1,833 research outputs found
Relation between potential and catalytic activity of rhodium in propylene combustion
The relation between the catalyst potential and the catalytic performance has been investigated in the gas-phase combustion of propylene with oxygen over rhodium catalysts at 375 °C. The rhodium catalyst, deposited on yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ) solid electrolyte, also served as working electrode in the electrochemical cell. Under open-circuit conditions, the measured catalyst potential was found to be a sensitive indicator of the oxidation state of the rhodium catalyst, which influences the catalytic reaction rate dramatically and depends strongly both on the method of catalyst film preparation and on the composition of the reacting gas mixture. In turn, under closed-circuit conditions, the applied catalyst potential is a convenient tool to maintain the catalyst in its more active, reduced form and to control its catalytic performance. The activity of atomic oxygen at the three-phase boundary (tpb) during open-circuit catalytic reaction was estimated from solid electrolyte potentiometric (SEP) measurements, in good agreement with the average surface oxidation state obtained from XRD and XPS analyses. O/Rh atomic ratios higher than stoichiometric were found by XPS at the outer surface of the catalysts suggesting a strong open circuit O2â spillover due to strong metal support interactions (SMSI) and a concomitant extension of the electric double layer to the gas-exposed catalyst surface, similarly to emersed electrodes in aqueous electrochemistry. Applying potentials up to several hundreds of mV, highly nonfaradaic promotion of propylene combustion was achieved. Electrochemical promotion of catalysis (EPOC) was most efficient at stoichiometric gas composition, that is, close to the limit of surface reduction, and with the catalyst exhibiting the smallest O2â spillover population at open-circuit condition
Distant red galaxies in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field
We take advantage of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field (UDF) data to study the
restframe optical and ultra violet (UV) morphologies of the novel population of
Distant Red Galaxies (DRGs). Six galaxies with J-Ks > 2.3 are found to Ks=21.5,
five of which have photometric redshifts z_phot > 2, corresponding to a surface
density of 0.9/arcmin^2. The surface brightness distributions of the z_phot > 2
galaxies are better represented by exponential disks than R^{1/4}-laws. Two of
the z_phot > 2 galaxies are extended, while three have compact morphologies.
The restframe optical morphology of the z_phot > 2 galaxies is quite different
from the restframe UV morphology: all the galaxies have red central components
which dominate in the NICMOS H_{160}-band images, and distinct off-center blue
features which show up in (and often dominate) the ACS images. The mean
measured effective radius of the z_phot > 2 galaxies is =1.9+/-1.4 kpc,
similar (within the errors) to the mean size of LBGs at similar redshifts. All
the DRGs are resolved in the ACS images, while four are resolved in the NICMOS
images. Two of the z_phot > 2 galaxies are bright X-ray sources and hence host
AGN. The diverse restframe optical and UV morphological properties of DRGs
derived here suggest that they have complex stellar populations, consisting of
both evolved populations that dominate the mass and the restframe optical
light, and younger populations, which show up as patches of star formation in
the restframe UV light; in many ways resembling the properties of normal local
galaxies. This interpretation is supported by fits to the broadband SEDs, which
for all five z_phot > 2 are best represented by models with extended star
formation histories and substantial amounts of dust.Comment: Accepted for publication in APJ
Discovery of a Galaxy Cluster via Weak Lensing
We report the discovery of a cluster of galaxies via its weak gravitational
lensing effect on background galaxies, the first spectroscopically confirmed
cluster to be discovered through its gravitational effects rather than by its
electromagnetic radiation. This fundamentally different selection mechanism
promises to yield mass-selected, rather than baryon or photon-selected, samples
of these important cosmological probes. We have confirmed this cluster with
spectroscopic redshifts of fifteen members at z=0.276, with a velocity
dispersion of 615 km/s. We use the tangential shear as a function of source
photometric redshift to estimate the lens redshift independently and find z_l =
0.30 +- 0.08. The good agreement with the spectroscopy indicates that the
redshift evolution of the mass function may be measurable from the imaging data
alone in shear-selected surveys.Comment: revised version with minor changes, to appear in ApJ
Finding Galaxy Groups In Photometric Redshift Space: the Probability Friends-of-Friends (pFoF) Algorithm
We present a structure finding algorithm designed to identify galaxy groups
in photometric redshift data sets: the probability friends-of-friends (pFoF)
algorithm. This algorithm is derived by combining the friends-of-friends
algorithm in the transverse direction and the photometric redshift probability
densities in the radial dimension. The innovative characteristic of our
group-finding algorithm is the improvement of redshift estimation via the
constraints given by the transversely connected galaxies in a group, based on
the assumption that all galaxies in a group have the same redshift. Tests using
the Virgo Consortium Millennium Simulation mock catalogs allow us to show that
the recovery rate of the pFoF algorithm is larger than 80% for mock groups of
at least 2\times10^{13}M_{\sun}, while the false detection rate is about 10%
for pFoF groups containing at least net members. Applying the algorithm
to the CNOC2 group catalogs gives results which are consistent with the mock
catalog tests. From all these results, we conclude that our group-finding
algorithm offers an effective yet simple way to identify galaxy groups in
photometric redshift catalogs.Comment: AJ accepte
The infrared luminosity function of galaxies at redshifts z=1 and z~2 in the GOODS fields
We present the rest-frame 8 micron luminosity function (LF) at redshifts z=1
and ~2, computed from Spitzer 24 micron-selected galaxies in the GOODS fields
over an area of 291 sq. arcmin. Using classification criteria based on X-ray
data and IRAC colours, we identify the AGN in our sample. The rest-frame 8
micron LF for star-forming galaxies at redshifts z=1 and ~2 have the same shape
as at z~0, but with a strong positive luminosity evolution. The number density
of star-forming galaxies with log_{10}(nu L_nu(8 micron))>11 increases by a
factor >250 from redshift z~0 to 1, and is basically the same at z=1 and ~2.
The resulting rest-frame 8 micron luminosity densities associated with star
formation at z=1 and ~2 are more than four and two times larger than at z~0,
respectively. We also compute the total rest-frame 8 micron LF for star-forming
galaxies and AGN at z~2 and show that AGN dominate its bright end, which is
well-described by a power-law. Using a new calibration based on Spitzer
star-forming galaxies at 0<z<0.6 and validated at higher redshifts through
stacking analysis, we compute the bolometric infrared (IR) LF for star-forming
galaxies at z=1 and ~2. We find that the respective bolometric IR luminosity
densities are (1.2+/-0.2) x 10^9 and (6.6^{+1.2}_{-1.0}) x 10^8 L_sun Mpc^{-3},
in agreement with previous studies within the error bars. At z~2, around 90% of
the IR luminosity density associated with star formation is produced by
luminous and ultraluminous IR galaxies (LIRG and ULIRG), with the two
populations contributing in roughly similar amounts. Finally, we discuss the
consistency of our findings with other existing observational results on galaxy
evolution.Comment: Accepted for publication in the ApJ. 33 pages, 15 figures. Uses
emulateap
Properties of high-z galaxies as seen through lensing clusters
We discuss the first results obtained on the study of a sample of high-z
galaxies (2 < z < 7), using the gravitational amplification effect in the core
of lensing clusters. Sources are located close to the critical lines in
clusters with well constrained mass distributions, and selected through
photometric redshifts, computed on a large wavelength domain, and lens
inversion techniques.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, Conference Proceedings of the "Clustering at High
Redshift" Conference, June 29 to July 2, 1999, Marseille (France
The VIPERS Multi-Lambda Survey. II. Diving with massive galaxies in 22 square degrees since z = 1.5
We investigate the evolution of the galaxy stellar mass function (SMF) and
stellar mass density from redshift z=0.2 to z=1.5 of a <22-selected
sample with highly reliable photometric redshifts and over an unprecedentedly
large area. Our study is based on NIR observations carried out with WIRCam at
CFHT over the footprint of the VIPERS spectroscopic survey and benefits from
the high quality optical photometry from the CFHTLS and UV observations with
the GALEX satellite. The accuracy of our photometric redshifts is <
0.03 and 0.05 for the bright (22.5) samples,
respectively. The SMF is measured with ~760,000 galaxies down to =22 and
over an effective area of ~22.4 deg, the latter of which drastically
reduces the statistical uncertainties (i.e. Poissonian error & cosmic
variance). We point out the importance of a careful control of the photometric
calibration, whose impact becomes quickly dominant when statistical
uncertainties are reduced, which will be a major issue for future generation of
cosmological surveys with, e.g. EUCLID or LSST. By exploring the rest-frame
(NUV-r) vs (r-) color-color diagram separating star-forming and quiescent
galaxies, (1) we find that the density of very massive log() >
11.5 galaxies is largely dominated by quiescent galaxies and increases by a
factor 2 from z~1 to z~0.2, which allows for additional mass assembly via dry
mergers, (2) we confirm a scenario where star formation activity is impeded
above a stellar mass log() = 10.640.01, a value that
is found to be very stable at 0.2 < z < 1.5, (3) we discuss the existence of a
main quenching channel that is followed by massive star-forming galaxies, and
finally (4) we characterise another quenching mechanism required to explain the
clear excess of low-mass quiescent galaxies observed at low redshift.Comment: 22 pages, 20 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A. Version to be
publishe
The lensing system towards the doubly imaged quasar SBS 1520+530
The gravitational potential responsible for the lensing effect in SBS
1520+530 is studied over length scales from a few arc-seconds to a few
arc-minutes. For this purpose, we use sharply deconvolved Hubble Space
Telescope images in the optical and near-IR, in combination with ground based
optical data obtained over a wider field-of-view. In particular, we have
carried out a multi-color analysis in order to identify groups or clusters of
galaxies along the line of sight. Photometric redshifts are measured for 139
galaxies unveiling significant excesses of galaxies 1.0 arcmin, NW and 1.7
arcmin, SW of the main lensing galaxy. The photometric redshift inferred both
for the main lensing galaxy and for the galaxy concentrations is
z=0.9^{+0.10}_{-0.25}. This is in rough agreement with the measured
spectroscopic redshift of the main lensing galaxy, z=0.71 (Burud et al. 2002),
suggesting that it is part of a larger group or cluster. We investigate the
impact of including the galaxy cluster, first on the modelling of the lensing
system, and second on the expected time--delay between the two quasar images.Comment: Accepted in A&A. 10 pages. Includes 3 jpg figure
Obscured and unobscured active galactic nuclei in the Spitzer Space Telescope First Look Survey
Selection of active galactic nuclei (AGN) in the infrared allows the
discovery of AGN whose optical emission is extinguished by dust. In this paper,
we use the Spitzer Space Telescope First Look Survey (FLS) to assess what
fraction of AGN with mid-infrared luminosities comparable to quasars are missed
in optical quasar surveys due to dust obscuration. We begin by using the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) database to identify 54 quasars within the 4 deg^2
extragalactic FLS. These quasars occupy a distinct region in mid-infrared color
space by virtue of their strong, red, continua. This has allowed us to define a
mid-infrared color criterion for selecting AGN candidates. About 2000 FLS
objects have colors consistent with them being AGN, but most are much fainter
in the mid-infrared than the SDSS quasars, which typically have 8 micron flux
densities, S(8.0), ~1 mJy. We have investigated the properties of the 43
objects with S(8.0) >= 1 mJy satisfying our AGN color selection. This sample
should contain both unobscured quasars, and AGN which are absent from the SDSS
survey due to extinction in the optical. After removing 16 known quasars, three
probable normal quasars, and eight spurious or confused objects from the
initial sample of 43, we are left with 16 objects which are likely to be
obscured quasars or luminous Seyfert-2 galaxies. This suggests the numbers of
obscured and unobscured AGN are similar in samples selected in the mid-infrared
at S(8.0)~1 mJy.Comment: To appear in the ApJS Spitzer Special Issu
- âŠ