811 results on '"IVISON, ROB"'
Search Results
202. COLDz: Shape of the CO Luminosity Function at High Redshift and the Cold Gas History of the Universe
- Author
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Riechers, Dominik A., primary, Pavesi, Riccardo, additional, Sharon, Chelsea E., additional, Hodge, Jacqueline A., additional, Decarli, Roberto, additional, Walter, Fabian, additional, Carilli, Christopher L., additional, Aravena, Manuel, additional, da Cunha, Elisabete, additional, Daddi, Emanuele, additional, Dickinson, Mark, additional, Smail, Ian, additional, Capak, Peter L., additional, Ivison, Rob J., additional, Sargent, Mark, additional, Scoville, Nicholas Z., additional, and Wagg, Jeff, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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203. The Strong Gravitationally Lensed Herschel Galaxy HLock01:Optical Spectroscopy Reveals a Close Galaxy Merger with Evidence of Inflowing Gas
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Marques-Chaves, Rui, Pérez-Fournon, Ismael, Gavazzi, Raphael, Martínez-Navajas, Paloma I., Riechers, Dominik, Rigopoulou, Dimitra, Cabrera-Lavers, Antonio, Clements, David L., Cooray, Asantha, Farrah, Duncan, Ivison, Rob J., Jiménez-Ángel, Camilo E., Nayyeri, Hooshang, Oliver, Seb, Omont, Alain, Scott, Douglas, Shu, Yiping, Wardlow, Julie, Marques-Chaves, Rui, Pérez-Fournon, Ismael, Gavazzi, Raphael, Martínez-Navajas, Paloma I., Riechers, Dominik, Rigopoulou, Dimitra, Cabrera-Lavers, Antonio, Clements, David L., Cooray, Asantha, Farrah, Duncan, Ivison, Rob J., Jiménez-Ángel, Camilo E., Nayyeri, Hooshang, Oliver, Seb, Omont, Alain, Scott, Douglas, Shu, Yiping, and Wardlow, Julie
- Abstract
The submillimeter galaxy (SMG) HERMES J105751.1+573027 (hereafter HLock01) at z = 2.9574 ± 0.0001 is one of the brightest gravitationally lensed sources discovered in the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey. Apart from the high flux densities in the far-infrared, it is also extremely bright in the rest-frame ultraviolet (UV), with a total apparent magnitude m UV ≃ 19.7 mag. We report here deep spectroscopic observations with the Gran Telescopio Canarias of the optically bright lensed images of HLock01. Our results suggest that HLock01 is a merger system composed of the Herschel-selected SMG and an optically bright Lyman break-like galaxy (LBG), separated by only 3.3 kpc in projection. While the SMG appears very massive (M * ≃ 5 × 1011 M ⊙), with a highly extinguished stellar component (A V ≃ 4.3 ), the LBG is a young, lower-mass (M * ≃ 1 × 1010 M ⊙), but still luminous (10× {L}UV}* ) satellite galaxy. Detailed analysis of the high signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) rest-frame UV spectrum of the LBG shows complex kinematics of the gas, exhibiting both blueshifted and redshifted absorption components. While the blueshifted component is associated with strong galactic outflows from the massive stars in the LBG, as is common in most star-forming galaxies, the redshifted component may be associated with gas inflow seen along a favorable sightline to the LBG. We also find evidence of an extended gas reservoir around HLock01 at an impact parameter of 110 kpc, through the detection of C II λλ1334 absorption in the red wing of a bright Lyα emitter at z ≃ 3.327. The data presented here highlight the power of gravitational lensing in high S/N studies to probe deeply into the physics of high-z star-forming galaxies.
- Published
- 2018
204. SCUBA-2 Ultra Deep Imaging EAO Survey (STUDIES): faint-end counts at 450 ?m
- Author
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Wang, Wei-Hao, Lin, Wei-Ching, Lim, Chen-Fatt, Smail, Ian, Chapman, Scott C., Zheng, Xian Zhong, Shim, Hyunjin, Kodama, Tadayuki, Almaini, Omar, Ao, Yiping, Blain, Andrew W., Bourne, Nathan, Bunker, Andrew J., Chang, Yu-Yen, Chao, Dani C.-Y., Chen, Chian-Chou, Clements, David L., Conselice, Christopher J., Cowley, William I., Dannerbauer, Helmut, Dunlop, James S., Geach, James E., Goto, Tomotsugu, Jiang, Linhua, Ivison, Rob J., Jeong, Woong-Seob, Kohno, Kotaro, Kong, Xu, Lee, Chien-Hsu, Lee, Hyung Mok, Lee, Minju, Micha?owski, Micha? J., Sawicki, Marcin, Scott, Douglas, Shu, Xin Wen, Simpson, James M., Tee, Wei-Leong, Toba, Yoshiki, Valiante, Elisabetta, Wang, Jun-Xian, Wang, Ran, and Wardlow, Julie L.
- Subjects
submillimeter: galaxies ,background radiation ,galaxies: high-redshift ,cosmology: cosmic ,galaxies: evolution - Abstract
The SCUBA-2 Ultra Deep Imaging EAO Survey (STUDIES) is a three-year JCMT Large Program aiming to reach the 450 μm confusion limit in the COSMOS-CANDELS region to study a representative sample of the high-redshift far-infrared galaxy population that gives rise to the bulk of the far-infrared background. We present the first-year data from STUDIES. We reached a 450 μm noise level of 0.91 mJy for point sources at the map center, covered an area of 151 arcmin2, and detected 98 and 141 sources at 4.0σ and 3.5σ, respectively. Our derived counts are best constrained in the 3.5–25 mJy regime using directly detected sources. Below the detection limits, our fluctuation analysis further constrains the slope of the counts down to 1 mJy. The resulting counts at 1–25 mJy are consistent with a power law having a slope of −2.59 (±0.10 for 3.5–25 mJy, and ${}_{-0.7}^{+0.4}$ for 1–3.5 mJy). There is no evidence of a faint-end termination or turnover of the counts in this flux density range. Our counts are also consistent with previous SCUBA-2 blank-field and lensing-cluster surveys. The integrated surface brightness from our counts down to 1 mJy is 90.0 ± 17.2 Jy deg−2, which can account for up to ${83}_{-16}^{+15} \% $ of the COBE 450 μm background. We show that Herschel counts at 350 and 500 μm are significantly higher than our 450 μm counts, likely caused by its large beam and source clustering. High angular resolution instruments like SCUBA-2 at 450 μm are therefore highly beneficial for measuring the luminosity and spatial density of high-redshift dusty galaxies.
- Published
- 2017
205. ALMA deep field in SSA22: Blindly detected CO emitters and [C ii] emitter candidates
- Author
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Hayatsu, Natsuki H., Yoshida, Naoki, Smail, Ian, Swinbank, A. Mark, Ivison, Rob, Kubo, Mariko, Nakanishi, Kouichiro, Kawabe, Ryohei, Nagao, Tohru, Inoue, Akio K., Takeuchi, Tsutomu T., Lee, Minju, Ao, Yiping, Fujimoto, Seiji, Izumi, Takuma, Yamaguchi, Yuki, Ikarashi, Soh, Matsuda, Yuichi, Umehata, Hideki, Kohno, Kotaro, Tamura, Yoichi, Iono, Daisuke, Hatsukade, Bunyo, Yamada, Toru, and Astronomy
- Subjects
ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI ,SPECTROSCOPIC SURVEY ,formation [galaxies] ,Hubble Deep Field ,INITIAL MASS FUNCTION ,clusters: individual (SSA22) [galaxies] ,MU-M ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Submillimeter Array ,HIGH-REDSHIFT GALAXIES ,FAR-INFRARED LINE ,galaxies: clusters: individual (SSA22) ,0103 physical sciences ,STAR-FORMING GALAXIES ,galaxies: formation ,Emission spectrum ,NUMBER COUNTS ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,Common emitter ,Physics ,SUBMILLIMETER GALAXIES ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Star formation ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,early universe ,Redshift ,Galaxy ,LUMINOSITY FUNCTION ,Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,Millimeter - Abstract
著者人数: 24名, Accepted: 2017-02-24, 資料番号: SA1170016000
- Published
- 2017
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206. Transparency and openness in science [Editorial]
- Author
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Sanders, Jeremy, Blundy, Jon, Donaldson, Anne, Brown, Steve, Ivison, Rob, Padgett, Miles, Padian, Kevin, Rittinger, Katrin, Rowe, Kerry, Stace, Anthony, Viding, Essi, Chambers, Christopher D., and Chaplain, Mark
- Published
- 2017
207. ALMA twenty-six arcmin2 survey of GOODS-S at one millimeter (ASAGAO): Millimeter properties of stellar mass selected galaxies.
- Author
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Yamaguchi, Yuki, Kohno, Kotaro, Hatsukade, Bunyo, Wang, Tao, Yoshimura, Yuki, Ao, Yiping, Dunlop, James S, Egami, Eiichi, Espada, Daniel, Fujimoto, Seiji, Hayatsu, Natsuki H, Ivison, Rob J, Kodama, Tadayuki, Kusakabe, Haruka, Nagao, Tohru, Ouchi, Masami, Rujopakarn, Wiphu, Tadaki, Ken-ichi, Tamura, Yoichi, and Ueda, Yoshihiro
- Subjects
GALAXIES ,STAR formation ,GALACTIC evolution ,SIGNAL-to-noise ratio ,STELLAR mass ,SUBMILLIMETER astronomy ,REDSHIFT - Abstract
We make use of the ALMA twenty-Six Arcmin
2 survey of GOODS-S At One-millimeter (ASAGAO), deep 1.2 mm continuum observations of a 26-arcmin2 region in the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey-South (GOODS-S) obtained with Atacama Large Millimeter/sub-millimeter Array (ALMA), to probe dust-enshrouded star formation in K -band selected (i.e. stellar mass selected) galaxies, which are drawn from the FourStar Galaxy Evolution Survey (ZFOURGE) catalog. Based on the ASAGAO combined map, which was created by combining ASAGAO and ALMA archival data in the GOODS-South field, we find that 24 ZFOURGE sources have 1.2 mm counterparts with a signal-to-noise ratio >4.5 (1σ ≃ 30–70 μJy beam−1 at 1.2 mm). Their median redshift is estimated to be |$z$|median = 2.38 ± 0.14. They generally follow the tight relationship of the stellar mass versus star formation rate (i.e. the main sequence of star-forming galaxies). ALMA-detected ZFOURGE sources exhibit systematically larger infrared (IR) excess (IRX ≡ LIR / LUV ) compared to ZFOURGE galaxies without ALMA detections even though they have similar redshifts, stellar masses, and star formation rates. This implies the consensus stellar-mass versus IRX relation, which is known to be tight among rest-frame-ultraviolet-selected galaxies, cannot fully predict the ALMA detectability of stellar-mass-selected galaxies. We find that ALMA-detected ZFOURGE sources are the main contributors to the cosmic IR star formation rate density at |$z$| = 2–3. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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208. ALMA twenty-six arcmin2 survey of GOODS-S at one millimeter (ASAGAO): Source catalog and number counts
- Author
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Hatsukade, Bunyo, primary, Kohno, Kotaro, additional, Yamaguchi, Yuki, additional, Umehata, Hideki, additional, Ao, Yiping, additional, Aretxaga, Itziar, additional, Caputi, Karina I, additional, Dunlop, James S, additional, Egami, Eiichi, additional, Espada, Daniel, additional, Fujimoto, Seiji, additional, Hayatsu, Natsuki H, additional, Hughes, David H, additional, Ikarashi, Soh, additional, Iono, Daisuke, additional, Ivison, Rob J, additional, Kawabe, Ryohei, additional, Kodama, Tadayuki, additional, Lee, Minju, additional, Matsuda, Yuichi, additional, Nakanishi, Kouichiro, additional, Ohta, Kouji, additional, Ouchi, Masami, additional, Rujopakarn, Wiphu, additional, Suzuki, Tomoko, additional, Tamura, Yoichi, additional, Ueda, Yoshihiro, additional, Wang, Tao, additional, Wang, Wei-Hao, additional, Wilson, Grant W, additional, Yoshimura, Yuki, additional, and Yun, Min S, additional
- Published
- 2018
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209. The CO Luminosity Density at High-z (COLDz) Survey: A Sensitive, Large-area Blind Search for Low-J CO Emission from Cold Gas in the Early Universe with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array
- Author
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Pavesi, Riccardo, primary, Sharon, Chelsea E., additional, Riechers, Dominik A., additional, Hodge, Jacqueline A., additional, Decarli, Roberto, additional, Walter, Fabian, additional, Carilli, Chris L., additional, Daddi, Emanuele, additional, Smail, Ian, additional, Dickinson, Mark, additional, Ivison, Rob J., additional, Sargent, Mark, additional, Cunha, Elisabete da, additional, Aravena, Manuel, additional, Darling, Jeremy, additional, Smolčić, Vernesa, additional, Scoville, Nicholas Z., additional, Capak, Peter L., additional, and Wagg, Jeff, additional
- Published
- 2018
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210. ALMA deep field in SSA22: Survey design and source catalog of a 20 arcmin2 survey at 1.1 mm
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Umehata, Hideki, primary, Hatsukade, Bunyo, additional, Smail, Ian, additional, Alexander, David M, additional, Ivison, Rob J, additional, Matsuda, Yuichi, additional, Tamura, Yoichi, additional, Kohno, Kotaro, additional, Kato, Yuta, additional, Hayatsu, Natsuki H, additional, Kubo, Mariko, additional, and Ikarashi, Soh, additional
- Published
- 2018
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211. The Strong Gravitationally LensedHerschelGalaxy HLock01: Optical Spectroscopy Reveals a Close Galaxy Merger with Evidence of Inflowing Gas
- Author
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Marques-Chaves, Rui, primary, Pérez-Fournon, Ismael, additional, Gavazzi, Raphael, additional, Martínez-Navajas, Paloma I., additional, Riechers, Dominik, additional, Rigopoulou, Dimitra, additional, Cabrera-Lavers, Antonio, additional, Clements, David L., additional, Cooray, Asantha, additional, Farrah, Duncan, additional, Ivison, Rob J., additional, Jiménez-Ángel, Camilo E., additional, Nayyeri, Hooshang, additional, Oliver, Seb, additional, Omont, Alain, additional, Scott, Douglas, additional, Shu, Yiping, additional, and Wardlow, Julie, additional
- Published
- 2018
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212. The Herschel –ATLAS Data Release 2, Paper I. Submillimeter and Far-infrared Images of the South and North Galactic Poles: The Largest Herschel Survey of the Extragalactic Sky
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Smith, Matthew W. L., primary, Ibar, Edo, additional, Maddox, Steve J., additional, Valiante, Elisabetta, additional, Dunne, Loretta, additional, Eales, Stephen, additional, Dye, Simon, additional, Furlanetto, Christina, additional, Bourne, Nathan, additional, Cigan, Phil, additional, Ivison, Rob J., additional, Gomez, Haley, additional, Smith, Daniel J. B., additional, and Viaene, Sébastien, additional
- Published
- 2017
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213. Rise of the Titans: A Dusty, Hyper-luminous “870 μm Riser” Galaxy at z ∼ 6
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Riechers, Dominik A., primary, Leung, T. K. Daisy, additional, Ivison, Rob J., additional, Pérez-Fournon, Ismael, additional, Lewis, Alexander J. R., additional, Marques-Chaves, Rui, additional, Oteo, Iván, additional, Clements, Dave L., additional, Cooray, Asantha, additional, Greenslade, Josh, additional, Martínez-Navajas, Paloma, additional, Oliver, Seb, additional, Rigopoulou, Dimitra, additional, Scott, Douglas, additional, and Weiss, Axel, additional
- Published
- 2017
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214. SONS: The JCMT legacy survey of debris discs in the submillimetre
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Holland, Wayne S., primary, Matthews, Brenda C., additional, Kennedy, Grant M., additional, Greaves, Jane S., additional, Wyatt, Mark C., additional, Booth, Mark, additional, Bastien, Pierre, additional, Bryden, Geoff, additional, Butner, Harold, additional, Chen, Christine H., additional, Chrysostomou, Antonio, additional, Davies, Claire L., additional, Dent, William R. F., additional, Di Francesco, James, additional, Duchêne, Gaspard, additional, Gibb, Andy G., additional, Friberg, Per, additional, Ivison, Rob J., additional, Jenness, Tim, additional, Kavelaars, JJ, additional, Lawler, Samantha, additional, Lestrade, Jean-François, additional, Marshall, Jonathan P., additional, Moro-Martin, Amaya, additional, Panić, Olja, additional, Phillips, Neil, additional, Serjeant, Stephen, additional, Schieven, Gerald H., additional, Sibthorpe, Bruce, additional, Vican, Laura, additional, Ward-Thompson, Derek, additional, van der Werf, Paul, additional, White, Glenn J., additional, Wilner, David, additional, and Zuckerman, Ben, additional
- Published
- 2017
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215. The Interstellar Medium in High-redshift Submillimeter Galaxies as Probed by Infrared Spectroscopy
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Wardlow, Julie L., primary, Cooray, Asantha, additional, Osage, Willow, additional, Bourne, Nathan, additional, Clements, David, additional, Dannerbauer, Helmut, additional, Dunne, Loretta, additional, Dye, Simon, additional, Eales, Steve, additional, Farrah, Duncan, additional, Furlanetto, Cristina, additional, Ibar, Edo, additional, Ivison, Rob, additional, Maddox, Steve, additional, Michałowski, Michał M., additional, Riechers, Dominik, additional, Rigopoulou, Dimitra, additional, Scott, Douglas, additional, Smith, Matthew W. L., additional, Wang, Lingyu, additional, Werf, Paul van der, additional, Valiante, Elisabetta, additional, Valtchanov, Ivan, additional, and Verma, Aprajita, additional
- Published
- 2017
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216. SXDF-UDS-CANDELS-ALMA 1.5 arcmin2 deep survey
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Kohno, Kotaro, Tamura, Yoichi, Yamaguchi, Yuki, Umehata, Hideki, Rujopakarn, Wiphu, Lee, Minju, Motohara, Kentaro, Makiya, Ryu, Izumi, Takuma, Ivison, Rob, Ikarashi, Soh, Tadaki, Ken-ichi, Kodama, Tadayuki, Hatsukade, Bunyo, Yabe, Kiyoto, Hayashi, Masao, Iono, Daisuke, Matsuda, Yuichi, Nakanishi, Kouichiro, Kawabe, Ryohei, Wilson, Grant, Yun, Min S., Hughes, David, Caputi, Karina, Dunlop, James, and Astronomy
- Abstract
We have conducted 1.1 mm ALMA observations of a contiguous 105″ × 50″ or 1.5 arcmin2 window (achieved by 19 point mosaic) in the SXDF-UDS-CANDELS. We achieved a 5σ sensitivity of 0.28 mJy, giving a flat sensus of dusty star-forming galaxies with LIR ~6 × 1011 L⊙ (if Tdust = 40 K) or SFR ~100 M⊙ yr-1 up to z~10 thanks to the negative K-correction at this wavelength. We detect 5 brightest sources (S/N>6) and 18 low-significant sources (5 > S/N > 4; they may contain spurious detections, though) in the field. We find that these discrete sources are responsible for a faint filamentary emission seen in low-resolution (~30″) heavily confused AzTEC 1.1mm and SPIRE 0.5mm images. One of the 5 brightest ALMA sources is very dark in deep WFC3 and HAWK-I NIR images as well as VLA 1.4 GHz images, demonstrating that deep ALMA imaging can unveil new obscured star-forming galaxy population.
- Published
- 2015
217. molecular gas properties in the gravitationally lensed merger HATLAS J142935.3–002836.
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Messias, Hugo, Nagar, Neil, Zhang, Zhi-Yu, Oteo, Iván, Dye, Simon, Ibar, Eduardo, Timmons, Nicholas, van der Werf, Paul, Riechers, Dominik, Eales, Stephen, Ivison, Rob, Maresca, Jacob, Michałowski, Michał J, and Yang, Chentao
- Subjects
SPECTRAL energy distribution ,CARBON monoxide ,SOLAR radio bursts ,STAR formation - Abstract
Follow-up observations of (sub-)mm-selected gravitationally lensed systems have allowed a more detailed study of the dust-enshrouded phase of star formation up to very early cosmic times. Here, the case of the gravitationally lensed merger in HATLAS J142935.3–002836 (also known as H1429−0028; z
lens = 0.218, zbkg = 1.027) is revisited following recent developments in the literature and new Atacama Pathfinder EXperiment (APEX) observations targeting two carbon monoxide (CO) rotational transitions Jup = 3 and 6. We show that the line profiles comprise three distinct velocity components, where the fainter high velocity one is less magnified and more compact. The modelling of the observed spectral line energy distribution of CO Jup = 2–6 and [C i ]3 P1 −3 P0 assumes a large velocity gradient scenario, where the analysis is based on four statistical approaches. Since the detected gas and dust emission comes exclusively from only one of the two merging components (the one oriented north–south, NS), we are only able to determine upper limits for the companion. The molecular gas in the NS component in H1429−0028 is found to have a temperature of ∼70 K, a volume density of log (n [cm−3 ]) ∼ 3.7, to be expanding at ∼10 km s−1 pc−1 , and amounts to |${M_{\rm H_2} = 4_{-2}^{+3} \times 10^9\,{\rm M}_\odot }$|. The CO to H2 conversion factor is estimated to be |$\alpha _{\rm CO} = 0.4_{-0.2}^{+0.3}\,$| M⊙ /(K km s−1 pc2 ). The NS galaxy is expected to have a factor of ≳10× more gas than its companion (|${M_{\rm H_2}}\lesssim 3\times 10^8$| M⊙ ). Nevertheless, the total amount of molecular gas in the system comprises only up to 15 per cent (1σ upper limit) of the total (dynamical) mass. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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218. The SCUBA-2 Cosmology Legacy Survey: The clustering of submillimetre galaxies in the UKIDSS UDS field
- Author
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Wilkinson, Aaron, Almaini, Omar, Chen, Chian-Chou, Smail, Ian, Arumugam, Vinodiran, Blain, Andrew, Chapin, Edward L., Chapman, Scott C., Conselice, Christopher J., Cowley, William I., Dunlop, James S., Farrah, Duncan, Geach, James, Hartley, William G., Ivison, Rob J., Maltby, David T., Michałowski, Michał J., Mortlock, Alice, Scott, Douglas, Simpson, Chris, Simpson, James M., van der Werf, Paul, Wild, Vivienne, Wilkinson, Aaron, Almaini, Omar, Chen, Chian-Chou, Smail, Ian, Arumugam, Vinodiran, Blain, Andrew, Chapin, Edward L., Chapman, Scott C., Conselice, Christopher J., Cowley, William I., Dunlop, James S., Farrah, Duncan, Geach, James, Hartley, William G., Ivison, Rob J., Maltby, David T., Michałowski, Michał J., Mortlock, Alice, Scott, Douglas, Simpson, Chris, Simpson, James M., van der Werf, Paul, and Wild, Vivienne
- Abstract
Submillimetre galaxies (SMGs) are among the most luminous dusty galaxies in the Universe, but their true nature remains unclear; are SMGs the progenitors of the massive elliptical galaxies we see in the local Universe, or are they just a short-lived phase among more typical star-forming galaxies? To explore this problem further, we investigate the clustering of SMGs identified in the SCUBA-2 Cosmology Legacy Survey. We use a catalogue of submillimetre ($850\mu$m) source identifications derived using a combination of radio counterparts and colour/IR selection to analyse a sample of 914 SMGs in the UKIDSS Ultra Deep Survey (UDS), making this the largest high redshift sample of these galaxies to date. Using angular cross-correlation techniques, we estimate the halo masses for this large sample of SMGs and compare them with passive and star-forming galaxies selected in the same field. We find that SMGs, on average, occupy high-mass dark matter halos (M$_{\text{halo}} >10^{13}$M$_{\odot}$) at redshifts $z > 2.5$, consistent with being the progenitors of massive quiescent galaxies in present-day galaxy clusters. We also find evidence of downsizing, in which SMG activity shifts to lower mass halos at lower redshifts. In terms of their clustering and halo masses, SMGs appear to be consistent with other star-forming galaxies at a given redshift., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 14 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2016
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219. SXDF-ALMA 2 arcmin$^2$ Deep Survey: 1.1-mm Number Counts
- Author
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Hatsukade, Bunyo, Kohno, Kotaro, Umehata, Hideki, Aretxaga, Itziar, Caputi, Karina I., Dunlop, James S., Ikarashi, Soh, Iono, Daisuke, Ivison, Rob J., Lee, Minju, Makiya, Ryu, Matsuda, Yuichi, Motohara, Kentaro, Nakanishi, Kouichiro, Ohta, Kouji, Tadaki, Ken-ich, Tamura, Yoichi, Wang, Wei-Hao, Wilson, Grant W., Yamaguchi, Yuki, Yun, Min S., Hatsukade, Bunyo, Kohno, Kotaro, Umehata, Hideki, Aretxaga, Itziar, Caputi, Karina I., Dunlop, James S., Ikarashi, Soh, Iono, Daisuke, Ivison, Rob J., Lee, Minju, Makiya, Ryu, Matsuda, Yuichi, Motohara, Kentaro, Nakanishi, Kouichiro, Ohta, Kouji, Tadaki, Ken-ich, Tamura, Yoichi, Wang, Wei-Hao, Wilson, Grant W., Yamaguchi, Yuki, and Yun, Min S.
- Abstract
We report 1.1 mm number counts revealed with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Survey Field (SXDF). The advent of ALMA enables us to reveal millimeter-wavelength number counts down to the faint end without source confusion. However, previous studies are based on the ensemble of serendipitously-detected sources in fields originally targeting different sources and could be biased due to the clustering of sources around the targets. We derive number counts in the flux range of 0.2-2 mJy by using 23 (>=4sigma) sources detected in a continuous 2.0 arcmin$^2$ area of the SXDF. The number counts are consistent with previous results within errors, suggesting that the counts derived from serendipitously-detected sources are not significantly biased, although there could be field-to-field variation due to the small survey area. By using the best-fit function of the number counts, we find that ~40% of the extragalactic background light at 1.1 mm is resolved at S(1.1mm) > 0.2 mJy., Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, Accepted for publication in PASJ
- Published
- 2016
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220. The SCUBA-2 Cosmology Legacy Survey: Multi-wavelengths counterparts to 10$^3$ submillimeter galaxies in the UKIDSS-UDS field
- Author
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Chen, Chian-Chou, Smail, Ian, Ivison, Rob J., Arumugam, Vinodiran, Almaini, Omar, Conselice, Christopher J., Geach, James E., Hartley, Will G., Ma, Cheng-Jiun, Mortlock, Alice, Simpson, Chris, Simpson, James M., Swinbank, A. Mark, Aretxaga, Itziar, Blain, Andrew, Chapman, Scott C., Dunlop, James S., Farrah, Duncan, Halpern, Mark, Michałowski, Michał J., van der Werf, Paul, Wilkinson, Aaron, Zavala, Jorge A., Chen, Chian-Chou, Smail, Ian, Ivison, Rob J., Arumugam, Vinodiran, Almaini, Omar, Conselice, Christopher J., Geach, James E., Hartley, Will G., Ma, Cheng-Jiun, Mortlock, Alice, Simpson, Chris, Simpson, James M., Swinbank, A. Mark, Aretxaga, Itziar, Blain, Andrew, Chapman, Scott C., Dunlop, James S., Farrah, Duncan, Halpern, Mark, Michałowski, Michał J., van der Werf, Paul, Wilkinson, Aaron, and Zavala, Jorge A.
- Abstract
We present multiwavelength identifications for the counterparts of 1088 submillimeter sources detected at 850$\mu$m in the SCUBA-2 Cosmology Legacy Survey study of the UKIDSS-UDS field. By utilising an ALMA pilot study on a subset of our bright SCUBA-2 sample as a training set, along with the deep optical-near-infrared data available in this field, we develop a novel technique, Optical-IR Triple Color (OIRTC), using $z-K$, $K-[3.6]$, $[3.6]-[4.5]$ colors to select the candidate submillimeter galaxy (SMG) counterparts. By combining radio identification and the OIRTC technique, we find counterpart candidates for 80% of the Class = 1 $\geq4\,\sigma$ SCUBA-2 sample, defined as those that are covered by both radio and OIR imaging and the base sample for our scientific analyses. Based on the ALMA training set, we expect the accuracy of these identifications to be $82\pm20$%, with a completeness of $69\pm16$%, essentially as accurate as the traditional $p$-value technique but with higher completeness. We find that the fraction of SCUBA-2 sources having candidate counterparts is lower for fainter 850$\mu$m sources, and we argue that for follow-up observations sensitive to SMGs with $S_{850}\gtrsim 1$ mJy across the whole ALMA beam, the fraction with multiple counterparts is likely to be $>40$% for SCUBA-2 sources at $S_{850} \gtrsim 4$ mJy. We find that the photometric redshift distribution for the SMGs is well fit by a lognormal distribution, with a median redshift of $z=2.3\pm0.1$. After accounting for the sources without any radio and/or OIRTC counterpart, we estimate the median redshift to be $z=2.6\pm0.1$ for SMGs with $S_{850} >1$ mJy. We also use this new large sample to study the clustering of SMGs and the the far-infrared properties of the unidentified submillimeter sources by stacking their Herschel SPIRE far-infrared emission., Comment: ApJ in press, 23 pages, 17 figures
- Published
- 2016
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221. THE SXDF-ALMA 2 arcmin2DEEP SURVEY: STACKING REST-FRAME NEAR-INFRARED SELECTED OBJECTS
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Wang, Wei-Hao, primary, Kohno, Kotaro, additional, Hatsukade, Bunyo, additional, Umehata, Hideki, additional, Aretxaga, Itziar, additional, Hughes, David, additional, Caputi, Karina I., additional, Dunlop, James S., additional, Ikarashi, Soh, additional, Iono, Daisuke, additional, Ivison, Rob J., additional, Lee, Minju, additional, Makiya, Ryu, additional, Matsuda, Yuichi, additional, Motohara, Kentaro, additional, Nakanish, Kouichiro, additional, Ohta, Kouji, additional, Tadaki, Ken-ichi, additional, Tamura, Yoichi, additional, Kodama, Tadayuki, additional, Rujopakarn, Wiphu, additional, Wilson, Grant W., additional, Yamaguchi, Yuki, additional, Yun, Min S., additional, Coupon, Jean, additional, Hsieh, Bau-Ching, additional, and Foucaud, Sébastien, additional
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- 2016
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222. THE ALMA SPECTROSCOPIC SURVEY IN THEHUBBLEULTRA DEEP FIELD: MOLECULAR GAS RESERVOIRS IN HIGH-REDSHIFT GALAXIES
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Decarli, Roberto, primary, Walter, Fabian, additional, Aravena, Manuel, additional, Carilli, Chris, additional, Bouwens, Rychard, additional, Cunha, Elisabete da, additional, Daddi, Emanuele, additional, Elbaz, David, additional, Riechers, Dominik, additional, Smail, Ian, additional, Swinbank, Mark, additional, Weiss, Axel, additional, Bacon, Roland, additional, Bauer, Franz, additional, Bell, Eric F., additional, Bertoldi, Frank, additional, Chapman, Scott, additional, Colina, Luis, additional, Cortes, Paulo C., additional, Cox, Pierre, additional, Gónzalez-López, Jorge, additional, Inami, Hanae, additional, Ivison, Rob, additional, Hodge, Jacqueline, additional, Karim, Alex, additional, Magnelli, Benjamin, additional, Ota, Kazuaki, additional, Popping, Gergö, additional, Rix, Hans-Walter, additional, Sargent, Mark, additional, Wel, Arjen van der, additional, and Werf, Paul van der, additional
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- 2016
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223. ALMA SPECTROSCOPIC SURVEY IN THE HUBBLE ULTRA DEEP FIELD: THE INFRARED EXCESS OF UV-SELECTEDz= 2–10 GALAXIES AS A FUNCTION OF UV-CONTINUUM SLOPE AND STELLAR MASS
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J. Bouwens, Rychard, primary, Aravena, Manuel, additional, Decarli, Roberto, additional, Walter, Fabian, additional, da Cunha, Elisabete, additional, Labbé, Ivo, additional, E. Bauer, Franz, additional, Bertoldi, Frank, additional, Carilli, Chris, additional, Chapman, Scott, additional, Daddi, Emanuele, additional, Hodge, Jacqueline, additional, J. Ivison, Rob, additional, Karim, Alex, additional, Le Fevre, Olivier, additional, Magnelli, Benjamin, additional, Ota, Kazuaki, additional, Riechers, Dominik, additional, R. Smail, Ian, additional, van der Werf, Paul, additional, Weiss, Axel, additional, Cox, Pierre, additional, Elbaz, David, additional, Gonzalez-Lopez, Jorge, additional, Infante, Leopoldo, additional, Oesch, Pascal, additional, Wagg, Jeff, additional, and Wilkins, Steve, additional
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- 2016
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224. The SCUBA-2 Cosmology Legacy Survey: the clustering of submillimetre galaxies in the UKIDSS UDS field
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Wilkinson, Aaron, primary, Almaini, Omar, additional, Chen, Chian-Chou, additional, Smail, Ian, additional, Arumugam, Vinodiran, additional, Blain, Andrew, additional, Chapin, Edward L., additional, Chapman, Scott C., additional, Conselice, Christopher J., additional, Cowley, William I., additional, Dunlop, James S., additional, Farrah, Duncan, additional, Geach, James, additional, Hartley, William G., additional, Ivison, Rob J., additional, Maltby, David T., additional, Michałowski, Michał J., additional, Mortlock, Alice, additional, Scott, Douglas, additional, Simpson, Chris, additional, Simpson, James M., additional, van der Werf, Paul, additional, and Wild, Vivienne, additional
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- 2016
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225. SXDF-ALMA 2 arcmin2deep survey: Resolving and characterizing the infrared extragalactic background light down to 0.5 mJy
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Yamaguchi, Yuki, primary, Tamura, Yoichi, additional, Kohno, Kotaro, additional, Aretxaga, Itziar, additional, Dunlop, James S., additional, Hatsukade, Bunyo, additional, Hughes, David, additional, Ikarashi, Soh, additional, Ishii, Shun, additional, Ivison, Rob J., additional, Izumi, Takuma, additional, Kawabe, Ryohei, additional, Kodama, Tadayuki, additional, Lee, Minju, additional, Makiya, Ryu, additional, Matsuda, Yuichi, additional, Nakanishi, Kouichiro, additional, Ohta, Kouji, additional, Rujopakarn, Wiphu, additional, Tadaki, Ken-ichi, additional, Umehata, Hideki, additional, Wang, Wei-Hao, additional, Wilson, Grant W., additional, Yabe, Kiyoto, additional, and Yun, Min S., additional
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- 2016
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226. Public surveys at ESO
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Arnaboldi, Magda, additional, Delmotte, Nausicaa, additional, Hilker, Michael, additional, Hussain, Gaitee, additional, Mascetti, Laura, additional, Micol, Alberto, additional, Petr-Gotzens, Monika, additional, Rejkuba, Marina, additional, Retzlaff, Jörg, additional, Mieske, Steffen, additional, Szeifert, Thomas, additional, Ivison, Rob, additional, Leibundgut, Bruno, additional, and Romaniello, Martino, additional
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- 2016
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227. SXDF–ALMA 2-arcmin2deep survey: 1.1-mm number counts
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Hatsukade, Bunyo, primary, Kohno, Kotaro, additional, Umehata, Hideki, additional, Aretxaga, Itziar, additional, Caputi, Karina I., additional, Dunlop, James S., additional, Ikarashi, Soh, additional, Iono, Daisuke, additional, Ivison, Rob J., additional, Lee, Minju, additional, Makiya, Ryu, additional, Matsuda, Yuichi, additional, Motohara, Kentaro, additional, Nakanishi, Kouichiro, additional, Ohta, Kouji, additional, Tadaki, Ken-ich, additional, Tamura, Yoichi, additional, Wang, Wei-Hao, additional, Wilson, Grant W., additional, Yamaguchi, Yuki, additional, and Yun, Min S., additional
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- 2016
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228. THE SCUBA-2 COSMOLOGY LEGACY SURVEY: MULTIWAVELENGTH COUNTERPARTS TO 103SUBMILLIMETER GALAXIES IN THE UKIDSS-UDS FIELD
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Chen (陳建州), Chian-Chou, primary, Smail, Ian, additional, Ivison, Rob J., additional, Arumugam, Vinodiran, additional, Almaini, Omar, additional, Conselice, Christopher J., additional, Geach, James E., additional, Hartley, Will G., additional, Ma, Cheng-Jiun, additional, Mortlock, Alice, additional, Simpson, Chris, additional, Simpson, James M., additional, Swinbank, A. Mark, additional, Aretxaga, Itziar, additional, Blain, Andrew, additional, Chapman, Scott C., additional, Dunlop, James S., additional, Farrah, Duncan, additional, Halpern, Mark, additional, Michałowski, Michał J., additional, van der Werf, Paul, additional, Wilkinson, Aaron, additional, and Zavala, Jorge A., additional
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- 2016
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229. The mysterious morphology of MRC0943-242 as revealed by ALMA and MUSE
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Gullberg, Bitten, primary, De Breuck, Carlos, additional, Lehnert, Matthew D., additional, Vernet, Joël, additional, Bacon, Roland, additional, Drouart, Guillaume, additional, Emonts, Bjorn, additional, Galametz, Audrey, additional, Ivison, Rob, additional, Nesvadba, Nicole P. H., additional, Richard, Johan, additional, Seymour, Nick, additional, Stern, Daniel, additional, and Wylezalek, Dominika, additional
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- 2016
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230. The Mysterious Morphology of MRC0943-242 as Revealed by ALMA and MUSE
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Gullberg, Bitten, De Breuck, Carlos, Lehnert, Matthew D., Vernet, Joel, Bacon, Roland, Drouart, Guillaume, Emonts, Bjorn, Galametz, Audrey, Ivison, Rob, Nesvadba, Nicole P. H., Richard, Johan, Seymour, Nick, Stern, Daniel, Wylezalek, Dominika, Gullberg, Bitten, De Breuck, Carlos, Lehnert, Matthew D., Vernet, Joel, Bacon, Roland, Drouart, Guillaume, Emonts, Bjorn, Galametz, Audrey, Ivison, Rob, Nesvadba, Nicole P. H., Richard, Johan, Seymour, Nick, Stern, Daniel, and Wylezalek, Dominika
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We present a pilot study of the z=2.923 radio galaxy MRC0943-242, where we for the first time combine information from ALMA and MUSE data cubes. Even with modest integration times, we disentangle an AGN and a starburst dominated set of components. These data reveal a highly complex morphology, as the AGN, starburst, and molecular gas components show up as widely separated sources in dust continuum, optical continuum and CO line emission observations. CO(1-0) and CO(8-7) line emission suggest that there is a molecular gas reservoir offset from both the dust and the optical continuum that is located ~90kpc from the AGN. The UV line emission has a complex structure in emission and absorption. The line emission is mostly due to i) a large scale ionisation cone energised by the AGN, ii) a Ly-alpha emitting bridge of gas between the radio galaxy and a heavily star-forming set of components. Strangely, the ionisation cone has no Ly-alpha emission. We find this is due to an optically thick layer of neutral gas with unity covering fraction spread out over a region of at least ~100kpc from the AGN. Other, less thick absorption components are associated with Ly-alpha emitting gas within a few tens of kpc from the radio galaxy and are connected by a bridge of emission. We speculate that this linear structure of dust, Ly-alpha and CO emission, and the redshifted absorption seen in the circum-nuclear region may represent an accretion flow feeding gas into this massive AGN host galaxy., Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2015
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231. Next Generation Very Large Array Memo No. 8 Science Working Group 3: Galaxy Assembly through Cosmic Time
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Casey, Caitlin M., Hodge, Jacqueline A., Lacy, Mark, Hales, Christopher A., Barger, Amy, Narayanan, Desika, Carilli, Chris, Alatalo, Katherine, da Cunha, Elisabete, Emonts, Bjorn, Ivison, Rob, Kimball, Amy, Kohno, Kotaro, Murphy, Eric, Riechers, Dominik, Sargent, Mark, Walter, Fabian, Casey, Caitlin M., Hodge, Jacqueline A., Lacy, Mark, Hales, Christopher A., Barger, Amy, Narayanan, Desika, Carilli, Chris, Alatalo, Katherine, da Cunha, Elisabete, Emonts, Bjorn, Ivison, Rob, Kimball, Amy, Kohno, Kotaro, Murphy, Eric, Riechers, Dominik, Sargent, Mark, and Walter, Fabian
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The Next-Generation Very Large Array (ngVLA) will be critical for understanding how galaxies are built and evolve at the earliest epochs. The sensitivity and frequency coverage will allow for the detection of cold gas and dust in `normal' distant galaxies, including the low-J transitions of molecular gas tracers such as CO, HNC, and HCO+; synchrotron and free-free continuum emission; and even the exciting possibility of thermal dust emission at the highest (z~7) redshifts. In particular, by enabling the total molecular gas reservoirs to be traced to unprecedented sensitivities across a huge range of epochs simultaneously -- something no other radio or submillimeter facility will be capable of -- the detection of the crucial low-J transitions of CO in a diverse body of galaxies will be the cornerstone of ngVLA's contribution to high-redshift galaxy evolution science. The ultra-wide bandwidths will allow a complete sampling of radio SEDs, as well as the detection of emission lines necessary for spectroscopic confirmation of elusive dusty starbursts. The ngVLA will also deliver unique contributions to our understanding of cosmic magnetism and to science accessible through microwave polarimetry. Finally, the superb angular resolution will move the field beyond detection experiments and allow detailed studies of the morphology and dynamics of these systems, including dynamical modeling of disks/mergers, determining the properties of outflows, measuring black hole masses from gas disks, and resolving multiple AGN nuclei. We explore the contribution of a ngVLA to these areas and more, as well as synergies with current and upcoming facilities including ALMA, SKA, large single-dish submillimeter observatories, GMT/TMT, and JWST., Comment: 52 pages, 13 figures, NRAO Next Generation Very Large Array Memos Series: http://library.nrao.edu/ngvla.shtml
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- 2015
232. SXDF-ALMA 1.5 arcmin^2 deep survey. A compact dusty star-forming galaxy at z=2.5
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Tadaki, Ken-ichi, Kohno, Kotaro, Kodama, Tadayuki, Ikarashi, Soh, Aretxaga, Itziar, Berta, Stefano, Caputi, Karina I., Dunlop, James S., Hatsukade, Bunyo, Hayashi, Masao, Hughes, David H., Ivison, Rob, Izumi, Takuma, Koyama, Yusei, Lutz, Dieter, Makiya, Ryu, Matsuda, Yuichi, Nakanishi, Kouichiro, Rujopakarn, Wiphu, Tamura, Yoichi, Umehata, Hideki, Wang, Wei-Hao, Wilson, Grant W., Wuyts, Stijn, Yamaguchi, Yuki, Yun, Min S., Tadaki, Ken-ichi, Kohno, Kotaro, Kodama, Tadayuki, Ikarashi, Soh, Aretxaga, Itziar, Berta, Stefano, Caputi, Karina I., Dunlop, James S., Hatsukade, Bunyo, Hayashi, Masao, Hughes, David H., Ivison, Rob, Izumi, Takuma, Koyama, Yusei, Lutz, Dieter, Makiya, Ryu, Matsuda, Yuichi, Nakanishi, Kouichiro, Rujopakarn, Wiphu, Tamura, Yoichi, Umehata, Hideki, Wang, Wei-Hao, Wilson, Grant W., Wuyts, Stijn, Yamaguchi, Yuki, and Yun, Min S.
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We present first results from the SXDF-ALMA 1.5 arcmin^2 deep survey at 1.1 mm using Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA). The map reaches a 1sigma depth of 55 uJy/beam and covers 12 Halpha-selected star-forming galaxies at z = 2.19 or z=2.53. We have detected continuum emission from three of our Halpha-selected sample, including one compact star-forming galaxy with high stellar surface density, NB2315-07. They are all red in the rest-frame optical and have stellar masses of log (M*/Msun)>10.9 whereas the other blue, main-sequence galaxies with log(M*/Msun)=10.0-10.8 are exceedingly faint, <290 uJy (2sigma upper limit). We also find the 1.1 mm-brightest galaxy, NB2315-02, to be associated with a compact (R_e=0.7+-0.1 kpc), dusty star-forming component. Given high gas fraction (44^{+20}_{-8}% or 37^{+25}_{-3}%) and high star formation rate surface density (126^{+27}_{-30} Msun yr^{-1}kpc^{-2}), the concentrated starburst can within less than 50^{+12}_{-11} Myr build up a stellar surface density matching that of massive compact galaxies at z~2, provided at least 19+-3% of the total gas is converted into stars in the galaxy centre. On the other hand, NB2315-07, which already has such a high stellar surface density core, shows a gas fraction (23+-8%) and is located in the lower envelope of the star formation main-sequence. This compact less star-forming galaxy is likely to be in an intermediate phase between compact dusty star-forming and quiescent galaxies., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in ApJL
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- 2015
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233. An ALMA survey of Sub-millimeter Galaxies in the Extended Chandra Deep Field South: Physical properties derived from ultraviolet-to-radio modelling
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da Cunha, Elisabete, Walter, Fabian, Smail, Ian, Swinbank, Mark, Simpson, James, Decarli, Roberto, Hodge, Jacqueline, Weiss, Axel, van der Werf, Paul, Bertoldi, Frank, Chapman, Scott, Cox, Pierre, Danielson, Alice, Dannerbauer, Helmut, Greve, Thomas, Ivison, Rob, Karim, Alexander, Thomson, Alasdair, da Cunha, Elisabete, Walter, Fabian, Smail, Ian, Swinbank, Mark, Simpson, James, Decarli, Roberto, Hodge, Jacqueline, Weiss, Axel, van der Werf, Paul, Bertoldi, Frank, Chapman, Scott, Cox, Pierre, Danielson, Alice, Dannerbauer, Helmut, Greve, Thomas, Ivison, Rob, Karim, Alexander, and Thomson, Alasdair
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[abridged] The ALESS survey has followed-up a sample of 122 sub-millimeter sources in the Extended Chandra Deep Field South at 870um with ALMA, allowing to pinpoint the positions of sub-millimeter galaxies (SMGs) to 0.3'' and to find their precise counterparts at different wavelengths. This enabled the first compilation of the multi-wavelength spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of a statistically reliable survey of SMGs. In this paper, we present a new calibration of the MAGPHYS modelling code that is optimized to fit these UV-to-radio SEDs of z>1 star-forming galaxies using an energy balance technique to connect the emission from stellar populations, dust attenuation and dust emission in a physically consistent way. We derive statistically and physically robust estimates of the photometric redshifts and physical parameters for the ALESS SMGs. We find that they have a median stellar mass $M_\ast=(8.9\pm0.1)\times10^{10} M_\odot$, SFR$=280\pm70 M_\odot$/yr, overall V-band dust attenuation $A_V=1.9\pm0.2$ mag, dust mass $M_\rm{dust}=(5.6\pm1.0)\times10^8 M_\odot$, and average dust temperature Tdust~40 K. The average intrinsic SED of the ALESS SMGs resembles that of local ULIRGs in the IR range, but the stellar emission of our average SMG is brighter and bluer, indicating lower dust attenuation, possibly because they are more extended. We explore how the average SEDs vary with different parameters, and we provide a new set of SMG templates. To put the ALESS SMGs into context, we compare their stellar masses and SFRs with those of less actively star-forming galaxies at the same redshifts. At z~2, about half of the SMGs lie above the star-forming main sequence, while half are at the high-mass end of the sequence. At higher redshifts (z~3.5), the SMGs tend to have higher SFR and Mstar, but the fraction of SMGs that lie significantly above the main sequence decreases to less than a third., Comment: 22 pages, 14 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. The new MAGPHYS model libraries used in this paper will appear in www.iap.fr/magphys. The SMG SED templates shown in Section 6.1 are available at http://astronomy.swinburne.edu.au/~ecunha/ecunha/SED_Templates.html
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- 2015
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234. Dust energy balance study of two edge-on spiral galaxies in the Herschel-ATLAS survey
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De Geyter, Gert, Baes, Maarten, De Looze, Ilse, Bendo, George J., Bourne, Nathan, Camps, Peter, Cooray, Asantha, De Zotti, Gianfranco, Dunne, Loretta, Dye, Simon, Eales, Steve A., Fritz, Jacopo, Furlanetto, Cristina, Gentile, Gianfranco, Hughes, Thomas M., Ivison, Rob J., Maddox, Steve J., Michałowski, Michał J., Smith, Matthew W. L., Valiante, Elisabetta, Viaene, Sébastien, De Geyter, Gert, Baes, Maarten, De Looze, Ilse, Bendo, George J., Bourne, Nathan, Camps, Peter, Cooray, Asantha, De Zotti, Gianfranco, Dunne, Loretta, Dye, Simon, Eales, Steve A., Fritz, Jacopo, Furlanetto, Cristina, Gentile, Gianfranco, Hughes, Thomas M., Ivison, Rob J., Maddox, Steve J., Michałowski, Michał J., Smith, Matthew W. L., Valiante, Elisabetta, and Viaene, Sébastien
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Interstellar dust in galaxies can be traced either through its extinction effects on the star light, or through its thermal emission at infrared wavelengths. Recent radiative transfer studies of several nearby edge-on galaxies have found an apparent inconsistency in the dust energy balance: the radiative transfer models that successfully explain the optical extinction underestimate the observed fluxes by an average factor of three. We investigate the dust energy balance for IC4225 and NGC5166, two edge-on spiral galaxies observed by the Herschel Space Observatory in the frame of the H-ATLAS survey. We start from models which were constrained from optical data and extend them to construct the entire spectral energy distribution of our galaxies. These predicted values are subsequently compared to the observed far-infrared fluxes. We find that including a young stellar population in the modelling is necessary as it plays a non-negligible part in the heating of the dust grains. While the modelling approach for both galaxies is nearly identical, we find two very different results. As is often seen in other edge-on spiral galaxies, the far-infrared emission of our radiative transfer model of IC4225 underestimates the observed fluxes by a factor of about three. For NGC5166 on the other hand, we find that both the predicted spectral energy distribution as well as the simulated images match the observations particularly well. We explore possible reasons for this difference and conclude that it is unlikely that one single mechanism is the cause of the dust energy balance problem in spiral galaxies. We discuss the different approaches that can be considered in order to get a conclusive answer on the origin this discrepancy., Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2015
235. H-ATLAS/GAMA: Quantifying the Morphological Evolution of the Galaxy Population Using Cosmic Calorimetry
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Eales, Stephen, Fullard, Andrew, Allen, Matthew, Smith, M. W. L., Baldry, Ivan, Bourne, Nathan, Clark, C. J. R., Driver, Simon, Dunne, Loretta, Dye, Simon, Graham, Alister W., Ibar, Edo, Hopkins, Andrew, Ivison, Rob, Kelvin, Lee S., Maddox, Steve, Maraston, Claudia, Robotham, Aaron S. G., Smith, Dan, Taylor, Edward N., Valiante, Elisabetta, van der Werf, Paul, Baes, Maarten, Brough, Sarah, Clements, David, Cooray, Asantha, Gomez, Haley, Loveday, Jon, Phillipps, Steven, Scott, Douglas, Serjeant, Steve, Eales, Stephen, Fullard, Andrew, Allen, Matthew, Smith, M. W. L., Baldry, Ivan, Bourne, Nathan, Clark, C. J. R., Driver, Simon, Dunne, Loretta, Dye, Simon, Graham, Alister W., Ibar, Edo, Hopkins, Andrew, Ivison, Rob, Kelvin, Lee S., Maddox, Steve, Maraston, Claudia, Robotham, Aaron S. G., Smith, Dan, Taylor, Edward N., Valiante, Elisabetta, van der Werf, Paul, Baes, Maarten, Brough, Sarah, Clements, David, Cooray, Asantha, Gomez, Haley, Loveday, Jon, Phillipps, Steven, Scott, Douglas, and Serjeant, Steve
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Using results from the Herschel Astrophysical Terrahertz Large-Area Survey and the Galaxy and Mass Assembly project, we show that, for galaxy masses above approximately 1.0e8 solar masses, 51% of the stellar mass-density in the local Universe is in early-type galaxies (ETGs: Sersic n > 2.5) while 89% of the rate of production of stellar mass-density is occurring in late-type galaxies (LTGs: Sersic n < 2.5). From this zero-redshift benchmark, we have used a calorimetric technique to quantify the importance of the morphological transformation of galaxies over the history of the Universe. The extragalactic background radiation contains all the energy generated by nuclear fusion in stars since the Big Bang. By resolving this background radiation into individual galaxies using the deepest far-infrared survey with the Herschel Space Observatory and a deep near-infrared/optical survey with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), and using measurements of the Sersic index of these galaxies derived from the HST images, we estimate that approximately 83% of the stellar mass-density formed over the history of the Universe occurred in LTGs. The difference between this and the fraction of the stellar mass-density that is in LTGs today implies there must have been a major transformation of LTGs into ETGs after the formation of most of the stars., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2015
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236. The SCUBA-2 Cosmology Legacy Survey: ALMA resolves the bright-end of the sub-millimeter number counts
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Simpson, James, Smail, Ian, Swinbank, Mark, Chapman, Scott, Geach, James, Ivison, Rob, Thomson, Alasdair, Aretxaga, Itziar, Blain, Andrew, Cowley, Will, Chen, Chian-Chou, Coppin, Kristen, Dunlop, Jim, Edge, Alastair, Farrah, Duncan, Ibar, Edo, Karim, Alex, Knudsen, Kirsten, Meijerink, Rowin, Michalowski, Michal, Scott, Douglas, Spanns, Marco, van der Werf, Paul, Simpson, James, Smail, Ian, Swinbank, Mark, Chapman, Scott, Geach, James, Ivison, Rob, Thomson, Alasdair, Aretxaga, Itziar, Blain, Andrew, Cowley, Will, Chen, Chian-Chou, Coppin, Kristen, Dunlop, Jim, Edge, Alastair, Farrah, Duncan, Ibar, Edo, Karim, Alex, Knudsen, Kirsten, Meijerink, Rowin, Michalowski, Michal, Scott, Douglas, Spanns, Marco, and van der Werf, Paul
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We present high-resolution 870-um ALMA continuum maps of 30 bright sub-millimeter sources in the UKIDSS UDS field. These sources are selected from deep, 1-square degrees 850-um maps from the SCUBA--2 Cosmology Legacy Survey, and are representative of the brightest sources in the field (median SCUBA2 flux S_850=8.7+/-0.4 mJy). We detect 52 sub-millimeter galaxies (SMGs) at >4-sigma significance in our 30 ALMA maps. In 61+/-17% of the ALMA maps the single-dish source comprises a blend of >=2 SMGs, where the secondary SMGs are Ultra--Luminous Infrared Galaxies (ULIRGs) with L_IR>10^12 Lo. The brightest SMG contributes on average 80+/-4% of the single-dish flux density, and in the ALMA maps containing >=2 SMGs the secondary SMG contributes 25+/-3% of the integrated ALMA flux. We construct source counts and show that multiplicity boosts the apparent single-dish cumulative counts by 20% at S_870>7.5mJy, and by 60% at S_870>12mJy. We combine our sample with previous ALMA studies of fainter SMGs and show that the counts are well-described by a double power-law with a break at 8.5+/-0.6mJy. The break corresponds to a luminosity of ~6x10^12Lsol or a star-formation rate of ~1000Mo/yr. For the typical sizes of these SMGs, which are resolved in our ALMA data with r=1.2+/-0.1kpc, this yields a limiting SFR density of ~100Msol/yr/kpc2. Finally, the number density of S_870>2mJy SMGs is 80+/-30 times higher than that derived from blank-field counts. An over-abundance of faint SMGs is inconsistent with line-of-sight projections dominating multiplicity in the brightest SMGs, and indicates that a significant proportion of these high-redshift ULIRGs must be physically associated., Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures. ApJ in press
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- 2015
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237. ALMA maps the Star-Forming Regions in a Dense Gas Disk at z~3
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Swinbank, Mark, Dye, Simon, Nightgale, James, Furlanetto, Christina, Smail, Ian, Cooray, Asantha, Dannerbauer, Helmut, Dunne, Loretta, Eales, Steve, Gavazzi, Raphael, Hunter, Todd, Ivison, Rob, Negrello, Mattia, Oteo, Ivan, Smit, Renske, van der Werf, Paul, Vlahakis, Catherine, Swinbank, Mark, Dye, Simon, Nightgale, James, Furlanetto, Christina, Smail, Ian, Cooray, Asantha, Dannerbauer, Helmut, Dunne, Loretta, Eales, Steve, Gavazzi, Raphael, Hunter, Todd, Ivison, Rob, Negrello, Mattia, Oteo, Ivan, Smit, Renske, van der Werf, Paul, and Vlahakis, Catherine
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We exploit long-baseline ALMA sub-mm observations of the lensed star-forming galaxy SDP 81 at z=3.042 to investigate the properties of inter-stellar medium on scales of 50-100pc. The kinematics of the CO gas within this system are well described by a rotationally-supported disk with an inclination-corrected rotation speed, v=320+/-20km/s and a dynamical mass of M=(3.5+/-1.0)x10^10Mo within a radius of 1.5 kpc. The disk is gas rich and unstable, with a Toomre parameter, Q=0.30+/-0.10 and so should collapse in to star-forming regions with Jeans length L_J~130pc. We identify five star-forming regions within the ISM on these scales and show that their scaling relations between luminosity, line-widths and sizes are significantly offset from those typical of molecular clouds in local Galaxies (Larson's relations). These offsets are likely to be caused by the high external hydrostatic pressure for the interstellar medium (ISM), P/kB=(40+/-20)x10^7K/cm3, which is ~10,000x higher than the typical ISM pressure in the Milky Way. The physical conditions of the star-forming ISM and giant molecular clouds appears to be similar to the those found in the densest environments in the local Universe, such as those in the Galactic center., Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. ApJL in press
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- 2015
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238. Molecular and atomic gas in dust lane early-type galaxies - I: Low star-formation efficiencies in minor merger remnants
- Author
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Davis, Timothy A., Rowlands, Kate, Allison, James R., Shabala, Stanislav S., Ting, Yuan-Sen, Lagos, Claudia del P., Kaviraj, Sugata, Bourne, Nathan, Dunne, Loretta, Eales, Steve, Ivison, Rob J., Maddox, Steve, Smith, Daniel J. B., Smith, Matthew. W. L., Temi, Pasquale, Davis, Timothy A., Rowlands, Kate, Allison, James R., Shabala, Stanislav S., Ting, Yuan-Sen, Lagos, Claudia del P., Kaviraj, Sugata, Bourne, Nathan, Dunne, Loretta, Eales, Steve, Ivison, Rob J., Maddox, Steve, Smith, Daniel J. B., Smith, Matthew. W. L., and Temi, Pasquale
- Abstract
In this work we present IRAM-30m telescope observations of a sample of bulge-dominated galaxies with large dust lanes, which have had a recent minor merger. We find these galaxies are very gas rich, with H2 masses between 4x10^8 and 2x10^10 Msun. We use these molecular gas masses, combined with atomic gas masses from an accompanying paper, to calculate gas-to-dust and gas-to-stellar mass ratios. The gas-to-dust ratios of our sample objects vary widely (between ~50 and 750), suggesting many objects have low gas-phase metallicities, and thus that the gas has been accreted through a recent merger with a lower mass companion. We calculate the implied minor companion masses and gas fractions, finding a median predicted stellar mass ratio of ~40:1. The minor companion likely had masses between ~10^7 - 10^10 Msun. The implied merger mass ratios are consistent with the expectation for low redshift gas-rich mergers from simulations. We then go on to present evidence that (no matter which star-formation rate indicator is used) our sample objects have very low star-formation efficiencies (star-formation rate per unit gas mass), lower even than the early-type galaxies from ATLAS3D which already show a suppression. This suggests that minor mergers can actually suppress star-formation activity. We discuss mechanisms that could cause such a suppression, include dynamical effects induced by the minor merger., Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, accepted to MNRAS
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
239. Herschel-ATLAS: The Surprising Diversity of Dust-Selected Galaxies in the Local Submillimetre Universe
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Clark, Christopher J. R., Dunne, Loretta, Gomez, Haley L., Maddox, Steven, De Vis, Pieter, Smith, Matthew W. L., Eales, Steven A., Baes, Maarten, Bendo, George J., Bourne, Nathan, Driver, Simon P., Dye, Simon, Furlanetto, Cristina, Grootes, Meiert W., Ivison, Rob J., Schofield, Simon P., Robotham, Aaron S. G., Rowlands, Kate, Vlahakis, Catherine, van der Werf, Paul, Wright, Angus, de Zotti, Gianfranco, Clark, Christopher J. R., Dunne, Loretta, Gomez, Haley L., Maddox, Steven, De Vis, Pieter, Smith, Matthew W. L., Eales, Steven A., Baes, Maarten, Bendo, George J., Bourne, Nathan, Driver, Simon P., Dye, Simon, Furlanetto, Cristina, Grootes, Meiert W., Ivison, Rob J., Schofield, Simon P., Robotham, Aaron S. G., Rowlands, Kate, Vlahakis, Catherine, van der Werf, Paul, Wright, Angus, and de Zotti, Gianfranco
- Abstract
We present the properties of the first 250 $\mu$m blind sample of nearby galaxies (15 < D < 46 Mpc) containing 42 objects from the Herschel Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey (H-ATLAS). Herschel's sensitivity probes the faint end of the dust luminosity function for the first time, spanning a range of stellar mass (7.4 < log$_{10}$ M$_{\star}$ < 11.3 M$_{\odot}$), star formation activity (-11.8 < log$_{10}$ SSFR < -8.9 yr$^{-1}$), gas fraction (3-96 per cent), and colour (0.6 < FUV-Ks < 7.0 mag). The median cold dust temperature is 14.6 K, colder than in the Herschel Reference Survey (18.5 K) and Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalogue 17.7 K. The mean dust-to-stellar mass ratio in our sample is higher than these surveys by factors of 3.7 and 1.8, with a dust mass volume density of (3.7 $\pm$ 0.7) x 10$^{5}$ M$_{\odot}$ Mpc$^{-3}$. Counter-intuitively, we find that the more dust rich a galaxy, the lower its UV attenuation. Over half of our dust-selected sample are very blue in FUV-Ks colour, with irregular and/or highly flocculent morphology, these galaxies account for only 6 per cent of the sample's stellar mass but contain over 35 per cent of the dust mass. They are the most actively star forming galaxies in the sample, with the highest gas fractions and lowest UV attenuation. They also appear to be in an early stage of converting their gas into stars, providing valuable insights into the chemical evolution of young galaxies., Comment: Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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240. Far-infrared observations of an unbiased sample of gamma-ray burst host galaxies
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Kohn, Saul A., Michałowski, Michal J., Bourne, Nathan, Baes, Maarten, Fritz, Jacopo, Cooray, Asantha, De Looze, Ilse, De Zotti, Gianfranco, Dannerbauer, Helmut, Dunne, Loretta, Dye, Simon, Eales, Stephen, Furlanetto, Cristina, Gonzalez-Nuevo, Joaquin, Ibar, Edo, Ivison, Rob J., Maddox, Steve J., Scott, Douglas, Smith, Daniel J. B., Smith, Matthew W. L., Symeonidis, Myrto, Valiante, Elisabetta, Kohn, Saul A., Michałowski, Michal J., Bourne, Nathan, Baes, Maarten, Fritz, Jacopo, Cooray, Asantha, De Looze, Ilse, De Zotti, Gianfranco, Dannerbauer, Helmut, Dunne, Loretta, Dye, Simon, Eales, Stephen, Furlanetto, Cristina, Gonzalez-Nuevo, Joaquin, Ibar, Edo, Ivison, Rob J., Maddox, Steve J., Scott, Douglas, Smith, Daniel J. B., Smith, Matthew W. L., Symeonidis, Myrto, and Valiante, Elisabetta
- Abstract
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are the most energetic phenomena in the Universe; believed to result from the collapse and subsequent explosion of massive stars. Even though it has profound consequences for our understanding of their nature and selection biases, little is known about the dust properties of the galaxies hosting GRBs. We present analysis of the far-infrared properties of an unbiased sample of 20 \textit{BeppoSAX} and \textit{Swift} GRB host galaxies (at an average redshift of $z\,=\,3.1$) located in the {\it Herschel} Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey, the {\it Herschel} Virgo Cluster Survey, the {\it Herschel} Fornax Cluster Survey, the {\it Herschel} Stripe 82 Survey and the {\it Herschel} Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey, totalling $880$ deg$^2$, or $\sim 3$\% of the sky in total. Our sample selection is serendipitous, based only on whether the X-ray position of a GRB lies within a large-scale {\it Herschel} survey -- therefore our sample can be considered completely unbiased. Using deep data at wavelengths of 100\,--\,500$\,\mu$m, we tentatively detected 1 out of 20 GRB hosts located in these fields. We constrain their dust masses and star formation rates (SFRs), and discuss these in the context of recent measurements of submillimetre galaxies and ultraluminous infrared galaxies. The average far-infrared flux of our sample gives an upper limit on SFR of $<114\,{\rm M}\odot\,\mbox{yr}^{-1}$. The detection rate of GRB hosts is consistent with that predicted assuming that GRBs trace the cosmic SFR density in an unbiased way, i.e. that the fraction of GRB hosts with $\mbox{SFR}>500\,{\rm M}\odot\,\mbox{yr}^{-1}$ is consistent with the contribution of such luminous galaxies to the cosmic star formation density., Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, 4 tables; accepted by MNRAS, updated TeX to match version in press
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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241. Progress in the Critical Assessment for a Far-Infrared Space Interferometer with Double Fourier Modulation (FP7-FISICA)
- Author
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Savini, G., Ade, P.A.R., Baccichet, Nicola, Bracken, Colm, Dohlen, Kjetil, Donohoe, Anthony, Gom, Brad, Griffin, Matthew J., Holland, Wayne, Iafolla, Valerio, Ivison, Rob, Jones, Martyn, Juanola-Parramon, Roser, Lightfoot, John, Liu, Scige, McMillan, Alison, Murphy, J.Anthony, Naylor, David A., O'Sullivan, Créidhe, Pascale, Enzo, Pezzuto, Stefano, Rakotonimbahy, Eddy, Schito, Daniele, Spencer, Locke D., Spinoglio, Luigi, Swinyard, Bruce, Veenendaal, Ian, Vives, Sebastien, Walker, David, Leisawitz, David T., Shi, Sheng-Cai, Matsuo, Hiroshi, Savini, G., Ade, P.A.R., Baccichet, Nicola, Bracken, Colm, Dohlen, Kjetil, Donohoe, Anthony, Gom, Brad, Griffin, Matthew J., Holland, Wayne, Iafolla, Valerio, Ivison, Rob, Jones, Martyn, Juanola-Parramon, Roser, Lightfoot, John, Liu, Scige, McMillan, Alison, Murphy, J.Anthony, Naylor, David A., O'Sullivan, Créidhe, Pascale, Enzo, Pezzuto, Stefano, Rakotonimbahy, Eddy, Schito, Daniele, Spencer, Locke D., Spinoglio, Luigi, Swinyard, Bruce, Veenendaal, Ian, Vives, Sebastien, Walker, David, Leisawitz, David T., Shi, Sheng-Cai, and Matsuo, Hiroshi
- Abstract
The progress and results of the ongoing FP7-FISICA programme to re-asses the scientific goals of a Far-Infrared Space Interfereometer and push the development of some of its key technology elements are reported.
- Published
- 2015
242. Herschel-PACS observations of [OI]63um towards submillimetre galaxies at z~1
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Coppin, Kristen, Danielson, Alice, Geach, James E., Hodge, Jacqueline, Swinbank, Mark, Wardlow, Julie, Bertoldi, Frank, Biggs, Andy, Brandt, Niel, Caselli, Paola, Chapman, Scott, Dannerbauer, Helmut, Dunlop, Jim, Greve, Thomas, Hamann, Fred, Ivison, Rob, Karim, Alex, Knudsen, Kirsten, Menten, Karl, Schinnerer, Eva, Smail, Ian, Spaans, Marco, Walter, Fabian, Webb, Tracy, and van der Werf, Paul
- Subjects
Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present Herschel-PACS spectroscopy of the [OI]63um far-infrared cooling line from a sample of six unlensed and spectroscopically-confirmed 870um-selected submillimetre (submm) galaxies (SMGs) at 1.13, tentatively detect [OI]63um in one SMG, and constrain the line flux for the non-detections. We also exploit the combination of submm continuum photometry from 250-870um and our new PACS continuum measurements to constrain the far-infrared (FIR) luminosity, L_FIR, in these SMGs to < 30%. We find that SMGs do not show a deficit in their [OI]63um-to-far-infrared continuum luminosity ratios (with ratios ranging from ~0.5-1.5%), similar to what was seen previously for the [CII]158um-to-FIR ratios in SMGs. These observed ratios are about an order of magnitude higher than what is seen typically for local ultra luminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs), which adds to the growing body of evidence that SMGs are not simply `scaled up' versions of local ULIRGs. Rather, the PDR line-to-L_FIR ratios suggest that the star formation modes of SMGs are likely more akin to that of local normal (lower-luminosity) star-forming galaxies, with the bulk of the star formation occurring in extended regions, galaxy-scale (~kpc) in size. These observations represent the first step towards a census of the major PDR cooling lines in typical SMGs that will be attainable with ALMA, enabling detailed modelling to probe the global properties of the star formation and the evolutionary status of SMGs., Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2012
243. Radio imaging of the Subaru/XMM-NewtonDeep Field- III. Evolution of the radio luminosity function beyond z= 1
- Author
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Simpson, Chris, Rawlings, Steve, Ivison, Rob, Akiyama, Masayuki, Almaini, Omar, Bradshaw, Emma, Chapman, Scott, Chuter, Rob, Croom, Scott, Dunlop, Jim, Foucaud, Sébastien, and Hartley, Will
- Published
- 2012
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244. An ALMA survey of Sub-millimetre Galaxies in the Extended Chandra Deep Field South: Detection of [C II] at z=4.4
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Swinbank, Mark, Karim, Alexander, Smail, Ian, Hodge, Jackie, Walter, Fabian, Bertoldi, Frank, Biggs, Andy, De Breuck, Carlos, Chapman, Scott, Coppin, Kristen, Cox, Pierre, Danielson, Alice, Dannerbauer, Helmut, Ivison, Rob, Greve, Thomas, Knudsen, Kirsten, Menten, Karl, Simpson, James, Schinnerer, Eva, Wardlow, Julie, Weiss, Axel, and van der Werf, Paul
- Subjects
Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present ALMA 870-um (345GHz) observations of two sub-millimetre galaxies (SMGs) drawn from an ALMA study of the 126 sub-millimeter sources from the LABOCA Extended Chandra Deep Field South Survey (LESS). The ALMA data identify the counterparts to these previously unidentified sub-millimeter sources and serendipitously detect bright emission lines in their spectra which we show are most likely to be [C II]157.74um emission yielding redshifts of z=4.42 and z=4.44. This blind detection rate within the 7.5-GHz bandpass of ALMA is consistent with the previously derived photometric redshift distribution of SMGs and suggests a modest, but not dominant (4. We find that the ratio of L_CII/L_FIR in these SMGs is much higher than seen for similarly far-infrared-luminous galaxies at z~0, which is attributed to the more extended gas reservoirs in these high-redshift ULIRGs. Indeed, in one system we show that the [C II] emission shows hints of extended emission on >3kpc scales. Finally, we use the volume probed by our ALMA survey to show that the bright end of the [C II] luminosity function evolves strongly between z=0 and z~4.4, reflecting the increased ISM cooling in galaxies as a result of their higher star-formation rates. These observations demonstrate that even with short integrations, ALMA is able to detect the dominant fine structure cooling lines from high-redshift ULIRGs, measure their energetics and trace their evolution with redshift., Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 10 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables
- Published
- 2012
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245. A joint analysis of BLAST 250-500\u2003\u03bcm and LABOCA 870\u2003\u03bcm observations in the Extended Chandra Deep Field-South
- Author
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Chapin, Edward L, Chapman, Scott C., Coppin, Kristen E., Devlin, Mark J., Dunlop, James S., Greve, Thomas R., Halpern, Mark, Hasselfield, Matthew F., Hughes, David H., Ivison, Rob J., Marsden, Gaelen, Moncelsi, Lorenzo, Netterfield, Calvin B., Pascale, Enzo, Scott, Douglas, Smail, Ian, Viero, Marco, Walter, Fabian, Weiss, Axel, and van der Werf, Paul
- Subjects
Galaxies: formation ,Galaxies: high-redshift ,Submillimetre: galaxies ,Space and Planetary Science ,Astronomy and Astrophysics - Published
- 2011
246. A joint analysis of BLAST 250–500 μm and LABOCA 870 μm observations in the Extended Chandra Deep Field-South
- Author
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Chapin, Edward L., Chapman, Scott C., Coppin, Kristen E., Devlin, Mark J., Dunlop, James S., Greve, Thomas R., Halpern, Mark, Hasselfield, Matthew F., Hughes, David H., Ivison, Rob J., Marsden, Gaelen, Moncelsi, Lorenzo, Netterfield, Calvin B., Pascale, Enzo, Scott, Douglas, Smail, Ian, Viero, Marco, Walter, Fabian, Weiss, Axel, and Werf, Paul van der
- Subjects
QB - Abstract
We present a joint analysis of the overlapping Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimetre Telescope (BLAST) 250, 350, 500 μm, and LABOCA 870 μm observations [from the LABOCA ECDFS Submm Survey (LESS) survey] of the Extended Chandra Deep Field-South. Out to z∼ 3, the BLAST filters sample near the peak wavelength of thermal far-infrared (FIR) emission from galaxies (rest-frame wavelengths ∼60–200 μm), primarily produced by dust heated through absorption in star-forming clouds. However, identifying counterparts to individual BLAST peaks is very challenging, given the large beams [full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) 36–60 arcsec]. In contrast, the ground-based 870 μm observations have a significantly smaller 19 arcsec FWHM beam, and are sensitive to higher redshifts (z∼ 1–5, and potentially beyond) due to the more favourable negative K-correction. We use the LESS data, as well as deep Spitzer and VLA imaging, to identify 118 individual sources that produce significant emission in the BLAST bands. We characterize the temperatures and FIR luminosities for a subset of 69 sources which have well-measured submillimetre (submm) spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and redshift measurements out to z∼ 3. For flux-limited sub-samples in each BLAST band, and a dust emissivity index β= 2.0, we find a median temperature T= 30 K (all bands) as well as median redshifts: z= 1.1 (interquartile range 0.2–1.9) for S250 > 40 mJy; z= 1.3 (interquartile range 0.6–2.1) for S350 > 30 mJy; and z= 1.6 (interquartile range 1.3–2.3) for S500 > 20 mJy. Taking into account the selection effects for our survey (a bias towards detecting lower-temperature galaxies), we find no evidence for evolution in the local FIR–temperature correlation out to z∼ 2.5. Comparing with star-forming galaxy SED templates, about 8 per cent of our sample appears to exhibit significant excesses in the radio and/or mid-IR, consistent with those sources harbouring active galactic nuclei (AGN). Since our statistical approach differs from most previous studies of submm galaxies, we describe the following techniques in two appendices: our ‘matched filter’ for identifying sources in the presence of point-source confusion; and our approach for identifying counterparts using likelihood ratios. This study is a direct precursor to future joint FIR/submm surveys, for which we outline a potential identification and SED measurement strategy.
- Published
- 2011
247. The ISM in distant star-forming galaxies: Turbulent pressure, fragmentation and cloud scaling relations in a dense gas disk at z=2.3
- Author
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Swinbank, Mark, Papadopoulos, Padelis, Cox, Pierre, Krips, Melanie, Ivison, Rob, Smail, Ian, Thomson, Alasdair, Neri, Roberto, Richard, Johan, and Ebeling, Harald
- Subjects
Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We have used the IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer and the Expanded Very Large Array to obtain a high resolution map of the CO(6-5) and CO(1-0) emission in the lensed, star-forming galaxy SMMJ2135-0102 at z=2.32. The kinematics of the gas are well described by a model of a rotationally-supported disk with an inclination-corrected rotation speed, v_rot = 320+/-25km/s, a ratio of rotational- to dispersion- support of v/sigma=3.5+/-0.2 and a dynamical mass of 6.0+/-0.5x10^10Mo within a radius of 2.5kpc. The disk has a Toomre parameter, Q=0.50+/-0.15, suggesting the gas will rapidly fragment into massive clumps on scales of L_J ~ 400pc. We identify star-forming regions on these scales and show that they are 10x denser than those in quiescent environments in local galaxies, and significantly offset from the local molecular cloud scaling relations (Larson's relations). The large offset compared to local molecular cloud linewidth-size scaling relations imply that supersonic turbulence should remain dominant on scales ~100x smaller than in the kinematically quiescent ISM of the Milky Way, while the molecular gas in SMMJ2135 is expected to be ~50x denser than that in the Milky Way on all scales. This is most likely due to the high external hydrostatic pressure we measure for the interstellar medium (ISM), P_tot/kB ~ (2+/-1)x10^7K/cm3. In such highly turbulent ISM, the subsonic regions of gravitational collapse (and star-formation) will be characterised by much higher critical densities, n_crit>=10^8/cm3, a factor ~1000x more than the quiescent ISM of the Milky Way., ApJ in press. 15 pages, 7 figures
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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248. A strongly star-forming group: three massive galaxies associated with a quasi-stellar object
- Author
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Carrera Troyano, Francisco Jesús, Page, Mathew J., Stevens, Jason A., Ivison, Rob J., Dwelly, Tom, Ebrero Carrero, Jacobo, Falocco, Serena, and Universidad de Cantabria
- Subjects
high-redshift [Galaxies] ,starburst [Galaxies] ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Galaxies: high-redshift ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Galaxies: evolution ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Galaxies: formation ,evolution [Galaxies] ,formation [Galaxies] ,Galaxies: starburst ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We present here photometric redshift confirmation of the presence of large-scale structure around the z= 1.82 quasi-stellar object (QSO) RX J0941, which shows an overdensity of submillimetre (submm) sources. Radio imaging confirms the presence of the submm sources and pinpoints their likely optical near-infrared (NIR) counterparts. Four of the five submm sources present in this field (including the QSO) have counterparts with redshifts compatible with z= 1.82. We show that our photometric redshifts are robust against the use of different spectral templates. We have measured the galaxy stellar mass of the submm galaxies from their rest-frame K-band luminosity obtaining log(M*/M⊙) ∼ 11.5 ± 0.2, slightly larger than the Schechter mass of present-day galaxies, and hence indicating that most of the stellar mass is already formed. We present optical-to-radio spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of the five Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) sources. The emission of RX J0941 is dominated by reprocessed active galactic nucleus (AGN) emission in the observed mid-IR (MIR) range, while the starburst contribution completely dominates in the submm range. The SEDs of the other three counterparts are compatible with a dominant starburst contribution above ∼24 μm, with star formation rates ∼2000 M⊙ yr−1, central dust masses log(Mdust/M⊙) ∼ 9 ± 0.5 and hence central gas masses log(Mgas/M⊙) ∼ 10.7. There is very little room for an AGN contribution. From X-ray upper limits and the observed 24 μm flux, we derive a maximum 2–10 keV X-ray luminosity of 1044 erg s−1 for any putative AGN, even if they are heavily obscured. This in turn points to relatively small black holes with log(M•/M⊙) ≲ 8 and hence stellar-to-black hole mass ratios about 1 order of magnitude higher than those observed in the present Universe: most of their central black hole masses are still to be accreted. Local stellar-to-black hole mass ratios can be reached if ∼1.3 per cent of the available nuclear gas mass is accreted. The authors thank the anonymous referee for helpful suggestions to clarify the paper. FJC thanks M. Rowan-Robinson for his help with the SWIRE templates, R. Pelló for her help with HYPERZ and N. Benítez for his help with BPZ. FJC, JE and SF acknowledge financial support from the Spanish Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia (later Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación) under projects ESP2006-13608-C02-01 and AYA2009-08059. FJC, JAS and MJP acknowledge further support from the Royal Society. Based on observations made at the William Herschel Telescope and at the Isaac Newton Telescope which is operated on the island of La Palma by the Isaac Newton Group in the Spanish Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos of the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias. Also based on observations obtained at the Gemini Observatory (under programme GN2004A-Q-52), which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under a cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation (NSF) on behalf of the Gemini partnership: the National Science Foundation (United States); the Science and Technology Facilities Council (United Kingdom); the National Research Council (Canada); CONICYT (Chile); the Australian Research Council (Australia); Ministério da Ciência e Tecnologia (Brazil) and Ministerio de Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación Productiva (Argentina). UKIRT is operated by the Joint Astronomy Centre, Hilo, Hawaii on behalf of the UK Science and Technology Facilities Council. Also based on observations made with the Spitzer Space Telescope, which is operated by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) contract 1407. The James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) is operated by The Joint Astronomy Centre on behalf of the Science and Technology Facilities Council of the United Kingdom, the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research and the National Research Council of Canada. JCMT data were taken under project ID M03AU46. Also based on data collected at the XMM–Newton, an ESA science mission with instruments and contributions directly funded by ESA Member States and NASA. This research has made use of data obtained from the SuperCOSMOS Science Archive, prepared and hosted by the Wide Field Astronomy Unit, Institute for Astronomy, University of Edinburgh, which is funded by the UK Science and Technology Facilities Council. The NRAO is a facility of the National Science Foundation operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities. We thank the staff of the GMRT who have made these observations possible. GMRT is run by the National Centre for Radio Astrophysics of the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research. This publication makes use of data products from the 2MASS, which is a joint project of the University of Massachusetts and the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center/California Institute of Technology, funded by the NASA and the NSF. Funding for the SDSS and SDSS-II has been provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the Participating Institutions, the NSF, the US Department of Energy, the NASA, the Japanese Monbukagakusho, the Max Planck Society and the Higher Education Funding Council for England. The SDSS is managed by the Astrophysical Research Consortium for the Participating Institutions. The Participating Institutions are the American Museum of Natural History, Astrophysical Institute Potsdam, University of Basel, University of Cambridge, Case Western Reserve University, University of Chicago, Drexel University, Fermilab, the Institute for Advanced Study, the Japan Participation Group, Johns Hopkins University, the Joint Institute for Nuclear Astrophysics, the Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology, the Korean Scientist Group, the Chinese Academy of Sciences (LAMOST), Los Alamos National Laboratory, the Max-Planck-Institute for Astronomy (MPIA), the Max-Planck-Institute for Astrophysics (MPA), New Mexico State University, Ohio State University, University of Pittsburgh, University of Portsmouth, Princeton University, the United States Naval Observatory and the University of Washington.
- Published
- 2011
249. Erratum: Molecular and atomic gas in dust lane early-type galaxies – I. Low star formation efficiencies in minor merger remnants: Table 1.
- Author
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Davis, Timothy A., primary, Rowlands, Kate, additional, Allison, James R., additional, Shabala, Stanislav S., additional, Ting, Yuan-Sen, additional, Lagos, Claudia del P., additional, Kaviraj, Sugata, additional, Bourne, Nathan, additional, Dunne, Loretta, additional, Eales, Steve, additional, Ivison, Rob J., additional, Maddox, Steve, additional, Smith, Daniel J. B., additional, Smith, Matthew W. L., additional, and Temi, Pasquale, additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
250. SXDF-ALMA 1.5 arcmin 2 DEEP SURVEY: A COMPACT DUSTY STAR-FORMING GALAXY AT z = 2.5
- Author
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Tadaki, Ken-ichi, primary, Kohno, Kotaro, additional, Kodama, Tadayuki, additional, Ikarashi, Soh, additional, Aretxaga, Itziar, additional, Berta, Stefano, additional, Caputi, Karina I., additional, Dunlop, James S., additional, Hatsukade, Bunyo, additional, Hayashi, Masao, additional, Hughes, David H., additional, Ivison, Rob, additional, Izumi, Takuma, additional, Koyama, Yusei, additional, Lutz, Dieter, additional, Makiya, Ryu, additional, Matsuda, Yuichi, additional, Nakanishi, Kouichiro, additional, Rujopakarn, Wiphu, additional, Tamura, Yoichi, additional, Umehata, Hideki, additional, Wang, Wei-Hao, additional, Wilson, Grant W., additional, Wuyts, Stijn, additional, Yamaguchi, Yuki, additional, and Yun, Min S., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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