362 research outputs found
The Herschel SPIRE Fourier Transform Spectrometer Spectral Feature Finder II. Estimating Radial Velocity of SPIRE Spectral Observation Sources
The Herschel SPIRE FTS Spectral Feature Finder (FF) detects significant
spectral features within SPIRE spectra and employs two routines, and external
references, to estimate source radial velocity. The first routine is based on
the identification of rotational CO emission, the second cross-correlates
detected features with a line template containing most of the characteristic
lines in typical far infra-red observations. In this paper, we outline and
validate these routines, summarise the results as they pertain to the FF, and
comment on how external references were incorporated.Comment: 12 pages, 16 figures, 1 table, accepted by MNRAS March 202
Star formation in the cluster CLG0218.3-0510 at z=1.62 and its large-scale environment: the infrared perspective
The galaxy cluster CLG0218.3-0510 at z=1.62 is one of the most distant galaxy
clusters known, with a rich muti-wavelength data set that confirms a mature
galaxy population already in place. Using very deep, wide area (20x20 Mpc)
imaging by Spitzer/MIPS at 24um, in conjunction with Herschel 5-band imaging
from 100-500um, we investigate the dust-obscured, star-formation properties in
the cluster and its associated large scale environment. Our galaxy sample of
693 galaxies at z=1.62 detected at 24um (10 spectroscopic and 683 photo-z)
includes both cluster galaxies (i.e. within r <1 Mpc projected clustercentric
radius) and field galaxies, defined as the region beyond a radius of 3 Mpc. The
star-formation rates (SFRs) derived from the measured infrared luminosity range
from 18 to 2500 Ms/yr, with a median of 55 Ms/yr, over the entire radial range
(10 Mpc). The cluster brightest FIR galaxy, taken as the centre of the galaxy
system, is vigorously forming stars at a rate of 25670 Ms/yr, and the
total cluster SFR enclosed in a circle of 1 Mpc is 116196 Ms/yr. We
estimate a dust extinction of about 3 magnitudes by comparing the SFRs derived
from [OII] luminosity with the ones computed from the 24um fluxes. We find that
the in-falling region (1-3 Mpc) is special: there is a significant decrement
(3.5x) of passive relative to star-forming galaxies in this region, and the
total SFR of the galaxies located in this region is lower (130 Ms/yr/Mpc2) than
anywhere in the cluster or field, regardless of their stellar mass. In a
complementary approach we compute the local galaxy density, Sigma5, and find no
trend between SFR and Sigma5. However, we measure an excess of star-forming
galaxies in the cluster relative to the field by a factor 1.7, that lends
support to a reversal of the SF-density relation in CLG0218.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRAS. v2: minor correction
FIR/submm spectroscopy with Herschel: first results from the VNGS and H-ATLAS surveys
The FIR/submm window is one of the least-studied regions of the
electromagnetic spectrum, yet this wavelength range is absolutely crucial for
understanding the physical processes and properties of the ISM in galaxies. The
advent of the Herschel Space Observatory has opened up the entire FIR/submm
window for spectroscopic studies. We present the first FIR/submm spectroscopic
results on both nearby and distant galaxies obtained in the frame of two
Herschel key programs: the Very Nearby Galaxies Survey and the Herschel ATLAS
The Herschel SPIRE Fourier Transform Spectrometer Spectral Feature Finder V. Rotational measurements of NGC 891
The ESA Herschel Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (SPIRE) Fourier
Transform Spectrometer (FTS) Spectral Feature Finder (FF) project is an
automated spectral feature fitting routine developed within the SPIRE
instrument team to extract all prominent spectral features from all publicly
available SPIRE FTS observations. In this work, we demonstrate the use of the
FF information extracted from three observations of the edge-on spiral galaxy
NGC 891 to measure the rotation of NII and CI gas at Far-infrared frequencies
in complement to radio observations of the HI 21cm line and the CO(1-0)
transition as well as optical measurements of Halpha. We find that measurements
of both NII and CI gas follow a similar velocity profile to that of HI and
Halpha showing a correlation between neutral and ionized regions of the
interstellar medium (ISM) in the disk of NGC 891
Star formation in the massive cluster merger Abell 2744
We present a comprehensive study of star-forming (SF) galaxies in the HST
Frontier Field recent cluster merger A2744 (z=0.308). Wide-field,
ultraviolet-infrared (UV-IR) imaging enables a direct constraint of the total
star formation rate (SFR) for 53 cluster galaxies, with SFR{UV+IR}=343+/-10
Msun/yr. Within the central 4 arcmin (1.1 Mpc) radius, the integrated SFR is
complete, yielding a total SFR{UV+IR}=201+/-9 Msun/yr. Focussing on obscured
star formation, this core region exhibits a total SFR{IR}=138+/-8 Msun/yr, a
mass-normalised SFR{IR} of Sigma{SFR}=11.2+/-0.7 Msun/yr per 10^14 Msun and a
fraction of IR-detected SF galaxies f{SF}=0.080(+0.010,-0.037). Overall, the
cluster population at z~0.3 exhibits significant intrinsic scatter in IR
properties (total SFR{IR}, Tdust distribution) apparently unrelated to the
dynamical state: A2744 is noticeably different to the merging Bullet cluster,
but similar to several relaxed clusters. However, in A2744 we identify a trail
of SF sources including jellyfish galaxies with substantial unobscured SF due
to extreme stripping (SFR{UV}/SFR{IR} up to 3.3). The orientation of the trail,
and of material stripped from constituent galaxies, indicates that the passing
shock front of the cluster merger was the trigger. Constraints on star
formation from both IR and UV are crucial for understanding galaxy evolution
within the densest environments.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS. 12 pages, 7 figures (high resolution versions of
Figs. 1 & 2 are available in the published PDF
GOODS-: identification of the individual galaxies responsible for the 80-290m cosmic infrared background
We propose a new method of pushing to its faintest detection
limits using universal trends in the redshift evolution of the far infrared
over 24m colours in the well-sampled GOODS-North field. An extension to
other fields with less multi-wavelength information is presented. This method
is applied here to raise the contribution of individually detected
sources to the cosmic infrared background (CIRB) by a factor 5 close to its
peak at 250m and more than 3 in the 350m and 500m bands. We
produce realistic mock images of the deep PACS and SPIRE images of
the GOODS-North field from the GOODS- Key Program and use them to
quantify the confusion noise at the position of individual sources, i.e.,
estimate a "local confusion noise". Two methods are used to identify sources
with reliable photometric accuracy extracted using 24m prior positions.
The clean index (CI), previously defined but validated here with simulations,
which measures the presence of bright 24m neighbours and the photometric
accuracy index (PAI) directly extracted from the mock images. After
correction for completeness, thanks to our mock images, individually
detected sources make up as much as 54% and 60% of the CIRB in the PACS bands
down to 1.1 mJy at 100m and 2.2 mJy at 160m and 55, 33, and 13% of
the CIRB in the SPIRE bands down to 2.5, 5, and 9 mJy at 250m, 350m,
and 500m, respectively. The latter depths improve the detection limits of
by factors of 5 at 250m, and 3 at 350m and 500m as
compared to the standard confusion limit. Interestingly, the dominant
contributors to the CIRB in all bands appear to be distant siblings
of the Milky Way (0.96 for 300m) with a stellar mass
of 910M.Comment: 22 pages, 16 figures. Accepted for publication by Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Calibration of <i>Herschel</i> SPIRE FTS observations at different spectral resolutions
The SPIRE Fourier Transform Spectrometer on-board the Herschel Space Observatory had two standard spectral resolution modes for science observations: high resolution (HR) and low resolution (LR), which could also be performed in sequence (H+LR). A comparison of the HR and LR resolution spectra taken in this sequential mode revealed a systematic discrepancy in the continuum level. Analysing the data at different stages during standard pipeline processing demonstrates that the telescope and instrument emission affect HR and H+LR observations in a systematically different way. The origin of this difference is found to lie in the variation of both the telescope and instrument response functions, while it is triggered by fast variation of the instrument temperatures. As it is not possible to trace the evolution of the response functions using housekeeping data from the instrument subsystems, the calibration cannot be corrected analytically. Therefore, an empirical correction for LR spectra has been developed, which removes the systematic noise introduced by the variation of the response functions
Systematic characterisation of the Herschel SPIRE Fourier Transform Spectrometer
A systematic programme of calibration observations was carried out to monitor
the performance of the SPIRE FTS instrument on board the Herschel Space
Observatory. Observations of planets (including the prime point-source
calibrator, Uranus), asteroids, line sources, dark sky, and cross-calibration
sources were made in order to monitor repeatability and sensitivity, and to
improve FTS calibration. We present a complete analysis of the full set of
calibration observations and use them to assess the performance of the FTS.
Particular care is taken to understand and separate out the effect of pointing
uncertainties, including the position of the internal beam steering mirror for
sparse observations in the early part of the mission. The repeatability of
spectral line centre positions is <5km/s, for lines with signal-to-noise ratios
>40, corresponding to <0.5-2.0% of a resolution element. For spectral line
flux, the repeatability is better than 6%, which improves to 1-2% for spectra
corrected for pointing offsets. The continuum repeatability is 4.4% for the SLW
band and 13.6% for the SSW band, which reduces to ~1% once the data have been
corrected for pointing offsets. Observations of dark sky were used to assess
the sensitivity and the systematic offset in the continuum, both of which were
found to be consistent across the FTS detector arrays. The average point-source
calibrated sensitivity for the centre detectors is 0.20 and 0.21 Jy [1 sigma; 1
hour], for SLW and SSW. The average continuum offset is 0.40 Jy for the SLW
band and 0.28 Jy for the SSW band.Comment: 41 pages, 37 figures, 32 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
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