21 results on '"ROGERS, ALEXANDER B."'
Search Results
2. New Constraints on Cosmic Reionization from the 2012 Hubble Ultra Deep Field Campaign
- Author
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Robertson, Brant E., Furlanetto, Steven R., Schneider, Evan, Charlot, Stephane, Ellis, Richard S., Stark, Daniel P., McLure, Ross J., Dunlop, James S., Koekemoer, Anton, Schenker, Matthew A., Ouchi, Masami, Ono, Yoshiaki, Curtis-Lake, Emma, Rogers, Alexander B., Bowler, Rebecca A. A., and Cirasuolo, Michele
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Understanding cosmic reionization requires the identification and characterization of early sources of hydrogen-ionizing photons. The 2012 Hubble Ultra Deep Field (UDF12) campaign has acquired the deepest infrared images with the Wide Field Camera 3 aboard Hubble Space Telescope and, for the first time, systematically explored the galaxy population deep into the era when cosmic microwave background (CMB) data indicates reionization was underway. The UDF12 campaign thus provides the best constraints to date on the abundance, luminosity distribution, and spectral properties of early star-forming galaxies. We synthesize the new UDF12 results with the most recent constraints from CMB observations to infer redshift-dependent ultraviolet (UV) luminosity densities, reionization histories, and electron scattering optical depth evolution consistent with the available data. Under reasonable assumptions about the escape fraction of hydrogen ionizing photons and the intergalactic medium clumping factor, we find that to fully reionize the universe by redshift z~6 the population of star-forming galaxies at redshifts z~7-9 likely must extend in luminosity below the UDF12 limits to absolute UV magnitudes of M_UV\sim -13 or fainter. Moreover, low levels of star formation extending to redshifts z~15-25, as suggested by the normal UV colors of z\simeq7-8 galaxies and the smooth decline in abundance with redshift observed by UDF12 to z\simeq10, are additionally likely required to reproduce the optical depth to electron scattering inferred from CMB observations., Comment: Version accepted by ApJ (originally submitted Jan 5, 2013). The UDF12 website can be found at http://udf12.arizona.edu
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- 2013
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3. The UV Luminosity Function of star-forming galaxies via dropout selection at redshifts z ~ 7 and 8 from the 2012 Ultra Deep Field campaign
- Author
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Schenker, Matthew A., Robertson, Brant E., Ellis, Richard S., Ono, Yoshiaki, McLure, Ross J., Dunlop, James S., Koekemoer, Anton, Bowler, Rebecca A. A., Ouchi, Masami, Curtis-Lake, Emma, Rogers, Alexander B., Schneider, Evan, Charlot, Stephane, Stark, Daniel P., Furlanetto, Steven R., and Cirasuolo, Michele
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a catalog of high redshift star-forming galaxies selected to lie within the redshift range z ~ 7-8 using the Ultra Deep Field 2012 (UDF12), the deepest near-infrared (near-IR) exposures yet taken with the Hubble Space Telescope. As a result of the increased near-infrared exposure time compared to previous HST imaging in this field, we probe 0.65 (0.25) mag fainter in absolute UV magnitude, at z ~ 7 (8), which increases confidence in a measurement of the faint end slope of the galaxy luminosity function. Through a 0.7 mag deeper limit in the key F105W filter that encompasses or lies just longward of the Lyman break, we also achieve a much-refined color-color selection that balances high redshift completeness and a low expected contamination fraction. We improve the number of drop-out selected UDF sources to 47 at z ~ 7 and 27 at z ~ 8. Incorporating brighter archival and ground-based samples, we measure the z ~ 7 UV luminosity function to an absolute magnitude limit of M_UV = -17 and find a faint end Schechter slope of \alpha = -1.87+/- 0.18. Using a similar color-color selection at z ~ 8 that takes account of our newly-added imaging in the F140W filter, and incorporating archival data from the HIPPIES and BoRG campaigns, we provide a robust estimate of the faint end slope at z ~ 8, \alpha = -1.94 +/- 0.23. We briefly discuss our results in the context of earlier work and that derived using the same UDF12 data but with an independent photometric redshift technique (McLure et al 2012)., Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, To be submitted to ApJ
- Published
- 2012
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4. Evolution of the Sizes of Galaxies over 7<z<12 Revealed by the 2012 Hubble Ultra Deep Field Campaign
- Author
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Ono, Yoshiaki, Ouchi, Masami, Curtis-Lake, Emma, Schenker, Matthew A., Ellis, Richard S., McLure, Ross J., Dunlop, James S., Robertson, Brant E., Koekemoer, Anton M., Bowler, Rebecca A. A., Rogers, Alexander B., Schneider, Evan, Charlot, Stephane, Stark, Daniel P., Shimasaku, Kazuhiro, Furlanetto, Steven R., and Cirasuolo, Michele
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We analyze the redshift- and luminosity-dependent sizes of dropout galaxy candidates in the redshift range z~7-12 using deep images from the UDF12 campaign, data which offers two distinct advantages over that used in earlier work. Firstly, we utilize the increased S/N ratio offered by the UDF12 imaging to provide improved size measurements for known galaxies at z=6.5-8 in the HUDF. Specifically, we stack the new deep F140W image with the existing F125W data in order to provide improved measurements of the half-light radii of z-dropouts. Similarly we stack this image with the new deep UDF12 F160W image to obtain new size measurements for a sample of Y-dropouts. Secondly, because the UDF12 data have allowed the construction of the first robust galaxy sample in the HUDF at z>8, we have been able to extend the measurement of average galaxy size out to significantly higher redshifts. Restricting our size measurements to sources which are now detected at >15sigma, we confirm earlier indications that the average half-light radii of z~7-12 galaxies are extremely small, 0.3-0.4 kpc, comparable to the sizes of giant molecular associations in local star-forming galaxies. We also confirm that there is a clear trend of decreasing half-light radius with increasing redshift, and provide the first evidence that this trend continues beyond z~8. Modeling the evolution of the average half-light radius as a power-law (1+z)^s, we obtain a best-fit index of s=-1.28+/-0.13 over the redshift range z~4-12, mid-way between the physically expected evolution for baryons embedded in dark halos of constant mass (s=-1) and constant velocity (s=-1.5). A clear size-luminosity relation, such as that found at lower redshift, is also evident in both our z- and Y-dropout sample. This relation can be interpreted in terms of a constant surface density of star formation over a range in luminosity of 0.05-1.0L*_z=3.(abridged), Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures, submitted to ApJ
- Published
- 2012
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5. The 2012 Hubble Ultra Deep Field (UDF12): Observational Overview
- Author
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Koekemoer, Anton M., Ellis, Richard S, McLure, Ross J., Dunlop, James S., Robertson, Brant E, Ono, Yoshiaki, Schenker, Matthew A., Ouchi, Masami, Bowler, Rebecca A. A., Rogers, Alexander B., Curtis-Lake, Emma, Schneider, Evan, Charlot, Stephane, Stark, Daniel P., Furlanetto, Steven R., Cirasuolo, Michele, Wild, V., and Targett, T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the 2012 Hubble Ultra Deep Field campaign (UDF12), a large 128-orbit Cycle 19 \HST\ program aimed at extending previous WFC3/IR observations of the UDF by quadrupling the exposure time in the F105W filter, imaging in an additional F140W filter, and extending the F160W exposure time by 50%. The principal scientific goal of this project is to determine whether galaxies reionized the universe; our observations are designed to provide a robust determination of the star formation density at $z$$\,\gtrsim\,$8, improve measurements of the ultraviolet continuum slope at $z$$\,\sim\,7\,-\,$8, facilitate the construction of new samples of $z$$\,\sim\,9\,-\,$10 candidates, and enable the detection of sources up to $z$$\,\sim\,$12. For this project we committed to combining these and other WFC3/IR imaging observations of the UDF area into a single homogeneous dataset, to provide the deepest near-infrared observations of the sky currently achievable. In this paper we present the observational overview of the project, motivated by its scientific goals, and describe the procedures used in reducing the data as well as the final products that are produced. We have used the most up up-to-date methods for calibrating and combining the images, in particular paying attention to correcting several instrumental effects. We release the full combined mosaics, comprising a single, unified set of mosaics of the UDF, providing the deepest near-infrared blank-field view of the universe obtained to date, reaching magnitudes as deep as AB$\,\sim\,$30 in the near-infrared, and yielding a legacy dataset on this field of lasting scientific value to the community., Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, submitted to ApJS
- Published
- 2012
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6. The Abundance of Star-Forming Galaxies in the Redshift Range 8.5 to 12: New Results from the 2012 Hubble Ultra Deep Field Campaign
- Author
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Ellis, Richard S, McLure, Ross J, Dunlop, James S, Robertson, Brant E, Ono, Yoshiaki, Schenker, Matthew A, Koekemoer, Anton, Bowler, Rebecca A A, Ouchi, Masami, Rogers, Alexander B, Curtis-Lake, Emma, Schneider, Evan, Charlot, Stephane, Stark, Daniel P, Furlanetto, Steven R, and Cirasuolo, Michele
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of the deepest search to date for star-forming galaxies beyond a redshift z~8.5 utilizing a new sequence of near-infrared Wide Field Camera 3 images of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field. This `UDF12' campaign completed in September 2012 doubles the earlier exposures with WFC3/IR in this field and quadruples the exposure in the key F105W filter used to locate such distant galaxies. Combined with additional imaging in the F140W filter, the fidelity of high redshift candidates is greatly improved. Using spectral energy distribution fitting techniques on objects selected from a deep multi-band near-infrared stack we find 7 promising z>8.5 candidates. As none of the previously claimed UDF candidates with 8.5
10 galaxies with JWST., Comment: Submitted to Astrophys. J. Lett. on Nov. 7, 2012. Resubmitted after responding to referee report. UDF12 public webpage available at http://udf12.arizona.edu - Published
- 2012
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7. EVOLUTION OF THE SIZES OF GALAXIES OVER 7 < z < 12 REVEALED BY THE 2012 HUBBLE ULTRA DEEP FIELD CAMPAIGN
- Author
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Ono, Yoshiaki, Ouchi, Masami, Curtis-Lake, Emma, Schenker, Matthew A, Ellis, Richard S, McLure, Ross J, Dunlop, James S, Robertson, Brant E, Koekemoer, Anton M, Bowler, Rebecca AA, Rogers, Alexander B, Schneider, Evan, Charlot, Stephane, Stark, Daniel P, Shimasaku, Kazuhiro, Furlanetto, Steven R, and Cirasuolo, Michele
- Subjects
galaxies: evolution ,galaxies: formation ,galaxies: high-redshift ,galaxies: structure ,astro-ph.CO ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
We analyze the redshift- and luminosity-dependent sizes of dropout galaxy candidates in the redshift range z ∼ 7-12 using deep images from the 2012 Hubble Ultra Deep Field (UDF12) campaign, which offers two advantages over that used in earlier work. First, we utilize the increased signal-to-noise ratio offered by the UDF12 imaging to provide improved measurements for known galaxies at z ≃ 6.5-8 in the HUDF. Second, because the UDF12 data have allowed the construction of the first robust galaxy sample in the HUDF at z > 8, we have been able to extend the measurement of average galaxy size out to higher redshifts. Restricting our measurements to sources detected at >15σ, we confirm earlier indications that the average half-light radii of z ∼ 7-12 galaxies are extremely small, 0.3-0.4 kpc, comparable to the sizes of giant molecular associations in local star-forming galaxies. We also confirm that there is a clear trend of decreasing half-light radius with increasing redshift, and provide the first evidence that this trend continues beyond z ≃ 8. Modeling the evolution of the average half-light radius as a power law, (1 + z)s, we obtain a best-fit index of over z ∼ 4-12. A clear size-luminosity relation is evident in our dropout samples. This relation can be interpreted in terms of a constant surface density of star formation over a range in luminosity of . The average star formation surface density in dropout galaxies is 2-3 orders of magnitude lower than that found in extreme starburst galaxies, but is comparable to that seen today in the centers of normal disk galaxies. © 2013. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2013
8. THE 2012 HUBBLE ULTRA DEEP FIELD (UDF12): OBSERVATIONAL OVERVIEW
- Author
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Koekemoer, Anton M, Ellis, Richard S, McLure, Ross J, Dunlop, James S, Robertson, Brant E, Ono, Yoshiaki, Schenker, Matthew A, Ouchi, Masami, Bowler, Rebecca AA, Rogers, Alexander B, Curtis-Lake, Emma, Schneider, Evan, Charlot, Stephane, Stark, Daniel P, Furlanetto, Steven R, Cirasuolo, Michele, Wild, V, and Targett, T
- Subjects
cosmology ,observations - galaxies ,high-redshift ,astro-ph.CO ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the 2012 Hubble Ultra Deep Field campaign (UDF12), a large 128 orbit Cycle 19 Hubble Space Telescope program aimed at extending previous Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3)/IR observations of the UDF by quadrupling the exposure time in the F105W filter, imaging in an additional F140W filter, and extending the F160W exposure time by 50%, as well as adding an extremely deep parallel field with the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) in the F814W filter with a total exposure time of 128 orbits. The principal scientific goal of this project is to determine whether galaxies reionized the universe; our observations are designed to provide a robust determination of the star formation density at z ≳ 8, improve measurements of the ultraviolet continuum slope at z ∼ 7-8, facilitate the construction of new samples of z ∼ 9-10 candidates, and enable the detection of sources up to z ∼ 12. For this project we committed to combining these and other WFC3/IR imaging observations of the UDF area into a single homogeneous dataset to provide the deepest near-infrared observations of the sky. In this paper we present the observational overview of the project and describe the procedures used in reducing the data as well as the final products that were produced. We present the details of several special procedures that we implemented to correct calibration issues in the data for both the WFC3/IR observations of the main UDF field and our deep 128 orbit ACS/WFC F814W parallel field image, including treatment for persistence, correction for time-variable sky backgrounds, and astrometric alignment to an accuracy of a few milliarcseconds. We release the full, combined mosaics comprising a single, unified set of mosaics of the UDF, providing the deepest near-infrared blank-field view of the universe currently achievable, reaching magnitudes as deep as AB ∼ 30 mag in the near-infrared, and yielding a legacy dataset on this field. © 2013. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2013
9. Expansion of novel biosynthetic gene clusters from diverse environments using SanntiS
- Author
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Sanchez Fragoso, Jose Santiago, primary, Rogers, Joel David, additional, Rogers, Alexander B, additional, Nassar, Maaly, additional, McEntyre, Johanna, additional, Welch, Martin, additional, Hollfelder, Florian, additional, and Finn, Robert D, additional
- Published
- 2023
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10. MGnify: the microbiome sequence data analysis resource in 2023
- Author
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Richardson, Lorna, primary, Allen, Ben, additional, Baldi, Germana, additional, Beracochea, Martin, additional, Bileschi, Maxwell L, additional, Burdett, Tony, additional, Burgin, Josephine, additional, Caballero-Pérez, Juan, additional, Cochrane, Guy, additional, Colwell, Lucy J, additional, Curtis, Tom, additional, Escobar-Zepeda, Alejandra, additional, Gurbich, Tatiana A, additional, Kale, Varsha, additional, Korobeynikov, Anton, additional, Raj, Shriya, additional, Rogers, Alexander B, additional, Sakharova, Ekaterina, additional, Sanchez, Santiago, additional, Wilkinson, Darren J, additional, and Finn, Robert D, additional
- Published
- 2022
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11. A machine learning framework for discovery and enrichment of metagenomics metadata from open access publications
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Nassar, Maaly, primary, Rogers, Alexander B., additional, Talo', Francesco, additional, Sanchez, Santiago, additional, Shafique, Zunaira, additional, Finn, Robert D., additional, and McEntyre, Johanna, additional
- Published
- 2022
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12. MGnify: the microbiome sequence data analysis resource in 2023.
- Author
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Richardson, Lorna, Allen, Ben, Baldi, Germana, Beracochea, Martin, Bileschi, Maxwell L, Burdett, Tony, Burgin, Josephine, Caballero-Pérez, Juan, Cochrane, Guy, Colwell, Lucy J, Curtis, Tom, Escobar-Zepeda, Alejandra, Gurbich, Tatiana A, Kale, Varsha, Korobeynikov, Anton, Raj, Shriya, Rogers, Alexander B, Sakharova, Ekaterina, Sanchez, Santiago, and Wilkinson, Darren J
- Published
- 2023
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13. A machine learning framework for discovery and enrichment of metagenomics metadata from open access publications.
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Nassar, Maaly, Rogers, Alexander B, Talo', Francesco, Sanchez, Santiago, Shafique, Zunaira, Finn, Robert D, and McEntyre, Johanna
- Subjects
- *
OPEN access publishing , *METADATA , *METAGENOMICS , *MACHINE learning - Abstract
Metagenomics is a culture-independent method for studying the microbes inhabiting a particular environment. Comparing the composition of samples (functionally/taxonomically), either from a longitudinal study or cross-sectional studies, can provide clues into how the microbiota has adapted to the environment. However, a recurring challenge, especially when comparing results between independent studies, is that key metadata about the sample and molecular methods used to extract and sequence the genetic material are often missing from sequence records, making it difficult to account for confounding factors. Nevertheless, these missing metadata may be found in the narrative of publications describing the research. Here, we describe a machine learning framework that automatically extracts essential metadata for a wide range of metagenomics studies from the literature contained in Europe PMC. This framework has enabled the extraction of metadata from 114,099 publications in Europe PMC, including 19,900 publications describing metagenomics studies in European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) and MGnify. Using this framework, a new metagenomics annotations pipeline was developed and integrated into Europe PMC to regularly enrich up-to-date ENA and MGnify metagenomics studies with metadata extracted from research articles. These metadata are now available for researchers to explore and retrieve in the MGnify and Europe PMC websites, as well as Europe PMC annotations API. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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14. EVOLUTION OF THE SIZES OF GALAXIES OVER 7 < 12 REVEALED BY THE 2012 HUBBLE ULTRA DEEP FIELD CAMPAIGN
- Author
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Ono, Yoshiaki, primary, Ouchi, Masami, additional, Curtis-Lake, Emma, additional, Schenker, Matthew A., additional, Ellis, Richard S., additional, McLure, Ross J., additional, Dunlop, James S., additional, Robertson, Brant E., additional, Koekemoer, Anton M., additional, Bowler, Rebecca A. A., additional, Rogers, Alexander B., additional, Schneider, Evan, additional, Charlot, Stephane, additional, Stark, Daniel P., additional, Shimasaku, Kazuhiro, additional, Furlanetto, Steven R., additional, and Cirasuolo, Michele, additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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15. THE UV LUMINOSITY FUNCTION OF STAR-FORMING GALAXIES VIA DROPOUT SELECTION AT REDSHIFTSz∼ 7 AND 8 FROM THE 2012 ULTRA DEEP FIELD CAMPAIGN
- Author
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Schenker, Matthew A., primary, Robertson, Brant E., additional, Ellis, Richard S., additional, Ono, Yoshiaki, additional, McLure, Ross J., additional, Dunlop, James S., additional, Koekemoer, Anton, additional, Bowler, Rebecca A. A., additional, Ouchi, Masami, additional, Curtis-Lake, Emma, additional, Rogers, Alexander B., additional, Schneider, Evan, additional, Charlot, Stephane, additional, Stark, Daniel P., additional, Furlanetto, Steven R., additional, and Cirasuolo, Michele, additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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16. NEW CONSTRAINTS ON COSMIC REIONIZATION FROM THE 2012 HUBBLE ULTRA DEEP FIELD CAMPAIGN
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Robertson, Brant E., primary, Furlanetto, Steven R., additional, Schneider, Evan, additional, Charlot, Stephane, additional, Ellis, Richard S., additional, Stark, Daniel P., additional, McLure, Ross J., additional, Dunlop, James S., additional, Koekemoer, Anton, additional, Schenker, Matthew A., additional, Ouchi, Masami, additional, Ono, Yoshiaki, additional, Curtis-Lake, Emma, additional, Rogers, Alexander B., additional, Bowler, Rebecca A. A., additional, and Cirasuolo, Michele, additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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17. THE ABUNDANCE OF STAR-FORMING GALAXIES IN THE REDSHIFT RANGE 8.5-12: NEW RESULTS FROM THE 2012 HUBBLE ULTRA DEEP FIELD CAMPAIGN
- Author
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Ellis, Richard S., primary, McLure, Ross J., additional, Dunlop, James S., additional, Robertson, Brant E., additional, Ono, Yoshiaki, additional, Schenker, Matthew A., additional, Koekemoer, Anton, additional, Bowler, Rebecca A. A., additional, Ouchi, Masami, additional, Rogers, Alexander B., additional, Curtis-Lake, Emma, additional, Schneider, Evan, additional, Charlot, Stephane, additional, Stark, Daniel P., additional, Furlanetto, Steven R., additional, and Cirasuolo, Michele, additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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18. Complex Permittivity of Volcanic Rock and Ash at Millimeter Wave Frequencies
- Author
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Rogers, Alexander B., primary, Macfarlane, David G., additional, and Robertson, Duncan A., additional
- Published
- 2011
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19. Measurement of the complex dielectric constant of volcanic ash at millimetre wavelengths
- Author
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Rogers, Alexander B., primary, Macfarlane, David G., additional, and Robertson, Duncan A., additional
- Published
- 2010
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20. THE UV LUMINOSITY FUNCTION OF STAR-FORMING GALAXIES VIA DROPOUT SELECTION AT REDSHIFTS z ~ 7 AND 8 FROM THE 2012 ULTRA DEEP FIELD CAMPAIGN.
- Author
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SCHENKER, MATTHEW A., ROBERTSON, BRANT E., ELLIS, RICHARD S., YOSHIAKI ONO, MCLURE, ROSS J., DUNLOP, JAMES S., KOEKEMOER, ANTON, BOWLER, REBECCA A. A., MASAMI OUCHI, CURTIS-LAKE, EMMA, ROGERS, ALEXANDER B., SCHNEIDER, EVAN, CHARLOT, STEPHANE, STARK, DANIEL P., FURLANETTO, STEVEN R., and CIRASUOLO, MICHELE
- Subjects
STELLAR luminosity function ,ULTRAVIOLET photometry ,GALAXY formation ,GALACTIC redshift ,NEAR infrared spectroscopy - Abstract
We present a catalog of high-redshift star-forming galaxies selected to lie within the redshift range z ≃ 7-8 using the Ultra Deep Field 2012 (UDF12), the deepest near-infrared (near-IR) exposures yet taken with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). As a result of the increased near-IR exposure time compared to previous HST imaging in this field, we probe ~0.65 (0.25) mag fainter in absolute UV magnitude, at z ~ 7 (8), which increases confidence in a measurement of the faint end slope of the galaxy luminosity function. Through a 0.7 mag deeper limit in the key F105W filter that encompasses or lies just longward of the Lyman break, we also achieve a much-refined color-color selection that balances high redshift completeness and a low expected contamination fraction. We improve the number of dropout-selected UDF sources to 47 at z ~ 7 and 27 at z ~ 8. Incorporating brighter archival and ground-based samples, we measure the z ≃ 7 UV luminosity function to an absolute magnitude limit of MUV = -17 and find a faint end Schechter slope of α = -1.87
+0.18 -0.17 . Using a similar color-color selection at z ≃ 8 that takes our newly added imaging in the F140W filter into account, and incorporating archival data from the HIPPIES and BoRG campaigns, we provide a robust estimate of the faint end slope at z ≃ 8, α = -1.94+0.21 -0.24 . We briefly discuss our results in the context of earlier work and that derived using the same UDF12 data but with an independent photometric redshift technique. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. THE ABUNDANCE OF STAR-FORMING GALAXIES IN THE REDSHIFT RANGE 8.5-12: NEW RESULTS FROM THE 2012 HUBBLE ULTRA DEEP FIELD CAMPAIGN.
- Author
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ELLIS, RICHARD S., MCLURE, ROSS J., DUNLOP, JAMES S., ROBERTSON, BRANT E., ONO, YOSHIAKI, SCHENKER, MATTHEW A., KOEKEMOER, ANTON, BOWLER, REBECCA A. A., OUCHI, MASAMI, ROGERS, ALEXANDER B., CURTIS-LAKE, EMMA, SCHNEIDER, EVAN, CHARLOT, STEPHANE, STARK, DANIEL P., FURLANETTO, STEVEN R., and CIRASUOLO, MICHELE
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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