Back to Search Start Over

The zCOSMOS-SINFONI Project I: Sample Selection and Natural-Seeing Observations

Authors :
Mancini, Chiara
Schreiber, Natascha Foerster
Renzini, Alvio
Cresci, Giovanni
Hicks, Erin
Peng, Yingjie
Vergani, Daniela
Lilly, Simon
Carollo, C. Marcella
Pozzetti, Lucia
Zamorani, Gianni
Daddi, Emanuele
Genzel, Reinhard
Maraston, Claudia
McCracken, Henry J.
Tacconi, Linda J.
Bouche, Nicolas
Davies, Richard I.
Oesch, Pascal
Shapiro, Kristen
Mainieri, Vincenzo
Lutz, Dieter
Mignoli, Marco
Sternberg, Amiel
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

The zCOSMOS SINFONI project is aimed at studying the physical and kinematical properties of a sample of massive z~1.4-2.5 star-forming galaxies, through SINFONI near-IR integral field spectroscopy (IFS), combined with the multi-wavelength information from the zCOSMOS (COSMOS) survey. The project is based on 1 hour of natural-seeing observations per target, and Adaptive Optics (AO) follow-up for a major part of the sample, which includes 30 galaxies selected from the zCOSMOS/VIMOS spectroscopic survey. This first paper presents the sample selection, and the global physical characterization of the target galaxies from multicolor photometry, i.e., star formation rate (SFR), stellar mass, age, etc. The Halpha integrated properties such as, flux, velocity dispersion, and size, are derived from the natural-seeing observations, while the follow up AO observations will be presented in the next paper of this series. Our sample appears to be well representative of star-forming galaxies at z~2, covering a wide range in mass and SFR. The Halpha integrated properties of the 25 Halpha detected galaxies are similar to those of other IFS samples at the same redshifts. Good agreement is found among the SFRs derived from Halpha luminosity and other diagnostic methods, provided the extinction affecting the Halpha luminosity is about twice that affecting the continuum. A preliminary kinematic analysis, based on the maximum observed velocity difference across the source, and on the integrated velocity dispersion, indicates that the sample splits nearly 50-50 into rotation-dominated and velocity dispersion-dominated galaxies, in good agreement with previous surveys.<br />Comment: 41 pages, 21 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1109.5952
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/743/1/86