805 research outputs found
A new extensive catalog of optically variable AGN in the GOODS Fields and a new statistical approach to variability selection
Variability is a property shared by practically all AGN. This makes
variability selection a possible technique for identifying AGN. Given that
variability selection makes no prior assumption about spectral properties, it
is a powerful technique for detecting both low-luminosity AGN in which the host
galaxy emission is dominating and AGN with unusual spectral properties. In this
paper, we will discuss and test different statistical methods for the detection
of variability in sparsely sampled data that allow full control over the false
positive rates. We will apply these methods to the GOODS North and South fields
and present a catalog of variable sources in the z band in both GOODS fields.
Out of 11931 objects checked, we find 155 variable sources at a significance
level of 99.9%, corresponding to about 1.3% of all objects. After rejection of
stars and supernovae, 139 variability selected AGN remain. Their magnitudes
reach down as faint as 25.5 mag in z. Spectroscopic redshifts are available for
22 of the variability selected AGN, ranging from 0.046 to 3.7. The absolute
magnitudes in the rest-frame z-band range from ~ -18 to -24, reaching
substantially fainter than the typical luminosities probed by traditional X-ray
and spectroscopic AGN selection in these fields. Therefore, this is a powerful
technique for future exploration of the evolution of the faint end of the AGN
luminosity function up to high redshifts.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal (version 2:
minor changes to text after receiving comments
The SEDs, Host Galaxies and Environments of Variability Selected AGN in GOODS-S
Variability selection has been proposed as a powerful tool for identifying
both low-luminosity AGN and those with unusual SEDs. However, a systematic
study of sources selected in such a way has been lacking. In this paper, we
present the multi-wavelength properties of the variability selected AGN in
GOODS South. We demonstrate that variability selection indeed reliably
identifies AGN, predominantly of low luminosity. We find contamination from
stars as well as a very small sample of sources that show no sign of AGN
activity, their number is consistent with the expected false positive rate. We
also study the host galaxies and environments of the AGN in the sample.
Disturbed host morphologies are relatively common. The host galaxies span a
wide range in the level of ongoing star-formation. However, massive star-bursts
are only present in the hosts of the most luminous AGN in the sample. There is
no clear environmental preference for the AGN sample in general but we find
that the most luminous AGN on average avoid dense regions while some
low-luminosity AGN hosted by late-type galaxies are found near the centres of
groups. AGN in our sample have closer nearest neighbours than the general
galaxy population. We find no indications that major mergers are a dominant
triggering process for the moderate to low luminosity AGN in this sample. The
environments and host galaxy properties instead suggest secular processes, in
particular tidal processes at first passage and minor mergers, as likely
triggers for the objects studied. This study demonstrates the strength of
variability selection for AGN and gives first hints at possibly triggering
mechanisms for high-redshift low luminosity AGN.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS (missing references added in
version 2
The WFPC2 Archival Parallels Project
We describe the methods and procedures developed to obtain a near-automatic
combination of WFPC2 images obtained as part of the WFPC2 Archival Pure
Parallels program. Several techniques have been developed or refined to ensure
proper alignment, registration, and combination of overlapping images that can
be obtained at different times and with different orientations. We quantify the
success rate and the accuracy of the registration of images of different types,
and we develop techniques suitable to equalize the sky background without
unduly affecting extended emission. About 600 combined images of the 1,500
eventually planned have already been publicly released through the STScI
Archive. The images released to date are especially suited to study star
formation in the Magellanic Clouds, the stellar population in the halo of
nearby galaxies, and the properties of star-forming galaxies at .Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, to appear in the PAS
Star formation and quenching among the most massive galaxies at z~1.7
We have conducted a detailed object-by-object study of a mass-complete
(M*>10^11 M_sun) sample of 56 galaxies at 1.4 < z < 2 in the GOODS-South field,
showing that an accurate de-blending in MIPS/24um images is essential to
properly assign to each galaxy its own star formation rate (SFR), whereas an
automatic procedure often fails. This applies especially to galaxies with SFRs
below the Main Sequence (MS) value, which may be in their quenching phase.
After that, the sample splits evenly between galaxies forming stars within a
factor of 4 of the MS rate (~45%), and sub-MS galaxies with SFRs ~10-1000 times
smaller (~55%). We did not find a well defined class of intermediate, transient
objects below the MS, suggesting that the conversion of a massive MS galaxy
into a quenched remnant may take a relatively short time (<1 Gyr), though a
larger sample should be analyzed in the same way to set precise limits on the
quenching timescale. X-ray detected AGNs represent a ~30% fraction of the
sample, and are found among both star-forming and quenched galaxies. The
morphological analysis revealed that ~50% of our massive objects are
bulge-dominated, and almost all MS galaxies with a relevant bulge component
host an AGN. We also found sub-MS SFRs in many bulge-dominated systems,
providing support to the notion that bulge growth, AGN activity and quenching
of star formation are closely related to each other.Comment: 27 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication by MNRA
A New Stellar Atmosphere Grid and Comparisons with HST/STIS Calspec Flux Distributions
The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) has measured the spectral
energy distributions (SEDs) for several stars of types O, B, A, F, and G. These
absolute fluxes from the CALSPEC database are fit with a new spectral grid
computed from the ATLAS-APOGEE ATLAS9 model atmosphere database using a
chi-square minimization technique in four parameters. The quality of the fits
are compared for complete LTE grids by Castelli & Kurucz (CK04) and our new
comprehensive LTE grid (BOSZ). For the cooler stars, the fits with the MARCS
LTE grid are also evaluated, while the hottest stars are also fit with the NLTE
Lanz & Hubeny OB star grids. Unfortunately, these NLTE models do not transition
smoothly in the infrared to agree with our new BOSZ LTE grid at the NLTE lower
limit of Teff =15,000K.
The new BOSZ grid is available via the Space Telescope Institute MAST archive
and has a much finer sampled IR wavelength scale than CK04, which will
facilitate the modeling of stars observed by the James Webb Space Telescope
(JWST). Our result for the angular diameter of Sirius agrees with the ground-
based interferometric value.Comment: 11 figure
Extended X-ray emission from non-thermal sources in the COSMOS field: A detailed study of a large radio galaxy at z=1.168
X-ray selected galaxy group samples are usually generated by searching for
extended X- ray sources that reflect the thermal radiation of the intragroup
medium. On the other hand, large radio galaxies that regularly occupy galaxy
groups also emit in the X-ray window, and their contribution to X-ray selected
group samples is still not well understood. In order to investigate their
relative importance, we have carried out a systematic search for non-thermal
extended X-ray sources in the COSMOS field. Based on the morphological
coincidence of X-ray and radio extensions, out of 60 radio galaxies, and \sim
300 extended X-ray sources, we find only one candidate where the observed
extended X-ray emission arises from non- thermal processes related to radio
galaxies. We present a detailed analysis of this source, and its environment.
Our results yield that external Inverse Compton emission of the lobes is the
dominant process that generates the observed X-ray emission of our extended
X-ray candidate, with a minor contribution from the gas of the galaxy group
hosting the radio galaxy. Finally, we show that finding only one potential
candidate in the COSMOS field (in a redshift range 0 < z < 6 and with radio
luminosity between 1025 and 1030 W/Hz) is consistent with expected X-ray-counts
arising from synchrotron lobes. This implies that these sources are not a
prominent source of contamination in samples of X-ray selected clusters/groups,
but they could potentially dominate the z > 1 cluster counts at the bright end
(S_X > 7 \cdot 10^-15 erg s^-1 cm^2).Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
Observational evidence of a slow downfall of star formation efficiency in massive galaxies during the last 10 Gyr
In this paper we study the causes of the reported mass-dependence of the
slope of SFR-M* relation, the so-called "Main Sequence" of star-forming
galaxies, and discuss its implication on the physical processes that shaped the
star formation history of massive galaxies over cosmic time. We use the CANDELS
near-IR imaging from the Hubble Space Telescope to perform the bulge-to-disk
decomposition of distant galaxies and measure for the first time the slope of
the SFR-Mdisk relation at z=1. We find that this relation follows very closely
the shape of the SFR-M* correlation, still with a pronounced flattening at the
high-mass end. This is clearly excluding, at least at z=1, the secular growth
of quiescent bulges in star-forming galaxies as the main driver for the change
of slope of the Main Sequence. Then, by stacking the Herschel data available in
the CANDELS field, we estimate the total gas mass and the star formation
efficiency at different positions on the SFR-M* relation. We find that the
relatively low SFRs observed in massive galaxies (M* > 5e10 Msun) are caused by
a decreased star formation efficiency, by up to a factor of 3 as compared to
lower stellar mass galaxies, and not by a reduced gas content. The trend at the
lowest masses is likely linked to the dominance of atomic over molecular gas.
We argue that this stellar-mass-dependent SFE can explain the varying slope of
the Main Sequence since z=1.5, hence over 70% of the Hubble time. The drop of
SFE occurs at lower masses in the local Universe (M* > 2e10 Msun) and is not
present at z=2. Altogether this provides evidence for a slow downfall of the
star formation efficiency in massive Main Sequence galaxies. The resulting loss
of star formation is found to be rising starting from z=2 to reach a level
comparable to the mass growth of the quiescent population by z=1. We finally
discuss the possible physical origin of this phenomenon.Comment: 21 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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