197 research outputs found
The Stripe 82 Massive Galaxy Project III: A Lack of Growth Among Massive Galaxies
The average stellar mass (Mstar) of high-mass galaxies (Mstar > 3e11 Msun) is
expected to grow by ~30% since z~1, largely through ongoing mergers that are
also invoked to explain the observed increase in galaxy sizes. Direct evidence
for the corresponding growth in stellar mass has been elusive, however, in part
because the volumes sampled by previous redshift surveys have been too small to
yield reliable statistics. In this work, we make use of the Stripe 82 Massive
Galaxy Catalog to build a mass-limited sample of 41,770 galaxies (Mstar >
1.6e11) with optical to near-IR photometry and a large fraction (>55%) of
spectroscopic redshifts. Our sample spans 139 square degrees, significantly
larger than most previous efforts. After accounting for a number of potential
systematic errors, including the effects of Mstar scatter, we measure galaxy
stellar mass functions over 0.3 < z < 0.65 and detect no growth in the typical
Mstar of massive galaxies with an uncertainty of 9%. This confidence level is
dominated by uncertainties in the star formation history assumed for Mstar
estimates, although our inability to characterize low surface-brightness
outskirts may be the most important limitation of our study. Even among these
high-mass galaxies, we find evidence for differential evolution when splitting
the sample by recent star formation (SF) activity. While low-SF systems appear
to become completely passive, we find a mostly sub-dominant population of
galaxies with residual, but low rates of star formation (~1 Msun/yr) number
density does not evolve. Interestingly, these galaxies become more prominent at
higher Mstar, representing ~10% of all galaxies at Mstar ~ 1e12 Msun and
perhaps dominating at even larger masses.Comment: Accepted in Ap
The Dynamical Distinction between Elliptical and Lenticular Galaxies in Distant Clusters: Further Evidence for the Recent Origin of S0 Galaxies
We examine resolved spectroscopic data obtained with the Keck II telescope
for 44 spheroidal galaxies in the fields of two rich clusters, Cl0024+16
(z=0.40) and MS0451-03 (z=0.54), and contrast this with similar data for 23
galaxies within the redshift interval 0.3<z<0.65 in the GOODS northern field.
For each galaxy we examine the case for systemic rotation, derive central
stellar velocity dispersions sigma and photometric ellipticities, epsilon.
Using morphological classifications obtained via Hubble Space Telescope imaging
as the basis, we explore the utility of our kinematic quantities in
distinguishing between pressure-supported ellipticals and
rotationally-supported lenticulars (S0s). We demonstrate the reliability of
using the v/(1-epsilon) vs sigma and v/sigma vs epsilon distributions as
discriminators, finding that the two criteria correctly identify 63%+-3% and
80%+-2% of S0s at z~0.5, respectively, along with 76%+8-3% and 79%+-2% of
ellipticals. We test these diagnostics using equivalent local data in the Coma
cluster, and find that the diagnostics are similarly accurate at z=0. Our
measured accuracies are comparable to the accuracy of visual classification of
morphologies, but avoid the band-shifting and surface brightness effects that
hinder visual classification at high redshifts. As an example application of
our kinematic discriminators, we then examine the morphology-density relation
for elliptical and S0 galaxies separately at z~0.5. We confirm, from kinematic
data alone, the recent growth of rotationally-supported spheroidals. We discuss
the feasibility of extending the method to a more comprehensive study of
cluster and field galaxies to z~1, in order to verify in detail the recent
density-dependent growth of S0 galaxies.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, updated with version accepted to Ap
Observational Evidence for the Co-evolution of Galaxy Mergers, Quasars, and the Blue/Red Galaxy Transition
We compile a number of observations to estimate the time-averaged rate of
formation or buildup of red sequence galaxies, as a function of mass and
redshift. Comparing this with the mass functions of mergers and quasar hosts,
and independently comparing their clustering properties as a function of
redshift, we find that these populations trace the same mass distribution, with
similar evolution, at redshifts 0<z<~1.5. Knowing one of the quasar, merger, or
elliptical mass/luminosity functions, it is possible to predict the others.
Allowing for greater model dependence, we compare the rate of early-type
buildup with the implied merger and quasar triggering rates as a function of
mass and redshift and find agreement. Over this redshift range, observed merger
fractions can account for the entire bright quasar luminosity function and
buildup of the red sequence at all but the highest masses at low redshift
(>~10^11 M_solar at z<~0.3) where 'dry' mergers appear to dominate. This
supports a necessary prediction of theories where mergers between gas-rich
galaxies produce ellipticals with an associated phase of quasar activity, after
which the remnant becomes red. These populations trace a similar characteristic
transition mass, possibly reflecting the mass above which the elliptical
population is mostly (>~50%) assembled at a given redshift, which increases
with redshift over the observed range in a manner consistent with suggestions
that cosmic downsizing may apply to red galaxy assembly as well as star
formation. These mass distributions as a function of redshift do not uniformly
trace the all/red/blue galaxy population, ruling out models in which quasar
activity is generically associated with star formation or is long lived in
'old' systems.Comment: 24 pages, 17 figures. Accepted to ApJ. Substantially revised and
expanded to match published versio
Extremely Red Objects in the Field of QSO 1213-0017: A Galaxy Concentration at z=1.31
We have discovered a concentration of extremely red objects (EROs; R-K>6) in
the field of the z=2.69 quasar QSO 1213-0017 (UM 485), which is significantly
overabundant compared to the field ERO surface density. The optical/near-IR
colors of the EROs and numerous other red galaxies in this field are consistent
with elliptical galaxies at z=1-2. HST optical images for a subset of galaxies
show regular morphologies, most of them being disky or diffuse and without any
obvious evidence for interactions. Ground-based IR images show similar
morphologies, indicating any dust reddening in these objects is spatially
uniform. Optical spectroscopy with the W. M. Keck Telescope has found that four
of the red galaxies lie at =1.31, and a fifth lies in the foreground at
z=1.20. Of the =1.31 galaxies, one is a reddened AGN while the remaining
three have rest-frame UV absorption-line spectra characteristic of old (few
Gyr) stellar populations, similar to the old red galaxy LBDS 53W091 at z=1.55.
Including the MgII absorber seen in the QSO spectrum, we find five galaxies at
=1.31 spread over 1.5 h_50^{-1} Mpc on the sky. These results suggest we
have discovered a coherent structure of old galaxies at high-redshift, possibly
associated with a massive galaxy cluster.Comment: 37 pages including 11 Postscript figures. To appear in the June 2000
issue of the Astronomical Journa
Connecting massive galaxies to dark matter halos in BOSS - I. Is galaxy color a stochastic process in high-mass halos?
We use subhalo abundance matching (SHAM) to model the stellar mass function
(SMF) and clustering of the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS)
"CMASS" sample at . We introduce a novel method which accounts for
the stellar mass incompleteness of CMASS as a function of redshift, and produce
CMASS mock catalogs which include selection effects, reproduce the overall SMF,
the projected two-point correlation function , the CMASS ,
and are made publicly available. We study the effects of assembly bias above
collapse mass in the context of "age matching" and show that these effects are
markedly different compared to the ones explored by Hearin et al. (2013) at
lower stellar masses. We construct two models, one in which galaxy color is
stochastic ("AbM" model) as well as a model which contains assembly bias
effects ("AgM" model). By confronting the redshift dependent clustering of
CMASS with the predictions from our model, we argue that that galaxy colors are
not a stochastic process in high-mass halos. Our results suggest that the
colors of galaxies in high-mass halos are determined by other halo properties
besides halo peak velocity and that assembly bias effects play an important
role in determining the clustering properties of this sample.Comment: 22 pages. Appendix. B added. Matches the version accepted by MNRAS.
Mock galaxy catalog and HOD table are available at
http://www.massivegalaxies.co
Design study of an image slicer module for a multiobject spectrograph
We investigate an image slicer module for an optical multiobject spectrograph, wide-field optical spectrograph (WFOS), which is one of the first-light instruments of the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT). The image slicer divides the target image into three slices, thus providing a one-third narrower slit width. By positioning a suite of such modules at the telescope focal surface, multiobject spectroscopy with high spectral resolution can be achieved. Three optical designs are developed: a two-mirror design, a four-mirror design, and a flat-mirror design. Comparing them, the flat-mirror design is found to be the most preferable for WFOS. From a tolerance analysis, the tolerances of manufacturing and assembling appear challenging but not insurmountable. We describe how the steep field curvature of TMT requires at least nine module variants, tuned to reduce defocus in specific focal surface zones. Finally, we introduce a viable mechanical packaging concept
On the Evolution of the Velocity-Mass-Size Relations of Disk-Dominated Galaxies over the Past 10 Billion Years
We study the evolution of the scaling relations between maximum circular
velocity, stellar mass and optical half-light radius of star-forming
disk-dominated galaxies in the context of LCDM-based galaxy formation models.
Using data from the literature combined with new data from the DEEP2 and AEGIS
surveys we show that there is a consistent observational and theoretical
picture for the evolution of these scaling relations from z\sim 2 to z=0. The
evolution of the observed stellar scaling relations is weaker than that of the
virial scaling relations of dark matter haloes, which can be reproduced, both
qualitatively and quantitatively, with a simple, cosmologically-motivated model
for disk evolution inside growing NFW dark matter haloes. In this model optical
half-light radii are smaller, both at fixed stellar mass and maximum circular
velocity, at higher redshifts. This model also predicts that the scaling
relations between baryonic quantities evolve even more weakly than the
corresponding stellar relations. We emphasize, though, that this weak evolution
does not imply that individual galaxies evolve weakly. On the contrary,
individual galaxies grow strongly in mass, size and velocity, but in such a way
that they move largely along the scaling relations. Finally, recent
observations have claimed surprisingly large sizes for a number of star-forming
disk galaxies at z \sim 2, which has caused some authors to suggest that high
redshift disk galaxies have abnormally high spin parameters. However, we argue
that the disk scale lengths in question have been systematically overestimated
by a factor \sim 2, and that there is an offset of a factor \sim 1.4 between
H\alpha sizes and optical sizes. Taking these effects into account, there is no
indication that star forming galaxies at high redshifts (z\sim 2) have
abnormally high spin parameters.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures, accepted to MNRAS, minor changes to previous
versio
Dependence of Galaxy Quenching on Halo Mass and Distance from its Centre
We study the dependence of star-formation quenching on galaxy mass and
environment, in the SDSS (z~0.1) and the AEGIS (z~1). It is crucial that we
define quenching by low star-formation rate rather than by red colour, given
that one third of the red galaxies are star forming. We address stellar mass
M*, halo mass Mh, density over the nearest N neighbours deltaN, and distance to
the halo centre D. The fraction of quenched galaxies appears more strongly
correlated with Mh at fixed M* than with M* at fixed Mh, while for satellites
quenching also depends on D. We present the M*-Mh relation for centrals at z~1.
At z~1, the dependence of quenching on M* at fixed Mh is somewhat more
pronounced than at z~0, but the quenched fraction is low (10%) and the haloes
are less massive. For satellites, M*-dependent quenching is noticeable at high
D, suggesting a quenching dependence on sub-halo mass for recently captured
satellites. At small D, where satellites likely fell in more than a few Gyr
ago, quenching strongly depends on Mh, and not on M*. The Mh-dependence of
quenching is consistent with theoretical wisdom where virial shock heating in
massive haloes shuts down accretion and triggers ram-pressure stripping,
causing quenching. The interpretation of deltaN is complicated by the fact that
it depends on the number of observed group members compared to N, motivating
the use of D as a better measure of local environment.Comment: 23 pages, 13 figures, accepted by MNRA
The Data Analysis Pipeline for the SDSS-IV MaNGA IFU Galaxy Survey: Emission-Line Modeling
SDSS-IV MaNGA (Mapping Nearby Galaxies at Apache Point Observatory) is the
largest integral-field spectroscopy survey to date, aiming to observe a
statistically representative sample of 10,000 low-redshift galaxies. In this
paper we study the reliability of the emission-line fluxes and kinematic
properties derived by the MaNGA Data Analysis Pipeline (DAP). We describe the
algorithmic choices made in the DAP with regards to measuring emission-line
properties, and the effect of our adopted strategy of simultaneously fitting
the continuum and line emission. The effect of random errors are quantified by
studying various fit-quality metrics, idealized recovery simulations and repeat
observations. This analysis demonstrates that the emission lines are well-fit
in the vast majority of the MaNGA dataset and the derived fluxes and errors are
statistically robust. The systematic uncertainty on emission-line properties
introduced by the choice of continuum templates is also discussed. In
particular, we test the effect of using different stellar libraries and simple
stellar-population models on the derived emission-line fluxes and the effect of
introducing different tying prescriptions for the emission-line kinematics. We
show that these effects can generate large ( 0.2 dex) discrepancies at low
signal-to-noise and for lines with low equivalent width (EW); however, the
combined effect is noticeable even for H EW 6~\AA. We provide
suggestions for optimal use of the data provided by SDSS data release 15 and
propose refinements on the \DAP\ for future MaNGA data releases.Comment: accepted on A
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