59 research outputs found
La forêt sous influence urbaine en zone méditerranéenne.
Le croisement des données cartographiques des forêts de l'IFN, avec celles du recensement de la population de l'Insee, a permis d'estimer la forêt sous influence urbaine. Ces zones forestières sont susceptibles d'être utilisées par les citadins pour leurs loisirs. En zone méditerranéenne, les 18 unités urbaines de plus de 50 000 habitants et leurs zones d'influence rassemblent 640 000 hectares de forêt. 28 % de la superficie de ces 18 unités urbaines sont couvertes par la forêt. Pour ces forêts, les zones d'interfaces entre forêt et habitat sont importantes. Ce phénomène a pour conséquence d'accroître le risque d'incendies de forêt
T-PHOT version 2.0: improved algorithms for background subtraction, local convolution, kernel registration, and new options
We present the new release v2.0 of T-PHOT, a publicly available software
package developed to perform PSF-matched, prior-based, multiwavelength
deconfusion photometry of extragalactic fields. New features included in the
code are presented and discussed: background estimation, fitting using position
dependent kernels, flux prioring, diagnostical statistics on the residual
image, exclusion of selected sources from the model and residual images,
individual registration of fitted objects. These new options improve on the
performance of the code, allowing for more accurate results and providing
useful aids for diagnostics.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
Hierarchical progressive surveys. Multi-resolution HEALPix data structures for astronomical images, catalogues, and 3-dimensional data cubes
Scientific exploitation of the ever increasing volumes of astronomical data
requires efficient and practical methods for data access, visualisation, and
analysis. Hierarchical sky tessellation techniques enable a multi-resolution
approach to organising data on angular scales from the full sky down to the
individual image pixels. Aims. We aim to show that the Hierarchical progressive
survey (HiPS) scheme for describing astronomical images, source catalogues, and
three-dimensional data cubes is a practical solution to managing large volumes
of heterogeneous data and that it enables a new level of scientific
interoperability across large collections of data of these different data
types. Methods. HiPS uses the HEALPix tessellation of the sphere to define a
hierarchical tile and pixel structure to describe and organise astronomical
data. HiPS is designed to conserve the scientific properties of the data
alongside both visualisation considerations and emphasis on the ease of
implementation. We describe the development of HiPS to manage a large number of
diverse image surveys, as well as the extension of hierarchical image systems
to cube and catalogue data. We demonstrate the interoperability of HiPS and
Multi-Order Coverage (MOC) maps and highlight the HiPS mechanism to provide
links to the original data. Results. Hierarchical progressive surveys have been
generated by various data centres and groups for ~200 data collections
including many wide area sky surveys, and archives of pointed observations.
These can be accessed and visualised in Aladin, Aladin Lite, and other
applications. HiPS provides a basis for further innovations in the use of
hierarchical data structures to facilitate the description and statistical
analysis of large astronomical data sets.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
T-PHOT: A new code for PSF-matched, prior-based, multiwavelength extragalactic deconfusion photometry
We present T-PHOT, a publicly available software aimed at extracting accurate
photometry from low-resolution images of deep extragalactic fields, where the
blending of sources can be a serious problem for the accurate and unbiased
measurement of fluxes and colours. T-PHOT has been developed within the
ASTRODEEP project and it can be considered as the next generation to TFIT,
providing significant improvements above it and other similar codes. T-PHOT
gathers data from a high-resolution image of a region of the sky, and uses it
to obtain priors for the photometric analysis of a lower resolution image of
the same field. It can handle different types of datasets as input priors: i) a
list of objects that will be used to obtain cutouts from the real
high-resolution image; ii) a set of analytical models; iii) a list of
unresolved, point-like sources, useful e.g. for far-infrared wavelength
domains. We show that T-PHOT yields accurate estimations of fluxes within the
intrinsic uncertainties of the method, when systematic errors are taken into
account (which can be done thanks to a flagging code given in the output).
T-PHOT is many times faster than similar codes like TFIT and CONVPHOT (up to
hundreds, depending on the problem and the method adopted), whilst at the same
time being more robust and more versatile. This makes it an optimal choice for
the analysis of large datasets. In addition we show how the use of different
settings and methods significantly enhances the performance. Given its
versatility and robustness, T-PHOT can be considered the preferred choice for
combined photometric analysis of current and forthcoming extragalactic optical
to far-infrared imaging surveys. [abridged]Comment: 23 pages, 20 figures, 2 table
Identification of z~>2 Herschel 500 micron sources using color-deconfusion
We present a new method to search for candidate z~>2 Herschel 500{\mu}m
sources in the GOODS-North field, using a S500{\mu}m/S24{\mu}m "color
deconfusion" technique. Potential high-z sources are selected against
low-redshift ones from their large 500{\mu}m to 24{\mu}m flux density ratios.
By effectively reducing the contribution from low-redshift populations to the
observed 500{\mu}m emission, we are able to identify counterparts to high-z
500{\mu}m sources whose 24{\mu}m fluxes are relatively faint. The recovery of
known z~4 starbursts confirms the efficiency of this approach in selecting
high-z Herschel sources. The resulting sample consists of 34 dusty star-forming
galaxies at z~>2. The inferred infrared luminosities are in the range
1.5x10^12-1.8x10^13 Lsun, corresponding to dust-obscured star formation rates
(SFRs) of ~260-3100 Msun/yr for a Salpeter IMF. Comparison with previous SCUBA
850{\mu}m-selected galaxy samples shows that our method is more efficient at
selecting high-z dusty galaxies with a median redshift of z=3.07+/-0.83 and 10
of the sources at z~>4. We find that at a fixed luminosity, the dust
temperature is ~5K cooler than that expected from the Td-LIR relation at z<1,
though different temperature selection effects should be taken into account.
The radio-detected subsample (excluding three strong AGN) follows the
far-infrared/radio correlation at lower redshifts, and no evolution with
redshift is observed out to z~5, suggesting that the far-infrared emission is
star formation dominated. The contribution of the high-z Herschel 500{\mu}m
sources to the cosmic SFR density is comparable to that of SMG populations at
z~2.5 and at least 40% of the extinction-corrected UV samples at z~4
(abridged).Comment: 33 pages in emulateapj format, 24 figures, 2 tables, accepted for
publication in the ApJ
The ASTRODEEP-GS43 catalogue: new photometry and redshifts for the CANDELS GOODS-South field
We present ASTRODEEP-GS43, a new multiwavelength photometric catalogue of the
GOODS-South field, which builds and improves upon the previously released
CANDELS catalogue. We provide photometric fluxes and corresponding
uncertainties in 43 optical and infrared bands (25 wide and 18 medium filters),
as well as photometric redshifts and physical properties of the 34930 CANDELS
-detected objects, plus an additional sample of 178 -dropout sources, of
which 173 are -detected and 5 IRAC-detected. We keep the CANDELS photometry
in 7 bands (CTIO , Hubble Space Telescope WFC3 and ISAAC-), and measure
from scratch the fluxes in the other 36 (VIMOS, HST ACS, HAWK-I , Spitzer
IRAC, and 23 from Subaru SuprimeCAM and Magellan-Baade Fourstar) with
state-of-the-art techniques of template-fitting. We then compute new
photometric redshifts with three different software tools, and take the median
value as best estimate. We finally evaluate new physical parameters from SED
fitting, comparing them to previously published ones. Comparing to a sample of
3931 high quality spectroscopic redshifts, for the new photo-'s we obtain a
normalized median absolute deviation (NMAD) of 0.015 with 3.01 of outliers
(0.011, 0.22 on the bright end at <22.5), similarly to the best
available published samples of photometric redshifts, such as the COSMOS
UltraVISTA catalogue. The ASTRODEEP-GS43 results are in qualitative agreement
with previously published catalogues of the GOODS-South field, improving on
them particularly in terms of SED sampling and photometric redshift estimates.
The catalogue is available for download from the Astrodeep website.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication on A&
Chasing passive galaxies in the early Universe: a critical analysis in CANDELS GOODS-South
We search for passive galaxies at in the GOODS-South field, using
different techniques based on photometric data, and paying attention to develop
methods that are sensitive to objects that have become passive shortly before
the epoch of observation. We use CANDELS HST catalogues, ultra-deep data
and new IRAC photometry, performing spectral energy distribution fitting using
models with abruptly quenched star formation histories. We then single out
galaxies which are best fitted by a passively evolving model, and having only
low probability star-forming solutions. We verify the effects of
including nebular lines emission, and we consider possible solutions at
different redshifts. The number of selected sources dramatically depends on the
models used in the SED fitting. Without including emission lines and with
photometric redshifts fixed at the CANDELS estimate, we single out 30
candidates; the inclusion of nebular lines emission reduces the sample to 10
objects; allowing for solutions at different redshifts, only 2 galaxies survive
as robust candidates. Most of the candidates are not far-infrared emitters,
corroborating their association with passive galaxies. Our results translate
into an upper limit in the number density of arcmin above the
detection limit. However, we conclude that the selection of passive galaxies at
is still subject to significant uncertainties, being sensitive to
assumptions in the SED modeling adopted and to the relatively low S/N of the
objects. By means of dedicated simulations, we show that JWST will greatly
enhance the accuracy, allowing for a much more robust classification.Comment: 28 pages, 13 figures, 2 table
The ASTRODEEP Frontier Fields catalogues: III. Multiwavelength photometry and rest-frame properties of MACS-J0717 and MACS-J1149
We present the multiwavelength photometry of two Frontier Fields massive
galaxy clusters MACS-J0717 and MACS-J1149 and their parallel fields, ranging
from HST to ground based K and Spitzer IRAC bands, and the public release of
photometric redshifts and rest frame properties of galaxies found in cluster
and parallel pointings. This work was done within ASTRODEEP project and aims to
provide a reference for future investigations of the extragalactic populations.
To fully exploit the depth of the images and detect faint sources we used an
accurate procedure which carefully removes the foreground light of bright
cluster sources and the intra-cluster light thus enabling detection and
measurement of accurate fluxes in crowded cluster regions. This same procedure
has been successfully used to derive the photometric catalogue of MACS-J0416
and Abell-2744.
The obtained multi-band photometry was used to derive photometric redshifts,
magnification and physical properties of sources. In line with the first two FF
catalogues released by ASTRODEEP, the photometric redshifts reach 4
accuracy. Moreover we extend the presently available samples to galaxies
intrinsically as faint as H16032-34 mag thanks the magnification factors
induced to strong gravitational lensing. Our analysis allows us to probe galaxy
masses larger then 10 M and/or SFR=0.1-1M/yr out to
redshift z
VizieR Online Data Catalog: CANDELS GOODS-S sources Chandra counterparts (Cappelluti+, 2016)
The 4Ms CDFS consists of 23 observations described in Table 1 of Luo et al. (2008, Cat. J/ApJS/179/19) plus other 31 pointings described in X11 for a total exposure of ~4Ms. For the purpose of this paper we employed only observations taken with a focal temperature of <=-120°C since at higher T the background cannot be modeled with our technique. (2 data files)
Chandra Counterparts of CANDELS GOODS-S Sources
Improving the capabilities of detecting faint X-ray sources is fundamental to
increase the statistics on faint high-z AGN and star-forming galaxies. We
performed a simultaneous Maximum Likelihood PSF fit in the [0.5-2] keV and
[2-7] keV energy bands of the 4 Ms{\em Chandra} Deep Field South (CDFS) data at
the position of the 34930 CANDELS H-band selected galaxies. For each detected
source we provide X-ray photometry and optical counterpart validation. We
validated this technique by means of a raytracing simulation. We detected a
total of 698 X-ray point-sources with a likelihood 4.98 (i.e.
2.7). We show that the prior knowledge of a deep sample of
Optical-NIR galaxies leads to a significant increase of the detection of faint
(i.e. 10 cgs in the [0.5-2] keV band) sources with respect to
"blind" X-ray detections. By including previous X-ray catalogs, this work
increases the total number of X-ray sources detected in the 4 Ms CDFS, CANDELS
area to 793, which represents the largest sample of extremely faint X-ray
sources assembled to date. Our results suggest that a large fraction of the
optical counterparts of our X-ray sources determined by likelihood ratio
actually coincides with the priors used for the source detection. Most of the
new detected sources are likely star-forming galaxies or faint absorbed AGN. We
identified a few sources sources with putative photometric redshift z4.
Despite the low number statistics and the uncertainties on the photo-z, this
sample significantly increases the number of X--ray selected candidate high-z
AGN.Comment: 15 Pages, 10 Figures, Accepted by ApJ, version before editing,
Catalog available at: http://www.astrodeep.eu/chandra-counterparts/ , CDS and
www.astrodeep.ed
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