61 research outputs found

    Dust Attenuation Curves at z ~ 0.8 from LEGA-C:Precise Constraints on the Slope and 2175Å Bump Strength

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    We present a novel approach to measure the attenuation curves of 485 individual star-forming galaxies with M* > 1010 M⊙ based on deep optical spectra from the VLT/VIMOS LEGA-C survey and multi-band photometry in the COSMOS field. Most importantly, we find that the attenuation curves in the rest-frame 3000-4500 Å range are typically almost twice as steep as the Milky Way, LMC, SMC, and Calzetti attenuation curves, which is in agreement with recent studies of the integrated light of present-day galaxies. The attenuation at 4500 Å and the slope strongly correlate with the galaxy inclination: face-on galaxies show less attenuation and steeper curves compared to edge-on galaxies, suggesting that geometric effects dominate observed variations in attenuation. Our new method produces 2175 Å UV bump detections for 260 individual galaxies. Even though obvious correlations between UV bump strength and global galaxy properties are absent, strong UV bumps are most often seen in face-on, lower-mass galaxies (10 < log10(M*/M⊙) < 10.5) with low overall attenuation. Finally, we produce a typical attenuation curve for star-forming galaxies at z ~ 0.8; this prescription represents the effect of dust on the integrated spectral energy distributions of high-redshift galaxies more accurately than commonly used attenuation laws

    Star formation histories of z~1 galaxies in LEGA-C

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    Using high resolution spectra from the VLT LEGA-C program, we reconstruct the star formation histories (SFHs) of 607 galaxies at redshifts z = 0.6 − 1.0 and stellar masses 10^10 M⊙ using a custom full spectrum fitting algorithm that incorporates the emcee and FSPS packages. We show that the mass-weighted age of a galaxy correlates strongly with stellar velocity dispersion (σ∗) and ongoing star-formation (SF) activity, with the stellar content in higher-σ∗ galaxies having formed earlier and faster. The SFHs of quiescent galaxies are generally consistent with passive evolution since their main SF epoch, but a minority show clear evidence of a rejuvenation event in their recent past. The mean age of stars in galaxies that are star-forming is generally significantly younger, with SF peaking after z 100 Myrs. This indicates that z > 2 progenitors of z ∌ 1 star-forming galaxies are generally far less massive. Finally, despite considerable variance in the individual SFHs, we show that the current SF activity of massive galaxies (> L∗ ) at z ∌ 1 correlates with SF levels at least 3 Gyrs prior: SFHs retain ‘memory’ on a large fraction of the Hubble time. Our results illustrate a novel approach to resolve the formation phase of galaxies, and in identifying their individual evolutionary paths, connects progenitors and descendants across cosmic time. This is uniquely enabled by the high-quality continuum spectroscopy provided by the LEGA-C survey

    Differences in Intrinsic Gray-Matter Connectivity and their genomic underpinnings in Autism Spectrum Disorder

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    Stellar Dynamics and Star Formation Histories of z similar to 1 Radio-loud Galaxies

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    We investigate the stellar kinematics and stellar populations of 58 radio-loud galaxies of intermediate luminosities (L-3 GHz > 10(23) W Hz(-1)) at 0.6 175 kms(-1), corresponding to black hole masses in excess of 10(8) M-circle dot. Furthermore, we confirm that at a fixed stellar mass the fraction of radio-loud AGN at z similar to 1 is five to 10 times higher than in the local universe, suggesting that quiescent, massive galaxies at z similar to 1 switch on as radio AGN on average once every Gyr. Our results strengthen the existing evidence for a link between high black hole masses, radio loudness, and quiescence at z similar to 1

    Stellar Populations of over 1000 z ~ 0.8 Galaxies from LEGA-C:Ages and Star Formation Histories from D n 4000 and HÎŽ

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    Drawing from the LEGA-C dataset, we present the spectroscopic view of the stellar population across a large volume- and mass-selected sample of galaxies at large lookback time. We measure the 4000\AA\ break (Dn_n4000) and Balmer absorption line strengths (probed by HÎŽ\delta) from 1019 high-quality spectra of z=0.6−1.0z=0.6 - 1.0 galaxies with M∗=2×1010M⊙−3×1011M⊙M_\ast = 2 \times 10^{10} M_\odot - 3 \times 10^{11} M_\odot. Our analysis serves as a first illustration of the power of high-resolution, high-S/N continuum spectroscopy at intermediate redshifts as a qualitatively new tool to constrain galaxy formation models. The observed Dn_n4000-EW(HÎŽ\delta) distribution of our sample overlaps with the distribution traced by present-day galaxies, but z∌0.8z\sim 0.8 galaxies populate that locus in a fundamentally different manner. While old galaxies dominate the present-day population at all stellar masses >2×1010M⊙> 2\times10^{10} M_\odot, we see a bimodal Dn_n4000-EW(HÎŽ\delta) distribution at z∌0.8z\sim0.8, implying a bimodal light-weighted age distribution. The light-weighted age depends strongly on stellar mass, with the most massive galaxies >1×1011M⊙>1\times10^{11}M_\odot being almost all older than 2 Gyr. At the same time we estimate that galaxies in this high mass range are only ∌3\sim3 Gyr younger than their z∌0.1z\sim0.1 counterparts, at odd with pure passive evolution given a difference in lookback time of >5>5 Gyr; younger galaxies must grow to >1011M⊙>10^{11}M_\odot in the meantime, and/or small amounts of young stars must keep the light-weighted ages young. Star-forming galaxies at z∌0.8z\sim0.8 have stronger HÎŽ\delta absorption than present-day galaxies with the same Dn_n4000, implying larger short-term variations in star-formation activity

    Spatially Resolved Stellar Kinematics from LEGA-C:Increased Rotational Support in z~0.8 Quiescent Galaxies

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    We present stellar rotation curves and velocity dispersion profiles for 104 quiescent galaxies at z=0.6−1z=0.6-1 from the Large Early Galaxy Astrophysics Census (LEGA-C) spectroscopic survey. Rotation is typically probed across 10-20kpc, or to an average of 2.7Re{\rm R_e}. Combined with central stellar velocity dispersions (σ0\sigma_0) this provides the first determination of the dynamical state of a sample selected by a lack of star formation activity at large lookback time. The most massive galaxies (M⋆>2×1011 M⊙M_{\star}>2\times10^{11}\,M_{\odot}) generally show no or little rotation measured at 5kpc ($|V_5|/\sigma_

    THE SFR– M * RELATION AND EMPIRICAL STAR FORMATION HISTORIES FROM ZFOURGE AT 0.5 < z < 4

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    We explore star formation histories (SFHs) of galaxies based on the evolution of the star formation rate stellar mass relation (SFR-M∗). Using data from the FourStar Galaxy Evolution Survey (ZFOURGE) in combination with far-IR imaging from the Spitzer and Herschel observatories we measure the SFR-M∗ relation at 0.5 &lt; z &lt; 4. Similar to recent works we find that the average infrared spectral energy distributions of galaxies are roughly consistent with a single infrared template across a broad range of redshifts and stellar masses, with evidence for only weak deviations. We find that the SFR-M∗ relation is not consistent with a single power law of the form at any redshift; it has a power law slope of α ∌ 1 at low masses, and becomes shallower above a turnover mass (M0) that ranges from 109.5 to 1010.8 M⊙, with evidence that M0 increases with redshift. We compare our measurements to results from state-of-the-art cosmological simulations, and find general agreement in the slope of the SFR-M∗ relation albeit with systematic offsets. We use the evolving SFR-M∗ sequence to generate SFHs, finding that typical SFRs of individual galaxies rise at early times and decline after reaching a peak. This peak occurs earlier for more massive galaxies. We integrate these SFHs to generate mass growth histories and compare to the implied mass growth from the evolution of the stellar mass function (SMF). We find that these two estimates are in broad qualitative agreement, but that there is room for improvement at a more detailed level. At early times the SFHs suggest mass growth rates that are as much as 10× higher than inferred from the SMF. However, at later times the SFHs under-predict the inferred evolution, as is expected in the case of additional growth due to mergers

    Corporate philanthropy through the lens of ethical subjectivity

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    The dynamic organisational processes in businesses dilute the boundaries between the individual, organisational, and societal drivers of corporate philanthropy. This creates a complex framework in which charitable project selection occurs. Using the example of European tour operators, this study investigates the mechanisms through which companies invest in charitable projects in overseas destinations. Inextricably linked to this is the increasing contestation by local communities as to how they are able to engage effectively with tourism in order to realise the benefits tourism development can bring. This research furthers such debates by exploring the processes through which tour operators facilitate community development through charitable giving. Findings show, with no formal frameworks in existence, project selection depends upon emergent strategies that connect the professional with the personal, with trust being positioned as a central driver of these informal processes. Discretionary responsibilities are reworked through business leaders’ commitment to responsible business practises and the ethical subjectivity guiding these processes

    The Large Early Galaxy Astrophysics Census (LEGA-C) Data Release 2:Dynamical and Stellar Population Properties of z lesssim 1 Galaxies in the COSMOS Field

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    We present the second data release of the Large Early Galaxy Astrophysics Census (LEGA-C), an ESO 130-night public spectroscopic survey conducted with VIMOS on the Very Large Telescope. We release 1988 spectra with typical continuum S / N ~= 20 /Angstrom of galaxies at 0.6 ~< z ~< 1.0, each observed for ~20 hours and fully reduced with a custom-built pipeline. We also release a catalog with spectroscopic redshifts, emission line fluxes, Lick/IDS indices, and observed stellar and gas velocity dispersions that are spatially integrated quantities including both rotational motions and genuine dispersion. To illustrate the new parameter space in the intermediate redshift regime probed by LEGA-C we explore relationships between dynamical and stellar population properties. The star-forming galaxies typically have observed stellar velocity dispersions of ~150 km/s and strong Hdelta absorption (Hd_A ~ 5 Angstrom), while passive galaxies have higher observed stellar velocity dispersions ~200 km/s and weak Hdelta absortion (Hd_A ~ 0 Angstrom). Strong [O III]5007 / Hbeta ratios tend to occur mostly for galaxies with weak Hd_A or galaxies with higher observed velocity dispersion. Beyond these broad trends, we find a large diversity of possible combinations of rest-frame colors, absorption line strengths and emission line detections, illustrating the utility of spectroscopic measurements to more accurately understand galaxy evolution. By making the spectra and value-added catalogs publicly available we encourage the community to take advantage of this very substantial investment in telescope time provided by ESO
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