169 research outputs found
A Deficit of Faint Red Galaxies in the Possible Large-Scale Structures around the RDCS J1252.9-2927 Cluster at z=1.24
(Abridged) We report a discovery of possible large-scale structures around
the RDCS J1252.9-2927 cluster at z=1.24 based on photometric redshifts. We
carried out multi-band wide-field imaging with Suprime-Cam on the Subaru
Telescope and WFCAM on the United Kingdom Infra-Red Telescope (UKIRT). The
distribution of photo-z selected galaxies reveals clumpy structures surrounding
the central cluster. We compare the observed structure with an X-ray map and
find that two of the four plausible clumps show significant X-ray emissions and
one with a marginal detection, which strongly suggest that they are dynamically
bound systems. Following the discovery of the possible large-scale structure,
we carried out deeper SOFI K_s-band imaging with New Technology Telescope on
the four plausible clumps. We construct the optical-to-near-infrared
colour-magnitude diagrams of the galaxies in the clumps, and find that the
colour-magnitude relation (CMR) of the red galaxies in the clumps is sharply
truncated below K_s=22. Interestingly, the main cluster shows a clear relation
down to K_s=23 (Lidman et al. 2004). We suggest that galaxies follow the
'environment-dependent down-sizing' evolution. Massive galaxies in high density
environments first stop forming stars and become red. Less massive galaxies in
less dense environments become red at later times. Based on a few assumptions,
we predict that the brightest tip of the CMR appears at z~2.5.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
MARZ: Manual and Automatic Redshifting Software
The Australian Dark Energy Survey (OzDES) is a 100-night spectroscopic survey
underway on the Anglo-Australian Telescope using the fibre-fed 2-degree-field
(2dF) spectrograph. We have developed a new redshifting application Marz with
greater usability, flexibility, and the capacity to analyse a wider range of
object types than the Runz software package previously used for redshifting
spectra from 2dF. Marz is an open-source, client-based, Javascript
web-application which provides an intuitive interface and powerful automatic
matching capabilities on spectra generated from the AAOmega spectrograph to
produce high quality spectroscopic redshift measurements. The software can be
run interactively or via the command line, and is easily adaptable to other
instruments and pipelines if conforming to the current FITS file standard is
not possible. Behind the scenes, a modified version of the Autoz
cross-correlation algorithm is used to match input spectra against a variety of
stellar and galaxy templates, and automatic matching performance for OzDES
spectra has increased from 54% (Runz) to 91% (Marz). Spectra not matched
correctly by the automatic algorithm can be easily redshifted manually by
cycling automatic results, manual template comparison, or marking spectral
features.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figure
A blinded determination of from low-redshift Type Ia supernovae, calibrated by Cepheid variables
Presently a tension exists between values of the Hubble constant
derived from analysis of fluctuations in the Cosmic Microwave Background
by Planck, and local measurements of the expansion using calibrators of type Ia
supernovae (SNe Ia). We perform a blinded reanalysis of Riess et al. 2011 to
measure from low-redshift SNe Ia, calibrated by Cepheid variables and
geometric distances including to NGC 4258. This paper is a demonstration of
techniques to be applied to the Riess et at. 2016 data. Our end-to-end analysis
starts from available CfA3 and LOSS photometry, providing an independent
validation of Riess et al. 2011. We obscure the value of throughout our
analysis and the first stage of the referee process, because calibration of SNe
Ia requires a series of often subtle choices, and the potential for results to
be affected by human bias is significant. Our analysis departs from that of
Riess et al. 2011 by incorporating the covariance matrix method adopted in SNLS
and JLA to quantify SN Ia systematics, and by including a simultaneous fit of
all SN Ia and Cepheid data. We find (stat)
(sys) km s Mpc with a three-galaxy (NGC 4258+LMC+MW) anchor. The
relative uncertainties are 4.3% statistical, 1.1% systematic, and 4.4% total,
larger than in Riess et al. 2011 (3.3% total) and the Efstathiou 2014
reanalysis (3.4% total). Our error budget for is dominated by statistical
errors due to the small size of the supernova sample, whilst the systematic
contribution is dominated by variation in the Cepheid fits, and for the SNe Ia,
uncertainties in the host galaxy mass dependence and Malmquist bias.Comment: 38 pages, 13 figures, 13 tables; accepted for publication in MNRA
Morphology with Light Profile Fitting of Confirmed Cluster Galaxies at z=0.84
We perform a morphological study of 124 spectroscopically confirmed cluster
galaxies in the z=0.84 galaxy cluster RX J0152.7-1357. Our classification
scheme includes color information, visual morphology, and 1-component and
2-component light profile fitting derived from Hubble Space Telescope riz
imaging. We adopt a modified version of a detailed classification scheme
previously used in studies of field galaxies and found to be correlated with
kinematic features of those galaxies. We compare our cluster galaxy
morphologies to those of field galaxies at similar redshift. We also compare
galaxy morphologies in regions of the cluster with different dark-matter
density as determined by weak-lensing maps. We find an early-type fraction for
the cluster population as a whole of 47%, about 2.8 times higher than the
field, and similar to the dynamically young cluster MS 1054 at similar
redshift. We find the most drastic change in morphology distribution between
the low and intermediate dark matter density regions within the cluster, with
the early type fraction doubling and the peculiar fraction dropping by nearly
half. The peculiar fraction drops more drastically than the spiral fraction
going from the outskirts to the intermediate-density regions. This suggests
that many galaxies falling into clusters at z~0.8 may evolve directly from
peculiar, merging, and compact systems into early-type galaxies, without having
the chance to first evolve into a regular spiral galaxy.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Star-forming fractions and galaxy evolution with redshift in rich X-ray-selected galaxy clusters
We have compared stacked spectra of galaxies, grouped by environment and stellar mass, among 58 members of the redshift z = 1.24 galaxy cluster RDCS J1252.9-2927 (J1252.9) and 134 galaxies in the z = 0.84 cluster RX J0152.7-1357 (J0152.7). These two clusters are excellent laboratories to study how galaxies evolve from star-forming to passive at z ~ 1. We measured spectral indices and star-forming fractions for our density- and mass-based stacked spectra. The star-forming fraction among low-mass galaxies (<7 × 10^(10)M_⊙) is higher in J1252.9 than in J0152.7, at about 4σ significance. Thus star formation is being quenched between z = 1.24 and z = 0.84 for a substantial fraction of low-mass galaxies. Star-forming fractions were also found to be higher in J1252.9 in all environments, including the core. Passive galaxies in J1252.9 have systematically lower D_n4000 values than in J0152.7 in all density and mass groups, consistent with passive evolution at modestly super-solar metallicities
The XMM Cluster Survey: The Dynamical State of XMMXCS J2215.9-1738 at z=1.457
We present new spectroscopic observations of the most distant X-ray selected
galaxy cluster currently known, XMMXCS J2215.9-1738 at z=1.457, obtained with
the DEIMOS instrument at the W. M. Keck Observatory, and the FORS2 instrument
on the ESO Very Large Telescope. Within the cluster virial radius, as estimated
from the cluster X-ray properties, we increase the number of known
spectroscopic cluster members to 17 objects, and calculate the line of sight
velocity dispersion of the cluster to be 580+/-140 km/s. We find mild evidence
that the velocity distribution of galaxies within the virial radius deviates
from a single Gaussian. We show that the properties of J2215.9-1738 are
inconsistent with self-similar evolution of local X-ray scaling relations,
finding that the cluster is underluminous given its X-ray temperature, and that
the intracluster medium contains ~2-3 times the kinetic energy per unit mass of
the cluster galaxies. These results can perhaps be explained if the cluster is
observed in the aftermath of an off-axis merger. Alternatively, heating of the
intracluster medium through supernovae and/or Active Galactic Nuclei activity,
as is required to explain the observed slope of the local X-ray
luminosity-temperature relation, may be responsible.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
SN1991bg-like supernovae are associated with old stellar populations
SN1991bg-like supernovae are a distinct subclass of thermonuclear supernovae
(SNe Ia). Their spectral and photometric peculiarities indicate their
progenitors and explosion mechanism differ from `normal' SNe Ia. One method of
determining information about supernova progenitors we cannot directly observe
is to observe the stellar population adjacent to the apparent supernova
explosion site to infer the distribution of stellar population ages and
metallicities. We obtain integral field observations and analyse the spectra
extracted from regions of projected radius about the
apparent SN explosion site for 11 91bg-like SNe in both early- and late-type
galaxies. We utilize full-spectrum spectral fitting to determine the ages and
metallicities of the stellar population within the aperture. We find that the
majority of the stellar populations that hosted 91bg-like supernovae have
little recent star formation. The ages of the stellar populations suggest that
that 91bg-like SN progenitors explode after delay times of ,
much longer than the typical delay time of normal SNe Ia, which peaks at .Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, 3 tables, submitted to Publications of the
Astronomical Society of Australi
The evolution in the stellar mass of Brightest Cluster Galaxies over the past 10 billion years
Using a sample of 98 galaxy clusters recently imaged in the near infra-red
with the ESO NTT, WIYN and WHT telescopes, supplemented with 33 clusters from
the ESO archive, we measure how the stellar mass of the most massive galaxies
in the universe, namely Brightest Cluster Galaxies (BCG), increases with time.
Most of the BCGs in this new sample lie in the redshift range ,
which has been noted in recent works to mark an epoch over which the growth in
the stellar mass of BCGs stalls. From this sample of 132 clusters, we create a
subsample of 102 systems that includes only those clusters that have estimates
of the cluster mass. We combine the BCGs in this subsample with BCGs from the
literature, and find that the growth in stellar mass of BCGs from 10 billion
years ago to the present epoch is broadly consistent with recent semi-analytic
and semi-empirical models. As in other recent studies, tentative evidence
indicates that the stellar mass growth rate of BCGs may be slowing in the past
3.5 billion years. Further work in collecting larger samples, and in better
comparing observations with theory using mock images is required if a more
detailed comparison between the models and the data is to be made.Comment: 15 pages, 8 tables, 7 figures - Accepted for publication in MNRA
- …
