46 research outputs found
Galaxy evolution in the William Herschel deep field
In this Thesis we investigate the evolutionary histories of faint field galaxies using extremely deep optical and near-infrared photometry. Our work is centred on a 50 arcmin(^2) region at high galactic latitude which we call "The William Herschel Deep Field" (WHDF). In this work we describe three new near-infrared surveys of this field. In considering both this infrared data and the existing optical data, our broad aims are to increase our understanding of both the growth of galaxy clustering in the Universe and also to determine the star-formation histories of the field galaxy population. We consider our observations primarily in the context of luminosity evolution models in low density universes, but alternative scenarios are considered. Near-infrared galaxy counts derived from our catalogues are consistent with the predictions of our models, without the need for a steep faint-end slope for the galaxy luminosity function. We find that optical-infrared colour distributions of infrared-selected galaxies in the WHDF are deficient in red, early-type galaxies. This is consistent with the predictions of evolutionary models in which these systems have a small amount of on-going star-formation. We measure the amplitude of galaxy clustering in the WHDF for galaxies selected in optical and near-infrared bandpasses using the projected two-point correlation function. By comparing our measured clustering amplitudes with the predictions of our models we find that in all bandpasses the growth of galaxy clustering is approximately fixed in proper co-ordinates, again assuming a low-density Universe. Finally, an analysis of errors on the correlation function measurements suggest that discrepancies between our work and those of other authors may be explained by an underestimation of statistical errors
Extragalactic Fields Optimized for Adaptive Optics
In this paper we present the coordinates of 67 55' x 55' patches of sky which
have the rare combination of both high stellar surface density (>0.5
arcmin^{-2} with 13<R<16.5 mag) and low extinction (E(B-V)<0.1). These fields
are ideal for adaptive-optics based follow-up of extragalactic targets. One
region of sky, situated near Baade's Window, contains most of the patches we
have identified. Our optimal field, centered at RA: 7h24m3s, Dec: -1deg27'15",
has an additional advantage of being accessible from both hemispheres. We
propose a figure of merit for quantifying real-world adaptive optics
performance, and use this to analyze the performance of multi-conjugate
adaptive optics in these fields. We also compare our results to those that
would be obtained in existing deep fields. In some cases adaptive optics
observations undertaken in the fields given in this paper would be orders of
magnitude more efficient than equivalent observations undertaken in existing
deep fields.Comment: 28 pages, 15 figures, 1 table; accepted for publication in PAS
The fmos-cosmos survey of star-forming galaxies at z ~ 1.6. I. Hα-based star formation rates and dust extinction
We present the first results from a near-IR spectroscopic survey of the COSMOS field, using the Fiber Multi-Object Spectrograph on the Subaru telescope, designed to characterize the star-forming galaxy population at 1.4 < z < 1.7. The high-resoluti
Deep Spitzer 24 μm COSMOS Imaging. I. The Evolution of Luminous Dusty Galaxies—Confronting the Models
We present the first results obtained from the identification of ~30,000 sources in the Spitzer/24 μm observations of the COSMOS field at S_(24 μm) ≳ 80 μJy. Using accurate photometric redshifts (σ_ z ~ 0.12 at z ~ 2 for 24 μm sources with i ^+ ≳ 25 mag AB) and simple extrapolations of the number counts at faint fluxes, we resolve with unprecedented detail the buildup of the mid-infrared background across cosmic ages. We find that ~50% and ~80% of the 24 μm background intensity originate from galaxies at z ≳ 1 and z ≳ 2, respectively, supporting the scenario where highly obscured sources at very high redshifts (z ≳ 2) contribute only marginally to the cosmic infrared background. Assuming flux-limited selections at optical wavelengths, we also find that the fraction of i ^+-band sources with 24 μm detection strongly increases up to z ~ 2 as a consequence of the rapid evolution that star-forming galaxies have undergone with look-back time. Nonetheless, this rising trend shows a clear break at z ~ 1.3, probably due to k-correction effects implied by the complexity of spectral energy distributions in the mid-infrared. Finally, we compare our results with the predictions from different models of galaxy formation. We note that semianalytical formalisms currently fail to reproduce the redshift distributions observed at 24 μm. Furthermore, the simulated galaxies at S _(24 μm) > 80 μJy exhibit R–K colors much bluer than observed and the predicted K-band fluxes are systematically underestimated at z ≳ 0.5. Unless these discrepancies mainly result from an incorrect treatment of extinction in the models they may reflect an underestimate of the predicted density of high-redshift massive sources with strong ongoing star formation, which would point to more fundamental processes and/or parameters (e.g., initial mass function, critical density to form stars, feedback,...) that are still not fully controlled in the simulations. The most recent backward evolution scenarios reproduce reasonably well the flux/redshift distribution of 24 μm sources up to z ~ 3, although none of them is able to exactly match our results at all redshifts
The Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey - Infrared (NGVS-IR): I. A new Near-UV/Optical/Near-IR Globular Cluster selection tool
The NGVS-IR project (Next Generation Virgo Survey - Infrared) is a contiguous
near-infrared imaging survey of the Virgo cluster of galaxies. It complements
the optical wide-field survey of Virgo (NGVS). The current state of NGVS-IR
consists of Ks-band imaging of 4 deg^2 centered on M87, and J and Ks-band
imaging of 16 deg^2 covering the region between M49 and M87. In this paper, we
present the observations of the central 4 deg^2 centered on Virgo's core
region. The data were acquired with WIRCam on the Canada-France-Hawaii
Telescope and the total integration time was 41 hours distributed in 34
contiguous tiles. A survey-specific strategy was designed to account for
extended galaxies while still measuring accurate sky brightness within the
survey area. The average 5\sigma limiting magnitude is Ks=24.4 AB mag and the
50% completeness limit is Ks=23.75 AB mag for point source detections, when
using only images with better than 0.7" seeing (median seeing 0.54"). Star
clusters are marginally resolved in these image stacks, and Virgo galaxies with
\mu_Ks=24.4 AB mag arcsec^-2 are detected. Combining the Ks data with optical
and ultraviolet data, we build the uiK color-color diagram which allows a very
clean color-based selection of globular clusters in Virgo. This diagnostic plot
will provide reliable globular cluster candidates for spectroscopic follow-up
campaigns needed to continue the exploration of Virgo's photometric and
kinematic sub-structures, and will help the design of future searches for
globular clusters in extragalactic systems. Equipped with this powerful new
tool, future NGVS-IR investigations based on the uiK diagram will address the
mapping and analysis of extended structures and compact stellar systems in and
around Virgo galaxies.Comment: 23 pages, 18 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
JWST and ALMA discern the assembly of structural and obscured components in a high-redshift starburst galaxy
We present observations and analysis of the starburst, PACS-819, at z=1.45
( M), using high-resolution (;
0.8 kpc) ALMA and multi-wavelength JWST images from the COSMOS-Web program.
Dissimilar to HST/ACS images in the rest-frame UV, the redder NIRCam and MIRI
images reveal a smooth central mass concentration and spiral-like features,
atypical for such an intense starburst. Through dynamical modeling of the CO
J=5--4 emission with ALMA, PACS-819 is rotation-dominated thus has a disk-like
nature. However, kinematic anomalies in CO and asymmetric features in the bluer
JWST bands (e.g., F150W) support a more disturbed nature likely due to
interactions. The JWST imaging further enables us to map the distribution of
stellar mass and dust attenuation, thus clarifying the relationships between
different structural components, not discernable in the previous HST images.
The CO J = 5 -- 4 and FIR dust continuum emission are co-spatial with a
heavily-obscured starbursting core (<1 kpc) which is partially surrounded by
much less obscured star-forming structures including a prominent arc, possibly
a tidally-distorted dwarf galaxy, and a clump, either a sign of an ongoing
violent disk instability or a recently accreted low-mass satellite. With
spatially-resolved maps, we find a high molecular gas fraction in the central
area reaching (/) and short depletion times
( 120 Myrs) across the entire system. These
observations provide insights into the complex nature of starbursts in the
distant universe and underscore the wealth of complementary information from
high-resolution observations with both ALMA and JWST.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, Submitted to Ap
COSMOS-Web: Intrinsically Luminous z10 Galaxy Candidates Test Early Stellar Mass Assembly
We report the discovery of 15 exceptionally luminous
candidate galaxies discovered in the first 0.28 deg of JWST/NIRCam imaging
from the COSMOS-Web Survey. These sources span rest-frame UV magnitudes of
, and thus constitute the most intrinsically luminous
candidates identified by JWST to-date. Selected via NIRCam imaging
with Hubble ACS/F814W, deep ground-based observations corroborate their
detection and help significantly constrain their photometric redshifts. We
analyze their spectral energy distributions using multiple open-source codes
and evaluate the probability of low-redshift solutions; we conclude that 12/15
(80%) are likely genuine sources and 3/15 (20%) likely
low-redshift contaminants. Three of our candidates push the limits of
early stellar mass assembly: they have estimated stellar masses
, implying an effective stellar baryon fraction of
, where . The assembly of such stellar reservoirs is made
possible due to rapid, burst-driven star formation on timescales 100\,Myr
where the star-formation rate may far outpace the growth of the underlying dark
matter halos. This is supported by the similar volume densities inferred for
galaxies relative to
-- both about Mpc -- implying they live in halos of comparable
mass. At such high redshifts, the duty cycle for starbursts would be of order
unity, which could cause the observed change in the shape of the UVLF from a
double powerlaw to Schechter at . Spectroscopic redshift
confirmation and ensuing constraints of their masses will be critical to
understanding how, and if, such early massive galaxies push the limits of
galaxy formation in CDM.Comment: 30 pages, 9 figures; ApJ submitte
Uncovering a Massive z~7.65 Galaxy Hosting a Heavily Obscured Radio-Loud QSO Candidate in COSMOS-Web
In this letter, we report the discovery of the highest redshift, heavily
obscured, radio-loud QSO candidate selected using JWST NIRCam/MIRI, mid-IR,
sub-mm, and radio imaging in the COSMOS-Web field. Using multi-frequency radio
observations and mid-IR photometry, we identify a powerful, radio-loud (RL),
growing supermassive black hole (SMBH) with significant spectral steepening of
the radio SED ( mJy, ,
, ). In conjunction
with ALMA, deep ground-based observations, ancillary space-based data, and the
unprecedented resolution and sensitivity of JWST, we find no evidence of QSO
contribution to the UV/optical/NIR data and thus infer heavy amounts of
obscuration (N cm). Using the wealth of deep UV
to sub-mm photometric data, we report a singular solution photo-z of
= 7.65 and estimate an extremely massive
host-galaxy (). This
source represents the furthest known obscured RL QSO candidate, and its level
of obscuration aligns with the most representative but observationally scarce
population of QSOs at these epochs.Comment: Submitted to ApJL, Comments welcom
ECSGS Management Plan
Version 0.9 reviewed by ESA at the Euclid SGS Preliminary Requirements Review (2013)
Version 1.9 reviewed by ESA at the Euclid SGS System Requirements Review (2015)The ECSGS Management Plan is focused on the following topics: ECSGS organisation, responsibilities, reporting; ECSGS costing, manpower, effort tracking; ECSGS logistic (when relevant); organisation of individual OUs and SDCs under ECSGS coordination. Sections 9 and 10 contain global and local organisation details, and the names of responsible staff. The management principles expressed in this document are a coherent extension of those described in the ECSGS Science Implementation Plan. The document is compliant with the ECSS standards, as tailored for the Euclid SGS
Unveiling the distant Universe: Characterizing Galaxies in the first epoch of COSMOS-Web
We report the identification of 15 galaxy candidates at using the
initial COSMOS-Web JWST observations over 77 arcmin through four NIRCam
filters (F115W, F150W, F277W, F444W) with an overlap with MIRI (F770W) of 8.7
arcmin. We fit the sample using several publicly-available SED fitting and
photometric redshift codes and determine their redshifts between and
(), UV-magnitudes between M =
21.2 and 19.5 (with M) and rest-frame
UV slopes (). These galaxies are, on average, more
luminous than most candidates discovered by JWST so far in the
literature, while exhibiting similar blue colors in their rest-frame UV. The
rest-frame UV slopes derived from SED-fitting are blue ([2.0,
2.7]) without reaching extremely blue values as reported in other recent
studies at these redshifts. The blue color is consistent with models that
suggest the underlying stellar population is not yet fully enriched in metals
like similarly luminous galaxies in the lower redshift Universe. The derived
stellar masses with MM are not in tension with the standard
CDM model and our measurement of the volume density of such UV
luminous galaxies aligns well with previously measured values presented in the
literature at . Our sample of galaxies, although compact, are
significantly resolved.Comment: Submitted to Ap