing the mass-metallicity relation at redshifts far beyond what was previously accessible. Here we report the discovery of two emission-line galaxies at redshifts 8.15 and 8.16 in JWST NIRCam imaging and NIRSpec spectroscopy of targets gravitationally lensed by the cluster RXJ2129.4$+$0005. We measure their metallicities and stellar masses along with nine additional galaxies at $7.2 < z_{\rm spec} < 9.5$ to report the first quantitative statistical inference of the mass-metallicity relation at $z\approx8$. We measure $\sim 0.9$ dex evolution in the normalization of the mass-metallicity relation from $z \approx 8$ to the local Universe; at fixed stellar mass, galaxies are 8 times less metal enriched at $z \approx 8$ compared to the present day. Our inferred normalization is in agreement with the predictions of the FIRE simulations. Our inferred slope of the mass-metallicity relation is similar to or slightly shallower than that predicted by FIRE or observed at lower redshifts. We compare the $z \approx 8$ galaxies to extremely low metallicity analog candidates in the local Universe, finding that they are generally distinct from extreme emission-line galaxies or "green peas" but are similar in strong emission-line ratios and metallicities to "blueberry galaxies". Despite this similarity, at fixed stellar mass, the $z \approx 8$ galaxies have systematically lower metallicities compared to blueberry galaxies., Comment: Published in ApJ
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- 2022
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189. A spatially resolved analysis of star-formation burstiness by comparing UV and H$\alpha$ in galaxies at z$\sim$1 with UVCANDELS
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Mehta, Vihang, Teplitz, Harry I., Scarlata, Claudia, Wang, Xin, Alavi, Anahita, Colbert, James, Rafelski, Marc, Grogin, Norman, Koekemoer, Anton, Prichard, Laura, Windhorst, Rogier, Barber, Justin M., Conselice, Christopher J., Dai, Y. Sophia, Gardner, Jonathan P., Gawiser, Eric, Guo, Yicheng, Hathi, Nimish, Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Hayes, Matthew, Iyer, Kartheik G., Jansen, Rolf A., Ji, Zhiyuan, Kurczynski, Peter, Kuschel, Maxwell, Lucas, Ray A., Mantha, Kameswara, O'Connell, Robert W., Ravindranath, Swara, Robertson, Brant E., Rutkowski, Michael, Siana, Brian, Yung, L. Y. Aaron, Mehta, Vihang, Teplitz, Harry I., Scarlata, Claudia, Wang, Xin, Alavi, Anahita, Colbert, James, Rafelski, Marc, Grogin, Norman, Koekemoer, Anton, Prichard, Laura, Windhorst, Rogier, Barber, Justin M., Conselice, Christopher J., Dai, Y. Sophia, Gardner, Jonathan P., Gawiser, Eric, Guo, Yicheng, Hathi, Nimish, Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Hayes, Matthew, Iyer, Kartheik G., Jansen, Rolf A., Ji, Zhiyuan, Kurczynski, Peter, Kuschel, Maxwell, Lucas, Ray A., Mantha, Kameswara, O'Connell, Robert W., Ravindranath, Swara, Robertson, Brant E., Rutkowski, Michael, Siana, Brian, and Yung, L. Y. Aaron
- Abstract
The UltraViolet imaging of the Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey Fields (UVCANDELS) program provides HST/UVIS F275W imaging for four CANDELS fields. We combine this UV imaging with existing HST/near-IR grism spectroscopy from 3D-HST$+$AGHAST to directly compare the resolved rest-frame UV and H$\alpha$ emission for a sample of 979 galaxies at $0.7
1.5$), suggesting that bursty star-formation is likely prevalent in the outskirts of even the most massive galaxies but is likely over-shadowed by their brighter cores. Furthermore, we present the UV-to-H$\alpha$ ratio as a function of galaxy surface brightness, a proxy for stellar mass surface density, and find that regions below $\sim$10$^{7.5}$ M$_\odot$ kpc$^{-2}$ are consistent with bursty star-formation, regardless of their galaxy stellar mass, potentially suggesting that local star-formation is independent of global galaxy properties at the smallest scales. Lastly, we find galaxies at $z>1.1$ to have bursty star-formation regardless of radius or surface brightness., Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures; accepted to ApJ - Published
- 2022
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190. Flashlights: More than A Dozen High-Significance Microlensing Events of Extremely Magnified Stars in Galaxies at Redshifts z=0.7-1.5
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Kelly, Patrick L., Chen, Wenlei, Alfred, Amruth, Broadhurst, Thomas J., Diego, Jose M., Emami, Najmeh, Filippenko, Alexei V., Keen, Allison, Li, Sung Kei, Lim, Jeremy, Meena, Ashish K., Oguri, Masamune, Scarlata, Claudia, Treu, Tommaso, Williams, Hayley, Williams, Liliya L. R., Zhou, Rui, Zitrin, Adi, Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh W., Kaiser, Nick, Mehta, Vihang, Rieck, Steven, Salo, Laura, Smith, Nathan, Weisz, Daniel R., Kelly, Patrick L., Chen, Wenlei, Alfred, Amruth, Broadhurst, Thomas J., Diego, Jose M., Emami, Najmeh, Filippenko, Alexei V., Keen, Allison, Li, Sung Kei, Lim, Jeremy, Meena, Ashish K., Oguri, Masamune, Scarlata, Claudia, Treu, Tommaso, Williams, Hayley, Williams, Liliya L. R., Zhou, Rui, Zitrin, Adi, Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh W., Kaiser, Nick, Mehta, Vihang, Rieck, Steven, Salo, Laura, Smith, Nathan, and Weisz, Daniel R.
- Abstract
Once only accessible in nearby galaxies, we can now study individual stars across much of the observable universe aided by galaxy-cluster gravitational lenses. When a star, compact object, or multiple such objects in the foreground galaxy-cluster lens become aligned, they can magnify a background individual star, and the timescale of a magnification peak can limit its size to tens of AU. The number and frequency of microlensing events therefore opens a window into the population of stars and compact objects, as well as high-redshift stars. To assemble the first statistical sample of stars in order to constrain the initial mass function (IMF) of massive stars at redshift z=0.7-1.5, the abundance of primordial black holes in galaxy-cluster dark matter, and the IMF of the stars making up the intracluster light, we are carrying out a 192-orbit program with the Hubble Space Telescope called "Flashlights," which is now two-thirds complete owing to scheduling challenges. We use the ultrawide F200LP and F350LP long-pass WFC3 UVIS filters and conduct two 16-orbit visits separated by one year. Having an identical roll angle during both visits, while difficult to schedule, yields extremely clean subtraction. Here we report the discovery of more than a dozen bright microlensing events, including multiple examples in the famous "Dragon Arc" discovered in the 1980s, as well as the "Spocks" and "Warhol" arcs that have hosted already known supergiants. The ultradeep observer-frame ultraviolet-through-optical imaging is sensitive to hot stars, which will complement deep James Webb Space Telescope infrared imaging. We are also acquiring Large Binocular Telescope LUCI and Keck-I MOSFIRE near-infrared spectra of the highly magnified arcs to constrain their recent star-formation histories.
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- 2022
191. Low Metallicity Galaxies from the Dark Energy Survey
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Lin, Yu-Heng, Scarlata, Claudia, Mehta, Vihang, Skillman, Evan, Hayes, Matthew, McQuinn, Kristen B. W., Fortson, Lucy, Chworowsky, Katherine, Clarke, Leonardo, Lin, Yu-Heng, Scarlata, Claudia, Mehta, Vihang, Skillman, Evan, Hayes, Matthew, McQuinn, Kristen B. W., Fortson, Lucy, Chworowsky, Katherine, and Clarke, Leonardo
- Abstract
We present a new selection of 358 blue compact dwarf galaxies (BCDs) from 5,000 square degrees in the Dark Energy Survey (DES), and the spectroscopic follow-up of a subsample of 68 objects. For the subsample of 34 objects with deep spectra, we measure the metallicity via the direct T$_e$ method using the auroral [\oiii]$\lambda$ 4363 emission line. These BCDs have an average oxygen abundance of 12+log(O/H)= 7.8, with stellar masses between 10$^7$ to 10$^8$ M$_\odot$ and specific star formation rates between $\sim$ 10$^{-9}$ to 10$^{-7}$ yr$^{-1}$. We compare the position of our BCDs with the Mass-metallicity (M-Z) and Luminosity-metallicity (L-Z) relation derived from the Local Volume Legacy sample. We find the scatter about the M-Z relation is smaller than the scatter about the L-Z relation. We identify a correlation between the offsets from the M-Z and L-Z relation that we suggest is due to the contribution of metal-poor inflows. Finally, we explore the validity of the mass-metallicity-SFR fundamental plane in the mass range probed by our galaxies. We find that BCDs with stellar masses smaller than $10^{8}$M$_{\odot}$ do not follow the extrapolation of the fundamental plane. This result suggests that mechanisms other than the balance between inflows and outflows may be at play in regulating the position of low mass galaxies in the M-Z-SFR space., Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures, accepted by ApJ
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- 2022
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192. A Magnified Compact Galaxy at Redshift 9.51 with Strong Nebular Emission Lines
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Williams, Hayley, Kelly, Patrick L., Chen, Wenlei, Brammer, Gabriel, Zitrin, Adi, Treu, Tommaso, Scarlata, Claudia, Koekemoer, Anton M., Oguri, Masamune, Lin, Yu-Heng, Diego, Jose M., Nonino, Mario, Hjorth, Jens, Langeroodi, Danial, Broadhurst, Tom, Rogers, Noah, Perez-Fournon, Ismael, Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh, Filippenko, Alexei V., Strolger, Lou, Pierel, Justin, Poidevin, Frederick, Yang, Lilan, Williams, Hayley, Kelly, Patrick L., Chen, Wenlei, Brammer, Gabriel, Zitrin, Adi, Treu, Tommaso, Scarlata, Claudia, Koekemoer, Anton M., Oguri, Masamune, Lin, Yu-Heng, Diego, Jose M., Nonino, Mario, Hjorth, Jens, Langeroodi, Danial, Broadhurst, Tom, Rogers, Noah, Perez-Fournon, Ismael, Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh, Filippenko, Alexei V., Strolger, Lou, Pierel, Justin, Poidevin, Frederick, and Yang, Lilan
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Ultraviolet light from early galaxies is thought to have ionized gas in the intergalactic medium. However, there are few observational constraints on this epoch because of the faintness of those galaxies and the redshift of their optical light into the infrared. We report the observation, in JWST imaging, of a distant galaxy that is magnified by gravitational lensing. JWST spectroscopy of the galaxy, at rest-frame optical wavelengths, detects strong nebular emission lines that are attributable to oxygen and hydrogen. The measured redshift is z = 9.51 +- 0.01, corresponding to 510 million years after the Big Bang. The galaxy has a radius of 16.2+4.6-7.2 parsecs, which is substantially more compact than galaxies with equivalent luminosity at z = 6 to 8, leading to a high star formation rate surface density.
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- 2022
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193. On the triggering of extreme starburst events in low-metallicity galaxies: a deep search for companions of Green Peas
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Laufman, Lauren, Scarlata, Claudia, Hayes, Matthew, Skillman, Evan, Laufman, Lauren, Scarlata, Claudia, Hayes, Matthew, and Skillman, Evan
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Green pea galaxies are starbursting, low-mass galaxies that are good analogues to star-forming galaxies in the early universe. We perform a survey of 23 Green Peas using the MUSE Integral Field Unit spectrograph on the VLT to search for companion galaxies. The survey reaches an average point-source depth of $\sim 10^{-18}$ erg cm$^{-2}$ s$^{-1}$ for emission lines. The MUSE field of view allows us to probe a 1$\times$1 arcmin$^2$ field around these galaxies and to search their surroundings for faint companions that could have interacted with them and induced their starburst episodes. We search for companions using a variety of methods including template matching to emission and absorption line spectra. When restricting the search to the same physical area (R = 78 kpc) for all galaxies, we find that the fraction of green pea galaxies with companions is $0.11_{-0.05}^{+0.07}$. We define a control sample of star-forming galaxies with the same stellar masses and redshifts as the green peas, but consistent with the star-formation main sequence. We find that green pea galaxies are as likely to have companions as the control sample; for which the fraction of objects with companions is $0.08_{-0.03}^{+0.05}$. Given that we do not find statistical evidence for an elevated companion fraction in the green peas in this study, we argue that the ``companions" are likely unrelated to the bursts in these galaxies., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2022
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194. Testing SALT Approximations with Numerical Radiation Transfer Code Part 1: Validity and Applicability
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Carr, Cody, Michel-Dansac, Leo, Blaizot, Jeremy, Scarlata, Claudia, Henry, Alaina, Verhamme, Anne, Carr, Cody, Michel-Dansac, Leo, Blaizot, Jeremy, Scarlata, Claudia, Henry, Alaina, and Verhamme, Anne
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Absorption line spectroscopy offers one of the best opportunities to constrain the properties of galactic outflows and the environment of the circumgalactic medium. Extracting physical information from line profiles is difficult, however, for the physics governing the underlying radiation transfer is complicated and depends on many different parameters. Idealized analytical models are necessary to constrain the large parameter spaces efficiently, but are typically plagued by model degeneracy and systematic errors. Comparison tests with idealized numerical radiation transfer codes offer an excellent opportunity to confront both of these issues. In this paper, we present a detailed comparison between SALT, an analytical radiation transfer model for predicting UV spectra of galactic outflows, with the numerical radiation transfer software, RASCAS. Our analysis has lead to upgrades to both models including an improved derivation of SALT and a customizable adaptive mesh refinement routine for RASCAS. We explore how well SALT, when paired with a Monte Carlo fitting procedure, can recover flow parameters from non-turbulent and turbulent flows. When the velocity and density gradients are excluded, we find that flow parameters are well recovered from high resolution (20 $\rm{km}$ $\rm{s}^{-1}$) data and moderately well from medium resolution (100 $\rm{km}$ $\rm{s}^{-1}$) data without turbulence at a S/N = 10, while derived quantities (e.g., mass outflow rates, column density, etc.) are well recovered at all resolutions. In the turbulent case, biased errors emerge in the recovery of individual parameters, but derived quantities are still well recovered.
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- 2022
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195. A Semi-Analytical Line Transfer (SALT) Model III: Galactic Inflows
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Carr, Cody, Scarlata, Claudia, Carr, Cody, and Scarlata, Claudia
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We present calculations of ultraviolet spectra resulting from the scattering of photons by gas in-falling onto an isotropically emitting source of radiation. The model is based on an adaptation of the semi-analytical line transfer (SALT) code of Scarlata & Panagia (2015), and designed to interpret the inverse P-Cygni profiles observed in the spectra of partially ionized galactic inflows. In addition to presenting the model, we explore the parameter space of the inflowing SALT model and recreate various physically motivated scenarios including spherical inflows, inflows with covering fractions less than unity, and galactic fountains (i.e., galactic systems with both an inflowing and outflowing component). The resulting spectra from inflowing gas show spectral features that could be misinterpreted as ISM features in low resolution spectroscopy ($\sigma \approx 120$ $\rm{km }$ $\rm{s}^{-1}$), suggesting that the total number of galactic systems with inflows is undercounted. Our models suggest that observations at medium resolution ($R = 6000$ or $\sigma \approx 50$ $\rm{km }$ $\rm{s}^{-1}$) that can be obtained with 8m-class telescopes will be able to resolve the characteristic inverse P Cygni profiles necessary to identify inflows., Comment: Accepted by ApJ
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- 2022
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196. Deep Large Binocular Camera r-band Observations of the GOODS-N Field
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Ashcraft, Teresa A., McCabe, Tyler, Redshaw, Caleb, Windhorst, Rogier A., Jansen, Rolf A., Cohen, Seth H., Carleton, Timothy, Ganzel, Kris, Koekemoer, Anton M., Ryan, Russell E., Nonino, Mario, Paris, Diego, Grazian, Andrea, Fontana, Adriano, Giallongo, Emanuele, Speziali, Roberto, Testa, Vincenzo, Boutsia, Konstantina, O'Connell, Robert W., Rutkowski, Michael J., Scarlata, Claudia, Teplitz, Harry I., Wang, Xin, Rafelski, Marc, Grogin, Norman A., Ashcraft, Teresa A., McCabe, Tyler, Redshaw, Caleb, Windhorst, Rogier A., Jansen, Rolf A., Cohen, Seth H., Carleton, Timothy, Ganzel, Kris, Koekemoer, Anton M., Ryan, Russell E., Nonino, Mario, Paris, Diego, Grazian, Andrea, Fontana, Adriano, Giallongo, Emanuele, Speziali, Roberto, Testa, Vincenzo, Boutsia, Konstantina, O'Connell, Robert W., Rutkowski, Michael J., Scarlata, Claudia, Teplitz, Harry I., Wang, Xin, Rafelski, Marc, and Grogin, Norman A.
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We obtained 838 Sloan r-band images (~28 hrs) of the GOODS-North field with the Large Binocular Camera (LBC) on the Large Binocular Telescope in order to study the presence of extended, low surface brightness features in galaxies and investigate the trade-off between image depth and resolution. The individual images were sorted by effective seeing, which allowed for optimal resolution and optimal depth mosaics to be created with all images with seeing FWHM < 0.9" and FWHM < 2.0", respectively. Examining bright galaxies and their substructure as well as accurately deblending overlapping objects requires the optimal resolution mosaic, while detecting the faintest objects possible (to a limiting magnitude of $m_{AB}$ ~ 29.2 mag) requires the optimal depth mosaic. The better surface brightness sensitivity resulting from the larger LBC pixels, compared to those of extant WFC3/UVIS and ACS/WFC cameras aboard the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) allows for unambiguous detection of both diffuse flux and very faint tidal tails. We created azimuthally-averaged radial surface brightness profiles for the 360 brightest galaxies in the mosaics. We find little difference in the majority of the light profiles from the optimal resolution and optimal depth mosaics. However, $\lesssim$ 15% of the profiles show excess flux in the galaxy outskirts down to surface brightness levels of $\mu^{AB}_{r} $ $\simeq$ 31 mag arcsec $^{-2}$. This is relevant to Extragalactic Background Light (EBL) studies as diffuse light in the outer regions of galaxies are thought to be a major contribution to the EBL. While some additional diffuse light exists in the optimal depth profiles compared to the shallower, optimal resolution profiles, we find that diffuse light in galaxy outskirts is a minor contribution to the EBL overall in the r-band., Comment: 30 pages, 25 figures, submitted to PASP
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- 2022
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197. Early Results from GLASS-JWST. I: Confirmation of Lensed $z\geqslant7$ Lyman-Break Galaxies Behind the Abell 2744 Cluster With NIRISS
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Roberts-Borsani, Guido, Morishita, Takahiro, Treu, Tommaso, Brammer, Gabriel, Strait, Victoria, Wang, Xin, Bradac, Marusa, Acebron, Ana, Bergamini, Pietro, Boyett, Kristan, Calabró, Antonello, Castellano, Marco, Fontana, Adriano, Glazebrook, Karl, Grillo, Claudio, Henry, Alaina, Jones, Tucker, Malkan, Matthew, Marchesini, Danilo, Mascia, Sara, Mason, Charlotte, Mercurio, Amata, Merlin, Emiliano, Nanayakkara, Themiya, Pentericci, Laura, Rosati, Piero, Santini, Paola, Scarlata, Claudia, Trenti, Michele, Vanzella, Eros, Vulcani, Benedetta, Willott, Chris, Roberts-Borsani, Guido, Morishita, Takahiro, Treu, Tommaso, Brammer, Gabriel, Strait, Victoria, Wang, Xin, Bradac, Marusa, Acebron, Ana, Bergamini, Pietro, Boyett, Kristan, Calabró, Antonello, Castellano, Marco, Fontana, Adriano, Glazebrook, Karl, Grillo, Claudio, Henry, Alaina, Jones, Tucker, Malkan, Matthew, Marchesini, Danilo, Mascia, Sara, Mason, Charlotte, Mercurio, Amata, Merlin, Emiliano, Nanayakkara, Themiya, Pentericci, Laura, Rosati, Piero, Santini, Paola, Scarlata, Claudia, Trenti, Michele, Vanzella, Eros, Vulcani, Benedetta, and Willott, Chris
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We present the first search for $z\geqslant7$, continuum-confirmed sources with NIRISS/WFS spectroscopy over the Abell 2744 Frontier Fields cluster, as part of the GLASS-JWST ERS survey. With $\sim15$ hrs of pre-imaging and multi-angle grism exposures in the F115W, F150W, and F200W filters, we describe the general data handling (i.e., reduction, cleaning, modeling, and extraction processes) and analysis for the GLASS-JWST survey. We showcase the power of JWST to peer deep into reionization, when most intergalactic hydrogen is neutral, by confirming two galaxies at $z=8.04\pm0.15$ and $z=7.90\pm0.13$ by means of their Lyman breaks. Fainter continuum spectra are observed in both the F150W and F200W bands, indicative of blue ($-1.69$ and $-1.33$) UV slopes and moderately-bright absolute magnitudes ($-20.37$ and $-19.68$ mag). We do not detect strong Ly$\alpha$ in either galaxy, but do observe tentative ($\sim2.7-3.8\sigma$) HeII$\lambda$1640 A, OIII]$\lambda\lambda$1661,1666 A, and NIII]$\lambda\lambda$1747,1749 A line emission in one, suggestive of low metallicity, star-forming systems with possible non-thermal contributions. These novel observations provide a first look at the extraordinary potential of JWST/NIRISS for confirming representative samples of bright $z\geqslant7$ sources in the absence of strong emission lines, and gain unprecedented insight into their contributions towards cosmic reionization., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL on 1st September 2022, after minor modifications based on the referee report. 10 pages, 3 figures, 1 table
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- 2022
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198. An excursion into the core of the cluster lens Abell 1689
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Ghosh, Agniva, Adams, Dominic, Williams, Liliya L. R., Liesenborgs, Jori, Alavi, Anahita, Scarlata, Claudia, Ghosh, Agniva, Adams, Dominic, Williams, Liliya L. R., Liesenborgs, Jori, Alavi, Anahita, and Scarlata, Claudia
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Abell 1689 is a well studied cluster of galaxies and one of the largest gravitational lens systems ever observed. We have obtained a reconstruction of the cluster Abell 1689 using Grale, a free-form lens inversion method that relies exclusively on the multiple image data. Non-inclusion of any data related to cluster member galaxies ensures an unbiased measure of the mass distribution, which is the most notable feature of free-form methods like Grale. We used two different sets of multiple image systems from the available strong lensing data - one containing only the secure systems (107 images), and the other containing all available systems, only excluding some very non-secure systems (151 images). For the very well-constrained central $\sim$100 kpc region of the cluster we made detailed comparison of the Grale reconstructed lensing mass and stellar mass retrieved by the Spectral Energy Distribution (SED) fitting software FAST++. We found a light-unaccompanied mass peak in this region, whose existence, while tentative, is favored by the distribution of nearby images that are local maxima in the Fermat potential. However, further tests, using different methodologies are needed to confirm the reality of this feature. If it shown to be real, this light-unaccompanied mass peak is consistent with dark matter self-interaction cross-section $\sigma \lesssim 1$cm$^2$/g, while being in tension with larger cross-sections., Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures
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- 2022
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199. Investigating the Dominant Environmental Quenching Process in UVCANDELS/COSMOS Groups
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Kuschel, Maxwell, Scarlata, Claudia, Mehta, Vihang, Teplitz, Harry I., Rafelski, Marc, Wang, Xin, Sunnquist, Ben, Prichard, Laura, Grogin, Norman, Windhorst, Rogier, Rutkowski, Michael, Alavi, Anahita, Chartab, Nima, Conselice, Christopher J., Dai, Y. Sophia, Gawiser, Eric, Giavalisco, Mauro, Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Hathi, Nimish, Jansen, Rolf, Ji, Zhiyuan, Koekemoer, Anton, Lucas, Ray A., Mantha, Kameswara, Mobasher, Bahram, O'Connell, Robert W., Robertson, Brant, Sattari, Zahra, Yung, L. Y. Aaron, Dave, Romeel, DeMello, Duilia, Dickinson, Mark, Ferguson, Henry, Finkelstein, Steven L., Hayes, Matt, Howell, Justin, Kaviraj, Sugata, Mackenty, John W., Siana, Brian, Kuschel, Maxwell, Scarlata, Claudia, Mehta, Vihang, Teplitz, Harry I., Rafelski, Marc, Wang, Xin, Sunnquist, Ben, Prichard, Laura, Grogin, Norman, Windhorst, Rogier, Rutkowski, Michael, Alavi, Anahita, Chartab, Nima, Conselice, Christopher J., Dai, Y. Sophia, Gawiser, Eric, Giavalisco, Mauro, Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Hathi, Nimish, Jansen, Rolf, Ji, Zhiyuan, Koekemoer, Anton, Lucas, Ray A., Mantha, Kameswara, Mobasher, Bahram, O'Connell, Robert W., Robertson, Brant, Sattari, Zahra, Yung, L. Y. Aaron, Dave, Romeel, DeMello, Duilia, Dickinson, Mark, Ferguson, Henry, Finkelstein, Steven L., Hayes, Matt, Howell, Justin, Kaviraj, Sugata, Mackenty, John W., and Siana, Brian
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We explore how the fraction of quenched galaxies changes in groups of galaxies with respect to the distance to the center of the group, redshift, and stellar mass to determine the dominant process of environmental quenching in $0.2 < z < 0.8$ groups. We use new UV data from the UVCANDELS project in addition to existing multiband photometry to derive new galaxy physical properties of the group galaxies from the zCOSMOS 20k Group Catalog. Limiting our analysis to a complete sample of log$(M_*/M_{\odot})>10.56$ group galaxies we find that the probability of being quenched increases slowly with decreasing redshift, diverging from the stagnant field galaxy population. A corresponding analysis on how the probability of being quenched increases with time within groups suggests that the dominant environmental quenching process is characterized by slow ($\sim$Gyr) timescales. We find a quenching time of approximately $4.91^{+0.91}_{-1.47} $Gyrs, consistent with the slow processes of strangulation (Larson et al. 1980) and delayed-then-rapid quenching (Wetzel et al. 2013 arXiv:1206.3571v2 [astro-ph.CO]), although more data are needed to confirm this result.
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- 2022
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200. CLASSY II: A technical Overview of the COS Legacy Archive Spectroscopic SurveY
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James, Bethan L., Berg, Danielle A., King, Teagan, Sahnow, David J., Mingozzi, Matilde, Chisholm, John, Heckman, Timothy, Martin, Crystal L., Stark, Dan P., Team, The Classy, Aloisi, Alessandra, Amorín, Ricardo O., Arellano-Córdova, Karla Z., Bayliss, Matthew, Bordoloi, Rongmon, Brinchmann, Jarle, Charlot, Stéphane, Chevallard, Jacopo, Clark, Ilyse, Erb, Dawn K., Feltre, Anna, Hayes, Matthew, Henry, Alaina, Hernandez, Svea, Jaskot, Anne, Jones, Tucker, Kewley, Lisa J., Kumari, Nimisha, Leitherer, Claus, Llerena, Mario, Maseda, Michael, Nanayakkara, Themiya, Ouchi, Masami, Plat, Adele, Pogge, Richard W., Ravindranath, Swara, Rigby, Jane R., Sanders, Ryan, Scarlata, Claudia, Senchyna, Peter, Skillman, Evan D., Steidel, Charles C., Strom, Allison L., Sugahara, Yuma, Wilkins, Stephen M., Wofford, Aida, Xu, Xinfeng, James, Bethan L., Berg, Danielle A., King, Teagan, Sahnow, David J., Mingozzi, Matilde, Chisholm, John, Heckman, Timothy, Martin, Crystal L., Stark, Dan P., Team, The Classy, Aloisi, Alessandra, Amorín, Ricardo O., Arellano-Córdova, Karla Z., Bayliss, Matthew, Bordoloi, Rongmon, Brinchmann, Jarle, Charlot, Stéphane, Chevallard, Jacopo, Clark, Ilyse, Erb, Dawn K., Feltre, Anna, Hayes, Matthew, Henry, Alaina, Hernandez, Svea, Jaskot, Anne, Jones, Tucker, Kewley, Lisa J., Kumari, Nimisha, Leitherer, Claus, Llerena, Mario, Maseda, Michael, Nanayakkara, Themiya, Ouchi, Masami, Plat, Adele, Pogge, Richard W., Ravindranath, Swara, Rigby, Jane R., Sanders, Ryan, Scarlata, Claudia, Senchyna, Peter, Skillman, Evan D., Steidel, Charles C., Strom, Allison L., Sugahara, Yuma, Wilkins, Stephen M., Wofford, Aida, and Xu, Xinfeng
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The COS Legacy Archive Spectroscopic SurveY (CLASSY) is designed to provide the community with a spectral atlas of 45 nearby star-forming galaxies which were chosen to cover similar properties as those seen at high-z (z>6). The prime high level science product of CLASSY is accurately coadded UV spectra, ranging from ~1000-2000A, derived from a combination of archival and new data obtained with HST's Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS). This paper details the multi-stage technical processes of creating this prime data product, and the methodologies involved in extracting, reducing, aligning, and coadding far-ultraviolet (FUV) and near-ultraviolet (NUV) spectra. We provide guidelines on how to successfully utilize COS observations of extended sources, despite COS being optimized for point sources, and best-practice recommendations for the coaddition of UV spectra in general. Moreover, we discuss the effects of our reduction and coaddition techniques in the scientific application of the CLASSY data. In particular, we find that accurately accounting for flux calibration offsets can affect the derived properties of the stellar populations, while customized extractions of NUV spectra for extended sources are essential for correctly diagnosing the metallicity of galaxies via CIII] nebular emission. Despite changes in spectral resolution of up to ~25% between individual datasets (due to changes in the COS line spread function), no adverse affects were observed on the difference in velocity width and outflow velocities of isolated absorption lines when measured in the final combined data products, owing in-part to our signal-to-noise regime of S/N<20., Comment: 31 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in ApJS
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- 2022
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