4,210 research outputs found
Hawaii Deep Water Cable Program phase II-A : executive summary
This Executive Summary for the Hawaii Deep Water Cable (HDWC) Program summarizes the state-funded Phase II-A work that has been performed; indicates the interrelationships of the state- and federally-funded portions of the program: and identifies the major accomplishments of these efforts.Funding for the HDWC Program is being provided by the State of Hawaii (through the Department of Planning and Economic Development - DPRD) and the U.S. Department of Energy. All federally-funded activities are included in the designation Phase II. State-funded activities have been designated as II-A, II-B, and II-C to correspond with the 82-83, 83-84, and 84-85 fiscal years
Using VO tools to investigate distant radio starbursts hosting obscured AGN in the HDF(N) region
A 10-arcmin field around the HDF(N) contains 92 radio sources >40 uJy,
resolved by MERLIN+VLA at 0".2-2".0 resolution. 55 have Chandra X-ray
counterparts including 18 with a hard X-ray photon index and high luminosity
characteristic of a type-II (obscured) AGN. >70% of the radio sources have been
classified as starbursts or AGN using radio morphologies, spectral indices and
comparisons with optical appearance and MIR emission. Starbursts outnumber
radio AGN 3:1. This study extends the VO methods previously used to identify
X-ray-selected obscured type-II AGN to investigate whether very luminous radio
and X-ray emission originates from different phenomena in the same galaxy. The
high-redshift starbursts have typical sizes of 5--10 kpc and star formation
rates of ~1000 Msun/yr. There is no correlation between radio and X-ray
luminosities nor spectral indices at z>~1.3. ~70% of both the radio-selected
AGN and the starburst samples were detected by Chandra. The X-ray luminosity
indicates the presence of an AGN in at least half of the 45 cross-matched radio
starbursts, of which 11 are type-II AGN including 7 at z>1.5. This distribution
overlaps closely with the X-ray detected radio sources which were also detected
by SCUBA. Stacked 1.4-GHz emission at the positions of radio-faint X-ray
sources is correlated with X-ray hardness. Most extended radio starbursts at
z>1.3 host X-ray selected obscured AGN. Radio emission from most of these
ultra-luminous objects is dominated by star formation but it contributes less
than 1/3 of their X-ray luminosity. Our results support the inferences from
SCUBA and IR data, that at z>1.5, star formation is an order of magnitude more
extended and more copious, it is closely linked to AGN activity and it is
triggered differently, compared with star formation at lower redshifts.Comment: 24 pages, 12 figures, uses graphicx, rotating, natbib, supertabular
packages and aa.cls. Accepted for publication in A&
Characterization of Extragalactic 24micron Sources in the Spitzer First Look Survey
In this Letter, we present the initial characterization of extragalactic 24um
sources in the Spitzer First Look Survey (FLS) by examining their counterparts
at 8um and R-band. The color-color diagram of 24-to-8 vs. 24-to-0.7um is
populated with 18,734 sources brighter than the 3sigma flux limit of 110uJy,
over an area of 3.7sq.degrees. The 24-to-0.7um colors of these sources span
almost 4 orders of magnitudes, while the 24-to-8um colors distribute at least
over 2 orders of magnitudes. In addition to identifying ~30% of the total
sample with infrared quiescent, mostly low redshift galaxies, we also found
that: (1) 23% of the 24um sources (~1200/sq.degrees) have very red 24-to-8 and
24-to-0.7 colors and are probably infrared luminous starbursts with
L(IR)>3x10^(11)Lsun at z>1. In particular, 13% of the sample (660/sq.degrees)
are 24um detected only, with no detectable emission in either 8um or R-band.
These sources are the candidates for being ULIRGs at z>2. (2) 2% of the sample
(85/sq.degrees) have colors similar to dust reddened AGNs, like Mrk231 at
z~0.6-3. (3) We anticipate that some of these sources with extremely red colors
may be new types of sources, since they can not be modelled with any familiar
type of spectral energy distribution. We find that 17% of the 24um sources have
no detectable optical counterparts brighter than R limit of 25.5mag. Optical
spectroscopy of these optical extremely faint 24um sources would be very
difficult, and mid-infrared spectroscopy from the Spitzer would be critical for
understanding their physical nature (Abridged).Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ (Spitzer Special Issue
The Parkes Observatory Pulsar Data Archive
The Parkes pulsar data archive currently provides access to 144044 data files
obtained from observations carried out at the Parkes observatory since the year
1991. Around 10^5 files are from surveys of the sky, the remainder are
observations of 775 individual pulsars and their corresponding calibration
signals. Survey observations are included from the Parkes 70cm and the
Swinburne Intermediate Latitude surveys. Individual pulsar observations are
included from young pulsar timing projects, the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array and
from the PULSE@Parkes outreach program. The data files and access methods are
compatible with Virtual Observatory protocols. This paper describes the data
currently stored in the archive and presents ways in which these data can be
searched and downloaded.Comment: Accepted by PAS
Status of the LUX Dark Matter Search
The Large Underground Xenon (LUX) dark matter search experiment is currently
being deployed at the Homestake Laboratory in South Dakota. We will highlight
the main elements of design which make the experiment a very strong competitor
in the field of direct detection, as well as an easily scalable concept. We
will also present its potential reach for supersymmetric dark matter detection,
within various timeframes ranging from 1 year to 5 years or more.Comment: 4 pages, in proceedings of the SUSY09 conferenc
Extragalactic millimeter-wave point source catalog, number counts and statistics from 771 square degrees of the SPT-SZ Survey
We present a point source catalog from 771 square degrees of the South Pole
Telescope Sunyaev Zel'dovich (SPT-SZ) survey at 95, 150, and 220 GHz. We detect
1545 sources above 4.5 sigma significance in at least one band. Based on their
relative brightness between survey bands, we classify the sources into two
populations, one dominated by synchrotron emission from active galactic nuclei,
and one dominated by thermal emission from dust-enshrouded star-forming
galaxies. We find 1238 synchrotron and 307 dusty sources. We cross-match all
sources against external catalogs and find 189 unidentified synchrotron sources
and 189 unidentified dusty sources. The dusty sources without counterparts are
good candidates for high-redshift, strongly lensed submillimeter galaxies. We
derive number counts for each population from 1 Jy down to roughly 9, 5, and 11
mJy at 95, 150, and 220 GHz. We compare these counts with galaxy population
models and find that none of the models we consider for either population
provide a good fit to the measured counts in all three bands. The disparities
imply that these measurements will be an important input to the next generation
of millimeter-wave extragalactic source population models.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Ap
Extragalactic millimeter-wave sources in South Pole Telescope survey data: source counts, catalog, and statistics for an 87 square-degree field
We report the results of an 87 square-degree point-source survey centered at
R.A. 5h30m, decl. -55 deg. taken with the South Pole Telescope (SPT) at 1.4 and
2.0 mm wavelengths with arc-minute resolution and milli-Jansky depth. Based on
the ratio of flux in the two bands, we separate the detected sources into two
populations, one consistent with synchrotron emission from active galactic
nuclei (AGN) and one consistent with thermal emission from dust. We present
source counts for each population from 11 to 640 mJy at 1.4 mm and from 4.4 to
800 mJy at 2.0 mm. The 2.0 mm counts are dominated by synchrotron-dominated
sources across our reported flux range; the 1.4 mm counts are dominated by
synchroton-dominated sources above ~15 mJy and by dust-dominated sources below
that flux level. We detect 141 synchrotron-dominated sources and 47
dust-dominated sources at S/N > 4.5 in at least one band. All of the most
significantly detected members of the synchrotron-dominated population are
associated with sources in previously published radio catalogs. Some of the
dust-dominated sources are associated with nearby (z << 1) galaxies whose dust
emission is also detected by the Infrared Astronomy Satellite (IRAS). However,
most of the bright, dust-dominated sources have no counterparts in any existing
catalogs. We argue that these sources represent the rarest and brightest
members of the population commonly referred to as sub-millimeter galaxies
(SMGs). Because these sources are selected at longer wavelengths than in
typical SMG surveys, they are expected to have a higher mean redshift
distribution and may provide a new window on galaxy formation in the early
universe.Comment: 35 emulateapj pages, 12 figures, 5 table
Angular Power Spectra of the Millimeter Wavelength Background Light from Dusty Star-forming Galaxies with the South Pole Telescope
We use data from the first 100 square-degree field observed by the South Pole
Telescope (SPT) in 2008 to measure the angular power spectrum of temperature
anisotropies contributed by the background of dusty star-forming galaxies
(DSFGs) at millimeter wavelengths. From the auto and cross-correlation of 150
and 220 GHz SPT maps, we significantly detect both Poisson distributed and, for
the first time at millimeter wavelengths, clustered components of power from a
background of DSFGs. The spectral indices between 150 and 220 GHz of the
Poisson and clustered components are found to be 3.86 +- 0.23 and 3.8 +- 1.3
respectively, implying a steep scaling of the dust emissivity index beta ~ 2.
The Poisson and clustered power detected in SPT, BLAST (at 600, 860, and 1200
GHz), and Spitzer (1900 GHz) data can be understood in the context of a simple
model in which all galaxies have the same graybody spectrum with dust
emissivity index of beta = 2 and dust temperature T_d = 34 K. In this model,
half of the 150 GHz background light comes from redshifts greater than 3.2. We
also use the SPT data to place an upper limit on the amplitude of the kinetic
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich power spectrum at l = 3000 of 13 uK^2 at 95% confidence.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figure
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