94 research outputs found
The SCUBA-2 Web Survey: I. Observations of CO(3-2) in hyper-luminous QSO fields
A primary goal of the SCUBA-2 Web survey is to perform tomography of the
early inter-galactic medium by studying systems containing some of the
brightest quasi-stellar objects (QSOs; 2.5<z<3.0) and nearby submillimetre
galaxies. As a first step, this paper aims to characterize the galaxies that
host the QSOs. To achieve this, a sample of 13 hyper-luminous (L_AGN>10^14
L_odot) QSOs with previous submillimetre continuum detections were followed up
with CO(3-2) observations using the NOEMA interferometer. All but two of the
QSOs are detected in CO(3-2); for one non-detection, our observations show a
tentative 2sigma line at the expected position and redshift, and for the other
non-detection we find only continuum flux density an order of magnitude
brighter than the other sources. In three of the fields, a companion
potentially suitable for tomography is detected in CO line emission within 25
arcsec of the QSO. We derive gas masses, dynamical masses and far-infrared
luminosities, and show that the QSOs in our sample have similar properties as
compared to less luminous QSOs and SMGs in the literature, despite the fact
that their black-hole masses (which are proportional to L_AGN) are 1-2 orders
of magnitude larger. We discuss two interpretations of these observations: this
is due to selection effects, such as preferential face-on viewing angles and
picking out objects in the tail ends of the scatter in host-galaxy mass and
black-hole mass relationships; or the black hole masses have been overestimated
because the accretion rates are super-Eddington.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures. Latest version published in MNRA
An optimal ALMA image of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field in the era of JWST: obscured star formation and the cosmic far-infrared background
We combine archival ALMA data targeting the Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF) to
produce the deepest currently attainable 1-mm maps of this key, extragalactic
survey field. Combining all existing data in Band 6, our deepest map covers
4.2arcmin^2, with a beamsize of 1.49"x1.07" at an effective frequency of 243GHz
(1.23mm). It reaches an rms of 4.6uJy/beam, with 1.5arcmin^2 below 9.0uJy/beam,
an improvement of >5% over the best previously published map and 50%
improvement in some regions. We also make a wider, but shallower map, covering
25.4arcmin^2. We detect 45 galaxies in the deep map down to 3.6sigma, including
10 more 1-mm sources than previously detected. 38 of these galaxies have a JWST
ID from the JADES NIRCam imaging and the new sources are typically faint and
red. A stacking analysis on the positions of ALMA-undetected JADES galaxies
yields detections for z<4 and stellar masses from 10^(8.4) to 10^(10.4)Msun,
extracting 10% of additional stacked signal from our map compared to previous
analyses. Detected sources and stacking contribute (10.0+/-0.5)Jy/deg^2 of the
cosmic infrared background (CIB) at 1.23mm. Although this is short of the
(uncertain) background level of about 20Jy/deg^2, after taking into account
intrinsic fluctuations in the CIB, our measurement is consistent with the
background if the HUDF is a mild (~2sigma) negative fluctuation. This suggests
that within the HUDF, JWST may have detected essentially all of the galaxies
that contribute to the CIB. Our stacking analysis predicts that the field
contains around 60 additional galaxies with 1.23mm flux densities averaging
around 15uJy, and over 300 galaxies at the few uJy level. However, the
contribution of these fainter more modestly-obscured objects to the background
is small, and converging, as anticipated from the now well-established strong
correlation between galaxy stellar mass and obscured star formation.Comment: Submitted to MNRA
A machine-learning approach for identifying the counterparts of submillimetre galaxies and applications to the GOODS-North field
Identifying the counterparts of submillimetre (submm) galaxies (SMGs) in multiwavelength images is a critical step towards building accurate models of the evolution of strongly star-forming galaxies in the early Universe. However, obtaining a statistically significant sample of robust associations is very challenging due to the poor angular resolution of single-dish submm facilities. Recently, a large sample of single-dish-detected SMGs in the UKIDSS UDS field, a subset of the SCUBA-2 Cosmology Legacy Survey (S2CLS), was followed up with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), which has provided the resolution necessary for identification in optical and near-infrared images. We use this ALMA sample to develop a training set suitable for machine-learning (ML) algorithms to determine how to identify SMG counterparts in multiwavelength images, using a combination of magnitudes and other derived features. We test several ML algorithms and find that a deep neural network performs the best, accurately identifying 85 perâcent of the ALMA-detected optical SMG counterparts in our cross-validation tests. When we carefully tune traditional colour-cut methods, we find that the improvement in using machine learning is modest (about 5 perâcent), but importantly it comes at little additional computational cost. We apply our trained neural network to the GOODS-North field, which also has single-dish submm observations from the S2CLS and deep multiwavelength data but little high-resolution interferometric submm imaging, and we find that we are able to classify SMG counterparts for 36/67 of the single-dish submm sources. We discuss future improvements to our ML approach, including combining ML with spectral energy distribution fitting techniques and using longer wavelength data as additional features
Using ALMA to resolve the nature of the early star-forming large-scale structure PLCK G073.4-57.5
Galaxy clusters at high redshift are key targets for understanding matter
assembly in the early Universe, yet they are challenging to locate. A sample of
>2000 high-z candidate structures has been found using Planck's all-sky submm
maps, and a sub-set of 234 have been followed up with Herschel-SPIRE, which
showed that the emission can be attributed to large overdensities of dusty
star-forming galaxies. In order to resolve and characterise the individual
galaxies we targeted the eight brightest SPIRE sources in the centre of the
Planck peak PLCK G073.4-57.5 using ALMA at 1.3 mm, and complemented these
observations with data from IRAC, WIRCam J,K, and SCUBA-2. We detected a total
of 18 millimetre galaxies brighter than 0.3 mJy in 2.4 arcmin^2. The ALMA
source density is 8-30 times higher than average background estimates and
larger than seen in typical 'proto-cluster' fields. We were able to match all
but one of the ALMA sources to a NIR counterpart. The most significant (four)
SCUBA-2 sources are not included in the ALMA pointings, but we find an 8sigma
stacking detection of the ALMA sources in the SCUBA-2 map at 850 um. We derive
photo-z, L_IR, SFR, stellar mass, T_dust, M_dust for all of the ALMA galaxies;
the photo-zs identify two groups each of five sources, at z~1.5 and 2.4. The
two groups show two 'red sequences' (i.e. similar NIR [3.6]-[4.5] colours and
different J-K colours). The majority of the ALMA-detected galaxies are on the
SFR versus stellar mass main sequence, and half of the sample is more massive
than the characteristic stellar mass at the corresponding redshift.
Serendipitous CO line detections in two of the galaxies appear to match their
photometric redshifts at z~1.54. We performed an analysis of star-formation
efficiencies and CO- and mm-continuum-derived gas fractions of our ALMA
sources, combined with a sample of 1<z<3 cluster and proto-cluster members.Comment: 26 pages, revised version, Astronomy & Astrophysics accepte
Financial incentives to promote active travel: an evidence review and economic framework
ContextFinancial incentives, including taxes and subsidies, can be used to encourage behavior change. They are common in transport policy for tackling externalities associated with use of motor vehicles, and in public health for influencing alcohol consumption and smoking behaviors. Financial incentives also offer policymakers a compromise between ânudging,â which may be insufficient for changing habitual behavior, and regulations that restrict individual choice.Evidence acquisitionThe literature review identified studies published between January 1997 and January 2012 of financial incentives relating to any mode of travel in which the impact on active travel, physical activity, or obesity levels was reported. It encompassed macroenvironmental schemes, such as gasoline taxes, and microenvironmental schemes, such as employer-subsidized bicycles. Five relevant reviews and 20 primary studies (of which nine were not included in the reviews) were identified.Evidence synthesisThe results show that more-robust evidence is required if policymakers are to maximize the health impact of fiscal policy relating to transport schemes of this kind.ConclusionsDrawing on a literature review and insights from the SLOTH (sleep, leisure, occupation, transportation, and home-based activities) time-budget model, this paper argues that financial incentives may have a larger role in promoting walking and cycling than is acknowledged generally
Chaotic and Clumpy Galaxy Formation in an Extremely Massive Reionization-era Halo
© 2022. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society. Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Abstract: The SPT 0311â58 system at z = 6.900 is an extremely massive structure within the reionization epoch and offers a chance to understand the formation of galaxies at an extreme peak in the primordial density field. We present 70 mas Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array observations of the dust continuum and [C ii] 158 ÎŒm emission in the central pair of galaxies and reach physical resolutions of âŒ100â350 pc, among the most detailed views of any reionization-era system to date. The observations resolve the source into at least a dozen kiloparsec-size clumps. The global kinematics and high turbulent velocity dispersion within the galaxies present a striking contrast to recent claims of dynamically cold thin-disk kinematics in some dusty galaxies just 800 Myr later at z ⌠4. We speculate that both gravitational interactions and fragmentation from massive parent disks have likely played a role in the overall dynamics and formation of clumps in the system. Each clump individually is comparable in mass to other 6 < z < 8 galaxies identified in rest-UV/optical deep field surveys, but with star formation rates elevated by a factor of ~3-5. Internally, the clumps themselves bear close resemblance to greatly scaled-up versions of virialized cloud-scale structures identified in low-redshift galaxies. Our observations are qualitatively similar to the chaotic and clumpy assembly within massive halos seen in simulations of high-redshift galaxies.Peer reviewe
SCUBA-2 web survey: I. Observations of CO(3â2) in hyper-luminous QSO fields
A primary goal of the Submillimetre Common User Bolometer Array-2 web survey is to perform tomography of the early intergalactic medium by studying systems containing some of the brightest quasi-stellar objects (QSOs; 2.5 10^(14) Lâ) QSOs with previous submillimetre continuum detections were followed up with CO(3â2) observations using the NOrthern Extended Millimeter Array interferometer. All but two of the QSOs are detected in CO(3â2); for one non-detection, our observations show a tentative 2Ï line at the expected position and redshift, and for the other non-detection we find only continuum flux density an order of magnitude brighter than the other sources. In three of the fields, a companion potentially suitable for tomography is detected in CO line emission within 25âarcsec of the QSO. We derive gas masses, dynamical masses, and far-infrared luminosities, and show that the QSOs in our sample have similar properties compared to less luminous QSOs and SMGs in the literature, despite the fact that their black hole masses (which are proportional to L_(AGN)) are 1â2 orders of magnitude larger. We discuss two interpretations of these observations: this is due to selection effects, such as preferential face-on viewing angles and picking out objects in the tail ends of the scatter in host-galaxy mass and black hole mass relationships; or the black hole masses have been overestimated because the accretion rates are super-Eddington
Constraints on galaxy formation from the cosmic-far-infrared-background â optical-imaging cross-correlation using Herschel and UNIONS
Using -SPIRE imaging and the Canada-France Imaging Survey (CFIS) Low Surface Brightness data products from the Ultraviolet Near-Infrared Optical Northern Survey (UNIONS), we present a cross-correlation between the cosmic infrared background and cosmic optical background fluctuations. With a combined sky area of and a minimum resolved scale of arcsec, the cross-spectrum is measured for two cases: all galaxies are kept in the images; or all individually-detected galaxies are masked to produce `background' maps. We report the detection of the cross-correlation signal at ( for the background map). The part of the optical brightness variations that are correlated with the submm emission translates to an rms brightness of in the band, a level normally unreachable for individual sources. A critical issue is determining what fraction of the cross-power spectrum might be caused by emission from Galactic cirrus. For one of the fields, the Galactic contamination is approximately a factor of 10 higher than the extragalactic signal, with the contamination being estimated using a linear regression from several external survey maps; however, for the other fields, the contamination is typically around 20 per cent. An additional discriminant is that the cross-power spectrum is of the approximate form , much shallower than that of Galactic cirrus. We interpret the results in a halo-model framework, which shows good agreement with independent measurements for the scalings of star-formation rates in galaxies. The approach presented in this study holds great promise for future surveys such as FYST/CCAT-prime combined with or the Vera Rubin Observatory (LSST), which will enable a detailed exploration of the evolution of star formation in galaxies
Projected distances to host galaxy reduce SNIa dispersion
We use multiband imagery data from the Sloan digital sky survey to measure projected distances of 302 supernova Type Ia (SNIa) from the centre of their host galaxies, normalized to the galaxy's brightness scale length, with a Bayesian approach. We test the hypothesis that SNIae further away from the centre of their host galaxy are less subject to dust contamination (as the dust column density in their environment is smaller) and/or come from a more homogeneous environment. Using the Mann-Whitney U test, we find a statistically significant difference in the observed colour correction distribution between SNIae that are near and those that are far from the centre of their host. The local p-value is 3
7 10-3, which is significant at the 5 per cent level after look-elsewhere effect correction. We estimate the residual scatter of the two sub-groups to be 0.073 \ub1 0.018 for the far SNIae, compared to 0.114 \ub1 0.009 for the near SNIae - an improvement of 30 per cent, albeit with a low-statistical significance of 2\u3c3. This confirms the importance of host galaxy properties in correctly interpreting SNIa observations for cosmological inference
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