190 research outputs found
Tests of the Las Campanas Distant Cluster Survey from Confirmation Observations for the ESO Distant Cluster Survey
The ESO Distant Cluster Survey (EDisCS) is a photometric and spectroscopic
study of the galaxy cluster population at two epochs, z~0.5 and z~0.8, drawn
from the Las Campanas Distant Cluster Survey (LCDCS). We report results from
the initial candidate confirmation stage of the program and use these results
to probe the properties of the LCDCS. Of the 30 candidates targeted, we find
statistically significant overdensities of red galaxies near 28. Of the ten
additional candidates serendipitously observed within the fields of the
targeted 30, we detect red galaxy overdensities near six. We test the
robustness of the published LCDCS estimated redshifts to misidentification of
the brighest cluster galaxy (BCG) in the survey data, and measure the spatial
alignment of the published cluster coordinates, the peak red galaxy
overdensity, and the brightest cluster galaxy. We conclude that for LCDCS
clusters out to z~0.8, 1) the LCDCS coordinates agree with the centroid of the
red galaxy overdensity to within 25'' (~150 h^{-1} kpc) for 34 out of 37
candidates with 3\sigma galaxy overdensities, 2) BCGs are typically coincident
with the centroid of the red galaxy population to within a projected separation
of 200 h^{-1} kpc (32 out of 34 confirmed candidates), 3) the red galaxy
population is strongly concentrated, and 4) the misidentification of the BCG in
the LCDCS causes a redshift error >0.1 in 15-20% of the LCDCS candidates. These
findings together help explain the success of the surface brightness
fluctuations detection method.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in the November 10
issue of Ap
Constraints On the Size Evolution of Brightest Cluster Galaxies
We measure the luminosity profiles of 16 brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs) at
using high resolution F160W NICMOS and F814W WFPC2 HST imaging.
The heterogeneous sample is drawn from a variety of surveys: seven from
clusters in the Einstein Medium Sensitivity Survey, five from the Las Campanas
Distant Cluster Survey and its northern hemisphere precursor, and the remaining
four from traditional optical surveys. We find that the surface brightness
profiles of all but three of these BCGs are well described by a standard de
Vaucouleurs () profile out to at least and that the
biweight-estimated NICMOS effective radius of our high redshift BCGs ( kpc for km s Mpc, ) is times smaller than that measured for a local
BCG sample. If high redshift BCGs are in dynamical equilibrium and satisfy the
same scaling relations as low redshift ones, this change in size would
correspond to a mass growth of a factor of 2 since . However, the
biweight-estimated WFPC2 effective radius of our sample is 18 5.1 kpc,
which is fully consistent with the local sample. While we can rule out mass
accretion rates higher than a factor of 2 in our sample, the discrepancy
between our NICMOS and WFPC2 results, which after various tests we describe
appears to be physical, does not yet allow us to place strong constraints on
accretion rates below that level.Comment: ApJ accepted (566, 1, February 2002), 12 pages, uses emulateapj5.st
Stellar populations in local star-forming galaxies. I.-Data and modelling procedure
We present an analysis of the integrated properties of the stellar
populations in the Universidad Complutense de Madrid Survey of Halpha-selected
galaxies. In this paper, the first of a series, we describe in detail the
techniques developed to model star-forming galaxies using a mixture of stellar
populations, and taking into account the observational uncertainties. We assume
a recent burst of star formation superimposed on a more evolved population. The
effects of the nebular continuum, line emission and dust attenuation are taken
into account. We also test different model assumptions including the choice of
specific evolutionary synthesis model, initial mass function, star formation
scenario and the treatment of dust extinction. Quantitative tests are applied
to determine how well these models fit our multi-wavelength observations for
the UCM sample. Our observations span the optical and near infrared, including
both photometric and spectroscopic data. Our results indicate that extinction
plays a key role in this kind of studies, revealing that low- and
high-extinction objects may require very different extinction laws and must be
treated differently. We also demonstrate that the UCM Survey galaxies are best
described by a short burst of star formation occurring within a quiescent
galaxy, rather than by continuous star formation. A detailed discussion on the
inferred parameters, such as the age, burst strength, metallicity, star
formation rate, extinction and total stellar mass for individual objects, is
presented in paper II of this series.Comment: 18 pages, 8 PostScript figures, minor changes to match the published
versio
Luminosity and Stellar Mass Functions of Local Star-Forming Galaxies
We present the optical and near-infrared luminosity and mass functions of the
local star-forming galaxies in the Universidad Complutense de Madrid Survey. A
bivariate method which explicitly deals with the Halpha selection of the survey
is used when estimating these functions. Total stellar masses have been
calculated on a galaxy-by-galaxy basis taking into account differences in star
formation histories. The main difference between the luminosity distributions
of the UCM sample and the luminosity functions of the local galaxy population
is a lower normalization (phi^*), indicating a lower global volume density of
UCM galaxies. The typical near-infrared luminosity (L^*) of local star-forming
galaxies is fainter than that of normal galaxies. This is a direct consequence
of the lower stellar masses of our objects. However, at optical wavelengths (B
and r) the luminosity enhancement arising from the young stars leads to M^*
values that are similar to those of normal galaxies. The fraction of the total
optical and near infrared luminosity density in the local Universe associated
with star-forming galaxies is 10-20%. Fitting the total stellar mass function
using a Schechter parametrization we obtain alpha=-1.15+/-0.15,
log({M}^*)=10.82+/-0.17 Msun and log(phi^*)=-3.04+/-0.20 Mpc^{-3}. This gives
an integrated total stellar mass density of 10^{7.83+/-0.07} Msun Mpc^{-3} in
local star-forming galaxies (H_0=70 km s^{-1} Mpc^{-1}, Omega_M=0.3,
Lambda=0.7). The volume-averaged burst strength of the UCM galaxies is
b=0.04+/-0.01, defined as the ratio of the mass density of stars formed in
recent bursts (age<10 Myr) to the total stellar mass density in UCM galaxies.
Finally, we derive that, in the local Universe, (13+/-3)% of the total baryon
mass density in the form of stars is associated with star-forming galaxies.Comment: 12 pages, 2 PostScript figures, published in ApJL. Minor changes to
match the published versio
Cluster Galaxy Evolution from a New Sample of Galaxy Clusters at 0.3 < z < 0.9
(Abridged) We analyze photometry and spectroscopy of a sample of 63 clusters
at 0.3<z<0.9 drawn from the Las Campanas Distant Cluster Survey to empirically
constrain models of cluster galaxy evolution. Specifically, by combining data
on our clusters with those from the literature we parametrize the redshift
dependence of 1) M*_I in the observed frame; 2) the V-I color of the E/S0 red
sequence in the observed frames; and 3) the I-K' color of the E/S0 red sequence
in the observed frame. Using the peak surface brightness of the cluster
detection, S, as a proxy for cluster mass, we find no correlation between S and
M* or the location of the red envelope in V-I. We suggest that these
observations can be explained with a model in which luminous early type
galaxies (or more precisely, the progenitors of current day luminous early type
galaxies) form the bulk of their stellar populations at high redshift (>~ 5)
and in which many of these galaxies, if not all, accrete mass either in the
form of evolved stellar populations or gas that causes only a short term
episode of star formation at lower redshifts (1.5 < z < 2). Our data are too
crude to reach conclusions regarding the evolutionary state of any particular
cluster or to investigate whether the morphological evolution of galaxies
matches the simple scenario we discuss, but the statistical nature of this
study suggests that the observed evolutionary trends are universal in massive
clusters.Comment: 35 pages, accepted for publication in Ap
Measurement of the intracluster light at z ~ 1
A significant fraction of the total photospheric light in nearby galaxy
clusters is thought to be contained within the diffuse intracluster light
(ICL), which extends 100s of kpc from cluster cores. The study of the ICL can
reveal details of the evolutionary histories and processes occurring within
galaxy clusters, however since it has a very low surface brightness it is often
difficult to detect. We present here the first measurements of the ICL as a
fraction of total cluster light at z \sim 1 using deep J-band (1.2 {\mu}m)
imaging from HAWK-I on the VLT. We investigate the ICL in 6 X-ray selected
galaxy clusters at 0.8< z <1.2 and find that the ICL below isophotes {\mu}(J) =
22 mag/arcsec2 constitutes 1-4% of the total cluster light within a radius
R500. This is broadly consistent with simulations of the ICL at a similar
redshift and when compared to nearby observations suggests that the fraction of
the total cluster light that is in the ICL has increased by a factor 2 - 4
since z\sim1. We also find the fraction of the total cluster light contained
within the Brightest Cluster Galaxy (BCG) to be 2.0-6.3% at these redshifts,
which in 5 out of 6 cases is larger than the fraction of the ICL component, in
contrast to results from nearby clusters. This suggests that the evolution in
cluster cores involves substantial stripping activity at late times, in
addition to the early build up of the BCG stellar mass through merging. The
presence of significant amounts of stellar light at large radii from these BCGs
may help towards solving the recent disagreement between the semi-analytic
model predictions of BCG mass growth (e.g. De Lucia & Blaziot, 2007) and the
observed large masses and scale sizes reported for BCGs at high redshift.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Spectroscopy of clusters in the ESO Distant Cluster Survey (EDisCS)
We present spectroscopic observations of galaxies in 4 clusters at z =
0.7-0.8 and in one cluster at z~0.5 obtained with the FORS2 spectrograph on the
VLT as part of the ESO Distant Cluster Survey (EDisCS), a photometric and
spectroscopic survey of 20 intermediate to high redshift clusters. We describe
our target selection, mask design, observation and data reduction procedures,
using these first 5 clusters to demonstrate how our strategies maximise the
number of cluster members for which we obtain spectroscopy. We present
catalogues containing positions, I-band magnitudes and spectroscopic redshifts
for galaxies in the fields of our 5 clusters. These contain 236 cluster
members, with the number of members per cluster ranging from 30 to 67. Our
spectroscopic success rate, i.e. the fraction of spectroscopic targets which
are cluster members, averages 50% and ranges from 30% to 75%. We use a robust
biweight estimator to measure cluster velocity dispersions from our
spectroscopic redshift samples. We also make a first assessment of substructure
within our clusters. The velocity dispersions range from 400 to 1100 km s-1.
Some of the redshift distributions are significantly non-Gaussian and we find
evidence for significant substructure in two clusters, one at z~0.79 and the
other at z~0.54. Both have velocity dispersions exceeding 1000 km s-1 but are
clearly not fully virialised; their velocity dispersions may thus be a poor
indicator of their masses. The properties of these first 5 EDisCS clusters span
a wide range in redshift, velocity dispersion, richness and substructure, but
are representative of the sample as a whole. Spectroscopy for the full dataset
will allow a comprehensive study of galaxy evolution as a function of cluster
environment and redshift.Comment: 18 pages, 27 figures, accepted for publication in A&A, Table 4 is
available ahead of journal publication by downloading the source files for
this astro-ph submission or from first author on request
([email protected]
On the Nature of the EIS Candidate Clusters: Confirmation of z<0.6 candidates
We use public V-band imaging data from the wide-angle surveys conducted by
the ESO Imaging Survey project (EIS) to further investigate the nature of the
EIS galaxy cluster candidates. These were originally identified by applying a
matched-filter algorithm which used positional and photometric data of the
galaxy sample extracted from the I-band survey images. In this paper, we apply
the same technique to the galaxy sample extracted from V-band data and compare
the new cluster detections with the original ones. We find that ~75% of the
low-redshift cluster candidates (z<0.6) are detected in both passbands and
their estimated redshifts show good agreement with the scatter in the redshift
differences being consistent with the estimated errors of the method. For the
``robust'' I-band detections the matching frequency approaches ~85%. We also
use the available (V-I) color to search for the red sequence of early-type
galaxies observed in rich clusters over a broad range of redshifts. This is
done by searching for a simultaneous overdensity in the three-dimensional
color-projected distance space. We find significant overdensities for ~75% of
the ``robust'' candidates with z_I<0.6. We find good agreement between the
characteristic color associated to the detected "red sequence" and that
predicted by passive evolution galaxy models for ellipticals at the redshift
estimated by the matched-filter. The results presented in this paper show the
usefulness of color data, even of two-band data, to both tentatively confirm
cluster candidates and to select possible cluster members for spectroscopic
observations. Based on the present results, we estimate that ~150 EIS clusters
with z_I<0.6 are real, making it one of the largest samples of galaxy clusters
in this redshift range currently available in the southern hemisphere.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Cl 1103.7-1245 at z=0.96: the highest redshift galaxy cluster in the EDisCS survey
We present new spectroscopic observations in a field containing the highest
redshift cluster of the ESO Distant Cluster Survey (EDisCS). We measure galaxy
redshifts and determine the velocity dispersions of the galaxy structures
located in this field. Together with the main cluster Cl1103.71245
(z=0.9580; sigma_{clus} = 522 +/- 111 km/s) we find a secondary structure at
z=0.9830, Cl1103.7-1245c. We then characterize the galaxy properties in both
systems, and find that they contain very different galaxy populations. The
cluster Cl1103.7-1245 hosts a mixture of passive elliptical galaxies and
star-forming spirals and irregulars. In the secondary structure Cl1103.7-1245c
all galaxies are lower-mass star-forming irregulars and peculiars. In addition,
we compare the galaxy populations in the Cl1103.7-1245 z=0.9580 cluster with
those in lower redshift EDisCS clusters with similar velocity dispersions. We
find that the properties of the galaxies in Cl1103.7-1245 follow the
evolutionary trends found at lower redshifts: the number of cluster members
increases with time in line with the expected growth in cluster mass, and the
fraction of passive early-type galaxies increases with time while star-forming
late types become less dominant. Finally, we find that the mean stellar masses
are similar in all clusters, suggesting that massive cluster galaxies were
already present at z~1.Comment: A&A in pres
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