4,024 research outputs found
The Hubble Deep Field in the Far Ultraviolet
Results from a recent HST survey of field galaxies at wavelengths 1600
Angstroms and 2400 Angstroms are be presented. The data are used to constrain
the fraction of Lyman-continuum radiation that escapes from galaxies at
redshifts z ~ 1. The combined UV-IR photometry for HDF galaxies is also used to
investigate whether low-mass starburst galaxies dominate the field-galaxy
population at redshift z ~1. The relative lack of objects with the colors of
faded bursts suggests that star-formation is largly quiescent rather than
bursty or episodic.Comment: Presented at the ESO/ECF/STScI Workshop on Deep Fields, October 2000.
7 pages, 3 figure
Gravitational Lensing by Burkert Halos
We investigate the gravitational lensing properties of dark matter halos with
Burkert profiles. We derive an analytic expression for the lens equation and
use it to compute the magnification, impact parameter and image separations for
strong lensing. For the scaling relation that provides the best fits to
spiral-galaxy rotation curve data, Burkert halos will not produce strong
lensing, even if this scaling relation extends up to masses of galaxy clusters.
Tests of a simple model of an exponential stellar disk superimposed on a
Burkert-profile halo demonstrate that strong lensing is unlikely without an
additional concentration of mass in the galaxy center (e.g. a bulge). The fact
that most strong lenses on galactic scales are elliptical galaxies suggests
that a strong central concentration of baryons is required to produce image
splitting. This solution is less attractive for clusters of galaxies, which are
generally considered to be dark-matter dominated even at small radii. There are
three possible implications of these results: (1) dark halos may have a variety
of inner profiles (2) dark matter halos may not follow a single scaling
relation from galaxy scale up to cluster scale and/or (3) the splitting of
images (even by clusters of galaxies) may in general be due to the central
concentration of baryonic material in halos rather than dark matter.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for ApJ
The IRX- relation: Insights from simulations
We study the relationship between the UV continuum slope and infrared excess
(IRX) predicted by performing dust radiative
transfer on a suite of hydrodynamical simulations of galaxies. Our suite
includes both isolated disk galaxies and mergers intended to be representative
of galaxies at both and . Our low-redshift isolated
disks and mergers often populate a region around the the locally calibrated
\citet[][M99]{M99} relation but move well above the relation during
merger-induced starbursts. Our high-redshift simulated galaxies are blue and
IR-luminous, which makes them lie above the M99 relation. The value of UV
continuum slope strongly depends on the dust type used in the radiative
transfer calculations: Milky Way-type dust leads to significantly more negative
(bluer) slopes compared with Small Magellanic Cloud-type dust. The effect on
due to variations in the dust composition with galaxy properties or
redshift can dominate over other sources of variations and is the
dominant model uncertainty. The dispersion in is anticorrelated with
specific star formation rate and tends to be higher for the
simulations. In the actively star-forming simulated galaxies, dust
attenuation dominates the dispersion in , whereas in the
simulations, the contributions of SFH variations and dust are similar. For
low-SSFR systems at both redshifts, SFH variations dominate the dispersion.
Finally, the simulated isolated disks and mergers both occupy a
region in the \irxbeta\ plane consistent with observed dusty
star-forming galaxies (DSFGs). Thus, contrary to some claims in the literature,
the blue colors of high-z DSFGs do not imply that they are short-lived
starbursts.Comment: 20 pages+a 4-page appendix, Accepted for publication at Ap
Optimal Galaxy Shape Measurements for Weak Lensing Applications Using the Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys
We present three-epoch multiband (, , )
measurements of galaxy shapes using the ``polar shapelet'' or
Laguerre-expansions method with the Hubble Space Telescope () Advanced
Camera for Surveys (ACS) data, obtained as part of the {\it Great Observatories
Origin Deep Survey} (GOODS). We take advantage of the unique features of the
GOODS/ACS Fields to test the reliability of this relatively new method of
galaxy shape measurement for weak lensing analysis and to quantify the impact
of the ACS Point Spread Function (PSF) on /ACS data. We estimate the bias
introduced by the sharp PSF of the ACS on shape measurement. We show that the
bias in the tangential shear due to galaxy-galaxy lensing can be safely
neglected provided only well-resolved galaxies are used, while it would be
comparable to the signal level (1--3%) for cosmic shear measurements. These
results should of be general utility in planning and analyzing weak lensing
measurements with /ACS data.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for ApJ
Lyman Break Galaxies in the NGST Era
With SIRTF and NGST in the offing, it is interesting to examine what the
stellar populations of z~3 galaxies models imply for the existence and nature
of Lyman-break galaxies at higher redshift. To this end, we ``turn back the
clock'' on the stellar population models that have been fit to optical and
infrared data of Lyman-break galaxies at z~3. The generally young ages
(typically 10^8 +- 0.5 yr) of these galaxies imply that their stars were not
present much beyond z=4. For smooth star-formation histories SFR(t) and
Salpeter IMFs, the ionizing radiation from early star-formation in these
galaxies would be insufficient to reionize the intergalactic medium at z~6, and
the luminosity density at z~4 would be significantly lower than observed. We
examine possible ways to increase the global star-formation rate at higher
redshift without violating the stellar-population constraints at z~3.Comment: To appear in "The Mass of Galaxies at Low and High Redshift", ed. R.
Bender and A. Renzini, ESO Astrophysics Symposia, Springer-Verlag 7 Pages, 2
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