463 research outputs found
A Successful Broad-band Survey for Giant Lya Nebulae I: Survey Design and Candidate Selection
Giant Lya nebulae (or Lya "blobs") are likely sites of ongoing massive galaxy
formation, but the rarity of these powerful sources has made it difficult to
form a coherent picture of their properties, ionization mechanisms, and space
density. Systematic narrow-band Lya nebula surveys are ongoing, but the small
redshift range covered and the observational expense limit the comoving volume
that can be probed by even the largest of these surveys and pose a significant
problem when searching for such rare sources. We have developed a systematic
search technique designed to find large Lya nebulae at 2<z<3 within deep
broad-band imaging and have carried out a survey of the 9.4 square degree NOAO
Deep Wide-Field Survey (NDWFS) Bootes field. With a total survey comoving
volume of ~10^8 h^-3_70 Mpc^3, this is the largest volume survey for Lya
nebulae ever undertaken. In this first paper in the series, we present the
details of the survey design and a systematically-selected sample of 79
candidates, which includes one previously discovered Lya nebula.Comment: Accepted to ApJ after minor revision; 25 pages in emulateapj format;
18 figures, 3 table
Fatalism and Future Contingents
In this paper I address issues related to the problem of future contingents and
the metaphysical doctrine of fatalism. Two classical responses to the problem of
future contingents are the third truth value view and the all-false view. According to
the former, future contingents take a third truth value which goes beyond truth and
falsity. According to the latter, they are all false. I here illustrate and discuss two
ways to respectively argue for those two views. Both ways are similar in spirit and
intimately connected with fatalism, in the sense that they engage with the doctrine
of fatalism and accept a large part of a standard fatalistic machinery
Infinite barbarians
This paper discusses an infinite regress that looms behind a certain kind of historical explanation. The movement of one barbarian group is often explained by the movement of others, but those movements in turn call for an explanation. While their explanation can again be the movement of yet another group of barbarians, if this sort of explanation does not stop somewhere we are left with an infinite regress of barbarians. While that regress would be vicious, it cannot be accommodated by several general views about what viciousness in infinite regresses amounts to. This example is additional evidence that we should prefer a pluralist approach to infinite regresses
Virtue and austerity
Virtue ethics is often proposed as a third way in health-care ethics, that while consequentialism and deontology focus on action guidelines, virtue focuses on character; all three aim to help agents discern morally right action although virtue seems to have least to contribute to political issues, such as austerity. I claim: (1) This is a bad way to characterize virtue ethics. The 20th century renaissance of virtue ethics was first proposed as a response to the difficulty of making sense of âmoral rightnessâ outside a religious context. For Aristotle the right action is that which is practically best; that means best for the agent in order to live a flourishing life.There are no moral considerations besides this. (2) Properly characterized, virtue ethics can contribute to discussion of austerity.
A criticism of virtue ethics is that fixed characteristics seem a bad idea in ever-changing environments; perhaps we should be generous in prosperity, selfish in austerity. Furthermore, empirical evidence suggests that people indeed do change with their environment. However, I argue that
virtues concern fixed values not fixed behaviour; the values underlying virtue allow for different behaviour in different circumstances: in austerity, virtues still give the agent the best chance of flourishing. Two questions
arise. (a) In austere environments might not injustice help an individual flourish by, say, obtaining material goods? No, because unjust acts undermine the type of society the agent needs for flourishing. (b) What good is virtue to those lacking the other means to flourish? The notion of degrees of flourishing shows that most people would benefit
somewhat from virtue. However, in extreme circumstances virtue might harm rather than benefit the agent: such circumstances are to be avoided; virtue ethics thus has a political agenda to enable flourishing.
This requires justice, a fortiori when in austerity
The nature of the variable millimetreâselected AGN in the brightest cluster galaxy of Abell 851
We present the detection of a bright 3âmm continuum source in the brightest cluster galaxy (BCG) in Abell 0851 (z = 0.411) with the NOrthern Extended Millimeter Array (NOEMA). When this detection is compared to other multifrequency observations across 21cmâ 100ÎŒm, including new Arcminute Microkelvin Imager 15âGHz observations, we find evidence for a relatively flat, variable core source associated with the BCG. The radio power and amplitude of variability observed in this galaxy is consistent with the cores in lower redshift BCGs in X-rayâselected clusters, and the flat mmâcm spectrum is suggestive of the BCG being a low-luminosity active galactic nucleus archetype. The discovery of this system could provide a basis for a long-term study of the role of low-luminosity radio mode âregulatoryâ feedback in massive clusters
Relativizing identity
In this paper, I defend Peter Geachâs theory of Relative Identity against the charge that it cannot make sense of basic semantic notions
Spitzer observations of extended Lyman-alpha Clouds in the SSA22 field
We present the results of a Spitzer IRAC and MIPS 24 micron study of extended
Lyman-alpha clouds (or Lyman-alpha Blobs, LABs) within the SSA22 filamentary
structure at z = 3.09. We detect 6/26 LABs in all IRAC filters, four of which
are also detected at 24 micron, and find good correspondence with the 850
micron measurements of Geach et al. 2005. An analysis of the rest-frame
ultraviolet, optical, near- and mid-infrared colors reveals that these six
systems exhibit signs of nuclear activity (AGN)and/or extreme star formation.
Notably, they have properties that bridge galaxies dominated by star formation
(Lyman-break galaxies; LBGs) and those with AGNs (LBGs classified as QSOs). The
LAB systems not detected in all four IRAC bands, on the other hand, are, as a
group, consistent with pure star forming systems, similar to the majority of
the LBGs within the filament. These results indicate that the galaxies within
LABs do not comprise a homogeneous population, though they are also consistent
with scenarios in which the gas halos are ionized through a common mechanism
such as galaxy-scale winds driven by the galaxies within them, or gravitational
heating of the collapsing cloud itself.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
A panoramic mid-infrared survey of two distant clusters
We present panoramic Spitzer MIPS 24 ÎŒm observations, covering ~9 Ă 9 Mpc2 (25' Ă 25') fields around two massive clusters, Cl 0024+16 and MS 0451-03, at z = 0.39 and z = 0.55, respectively, reaching a 5 Ï flux limit of ~200 ÎŒJy. Our observations cover a very wide range of environments within these clusters, from high-density regions around the cores out to the turnaround radius. Cross-correlating the mid-infrared catalogs with deep optical and near-infrared imaging of these fields, we investigate the optical/near-infrared colors of the mid-infrared sources. We find excesses of mid-infrared sources with the optical/near-infrared colors expected of cluster members in the two clusters and test this selection using spectroscopically confirmed 24 ÎŒm members. The much more significant excess is associated with Cl 0024+16, whereas MS 0451-03 has comparatively few mid-infrared sources. The mid-infrared galaxy population in Cl 0024+16 appears to be associated with dusty star-forming galaxies (typically redder than the general cluster population by up to AV ~ 1-2 mag) rather than emission from dusty tori around active galactic nuclei in early-type hosts. We compare the star formation rates derived from the total infrared (8-1000 ÎŒm) luminosities for the mid-infrared sources in Cl 0024+16 with those estimated from a published Hα survey, finding rates 5 times those found from Hα, indicating significant obscured activity in the cluster population. Compared to previous mid-infrared surveys of clusters from z ~ 0-0.5, we find evidence for strong evolution of the level of dust-obscured star formation in dense environments to z = 0.5, analogous to the rise in the fraction of optically selected star-forming galaxies seen in clusters and the field out to similar redshifts. However, there are clearly significant cluster-to-cluster variations in the populations of mid-infrared sources, probably reflecting differences in the intracluster media and recent dynamical evolution of these systems
The properties of the star-forming interstellar medium at z = 0.84-2.23 from HiZELS : mapping the internal dynamics and metallicity gradients in high-redshift disc galaxies
We present adaptive optics assisted, spatially resolved spectroscopy of a sample of nine Hα-selected galaxies at z = 0.84-2.23 drawn from the HiZELS narrow-band survey. These galaxies have star formation rates of 1-27 Mâ yr-1 and are therefore representative of the typical high-redshift star-forming population. Our Ëkpc-scale resolution observations show that approximately half of the sample have dynamics suggesting that the ionized gas is in large, rotating discs. We model their velocity fields to infer the inclination-corrected, asymptotic rotational velocities. We use the absolute B-band magnitudes and stellar masses to investigate the evolution of the B-band and stellar-mass Tully-Fisher relationships. By combining our sample with a number of similar measurements from the literature, we show that, at fixed circular velocity, the stellar mass of star-forming galaxies has increased by a factor of 2.5 between z = 2 and 0, whilst the rest-frame B-band luminosity has decreased by a factor of Ë 6 over the same period. Together, these demonstrate a change in mass-to-light ratio in the B band of Î(M/LB)/(M/LB)z=0 Ë 3.5 between z = 1.5 and 0, with most of the evolution occurring below z = 1. We also use the spatial variation of [N II]/Hα to show that the metallicity of the ionized gas in these galaxies declines monotonically with galactocentric radius, with an average Î log(O/H)/ÎR = -0.027 ± 0.005 dex kpc-1. This gradient is consistent with predictions for high-redshift disc galaxies from cosmologically based hydrodynamic simulations
The Subaru Ly-alpha blob survey: A sample of 100 kpc Ly-alpha blobs at z=3
We present results of a survey for giant Ly-alpha nebulae (LABs) at z=3 with
Subaru/Suprime-Cam. We obtained Ly-alpha imaging at z=3.09+-0.03 around the
SSA22 protocluster and in several blank fields. The total survey area is 2.1
square degrees, corresponding to a comoving volume of 1.6 x 10^6 Mpc^3. Using a
uniform detection threshold of 1.4 x 10^{-18} erg s^{-1} cm^{-2} arcsec^{-2}
for the Ly-alpha images, we construct a sample of 14 LAB candidates with
major-axis diameters larger than 100 kpc, including five previously known blobs
and two known quasars. This survey triples the number of known LABs over 100
kpc. The giant LAB sample shows a possible "morphology-density relation":
filamentary LABs reside in average density environments as derived from compact
Ly-alpha emitters, while circular LABs reside in both average density and
overdense environments. Although it is hard to examine the formation mechanisms
of LABs only from the Ly-alpha morphologies, more filamentary LABs may relate
to cold gas accretion from the surrounding inter-galactic medium (IGM) and more
circular LABs may relate to large-scale gas outflows, which are driven by
intense starbursts and/or by AGN activities. Our survey highlights the
potential usefulness of giant LABs to investigate the interactions between
galaxies and the surrounding IGM from the field to overdense environments at
high-redshift.Comment: MNRAS Letters accepted (6 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables
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