131 research outputs found

    Reinventing the slide rule for redshifts: the case for logarithmic wavelength shift

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    Redshift is not a shift, it is defined as a fractional change in wavelength. Nevertheless, it is a fairly common misconception that Delta-z c represents a velocity where Delta-z is the redshift separation between two galaxies. When evaluating large changes in a quantity, it is often more useful to consider logarithmic differences. Defining zeta = ln lambda_obs - ln lambda_em results in a more accurate approximation for line-of-sight velocity and, more importantly, this means that the cosmological and peculiar velocity terms become additive: Delta-zeta c can represent a velocity at any cosmological distance. Logarithmic shift zeta, or equivalently ln(1+z), should arguably be used for photometric redshift evaluation. For a comparative non-accelerating universe, used in cosmology, comoving distance is proportional to zeta. This means that galaxy population distributions in zeta, rather than z, are close to being evenly distributed in comoving distance, and they have a more aesthetic spacing when considering galaxy evolution. Some pedagogic notes on these quantities are presented

    The effects of peculiar velocities in SN Ia environments on the local H0 measurement

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    The discrepancy between estimates of the Hubble Constant (H0H_{0}) measured from local (z≲0.1z \lesssim 0.1) scales and from scales of the sound horizon is a crucial problem in modern cosmology. Peculiar velocities of standard candle distance indicators can systematically affect local H0H_{0} measurements. We here use 2MRS galaxies to measure the local galaxy density field, finding a notable z<0.05z < 0.05 under-density in the SGC-6dFGS region of 27±227 \pm 2 %. However, no strong evidence for a 'Local Void' pertaining to the full 2MRS sky coverage is found. Galaxy densities are used to measure a density parameter, Δϕ+−\Delta \phi_{+-}, which acts as a proxy for peculiar velocity (vpecv_{pec}) by quantifying density gradients along a line-of-sight. Δϕ+−\Delta \phi_{+-} is found to correlate strongly with local H0H_{0} estimates from Union 2.1 Type Ia SNe (0.02<z<0.040.02 < z < 0.04). Density structures on scales of ∼50\sim 50 Mpc are found to correlate most strongly with H0H_{0} estimates in both the observational data and in mock data from the MDPL2-Galacticus simulation. Interpolating SN Ia H0H_{0} estimates to their Δϕ+−=0\Delta \phi_{+-} = 0 values, we can correct for the effects of density structure on the local H0H_{0} estimates, even in the presence of biased peculiar velocities. For these particular observational data, we reveal a <0.1 km s−1Mpc−1< 0.1 \,\rm km\,s^{-1} Mpc^{-1} difference in the sample mean estimate compared to the value uncorrected for peculiar velocities. Our best estimate is then 74.9 km s−1Mpc−174.9 \,\rm km\,s^{-1} Mpc^{-1}. Using the mock data, the systematic uncertainty from these peculiar velocity corrections is estimated to be 0.3 km s−1Mpc−10.3 \,\rm km\,s^{-1} Mpc^{-1}. The dominant source of uncertainty in our estimate instead relates to Cepheid-based calibrations of distance moduli (1.7 km s−1Mpc−11.7 \,\rm km\,s^{-1} Mpc^{-1}) and SN photometry (0.7 km s−1Mpc−10.7 \,\rm km\,s^{-1} Mpc^{-1})

    Compact galaxies and the size-mass galaxy distribution from a colour-selected sample at 0.04 < z < 0.15 supplemented by ugrizYJHK photometric redshifts

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    The size-mass galaxy distribution is a key diagnostic for galaxy evolution. Massive compact galaxies are of particular interest as potential surviving relics of a high-redshift phase of star formation. Some compact galaxies at low redshift could be nearly unresolved in SDSS imaging and thus not included in galaxy samples. To overcome this, a sample was selected from the 9-band combination of SDSS and UKIDSS photometry to r 0.06). A sample of 163186 galaxies was obtained with 0.04 10, log S_1.5 > 10.5). The spectroscopic completeness was 76% for compact galaxies compared to 92% for normal-size galaxies. This difference is primarily attributed to SDSS fibre collisions and not the completeness of the main galaxy sample selection. Using environmental overdensities, this confirms that compact quiescent galaxies are significantly more likely to be found in high-density environments compared to normal-size galaxies. By comparison with a high-redshift sample from 3D-HST, log S_1.5 distribution functions show significant evolution, with this being a compelling way to compare with simulations such as EAGLE. The number density of compact quiescent galaxies drops by a factor of about 30 from z ~ 2 to log (n / Mpc^-3) = -5.3 +- 0.4 in the SDSS-UKIDSS sample. The uncertainty is dominated by the steep cut off in log S_1.5, which is demonstrated conclusively using this complete sample

    Environment from cross-correlations: connecting hot gas and the quenching of galaxies

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    The observable properties of galaxies are known to depend on both internal processes and the external environment. In terms of the environmental role, we still do not have a clear picture of the processes driving the transformation of galaxies. This may be due to the fact that these environmental processes depend on local physical conditions (e.g., local tidal force or hot gas density), whereas observations typically probe only broad-brush proxies for these conditions (e.g., host halo mass, distance to the N^th nearest neighbour, etc.). Here we propose a new method that directly links galaxies to their local environments, by using spatial cross-correlations of galaxy catalogues with maps from large-scale structure surveys (e.g., thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich [tSZ] effect, diffuse X-ray emission, weak lensing of galaxies or the CMB). We focus here on the quenching of galaxies and its link to local hot gas properties. Maps of galaxy overdensity and quenched fraction excess are constructed from volume-limited SDSS catalogs, which are cross-correlated with maps of tSZ effect from Planck and X-ray emission from ROSAT. Strong signals out to Mpc scales are detected for all cross-correlations and are compared to predictions from cosmological hydrodynamical simulations (the EAGLE and BAHAMAS simulations). The simulations successfully reproduce many, but not all, of the observed power spectra, with an indication that environmental quenching may be too efficient in the simulations. We demonstrate that the cross-correlations are sensitive to both the internal and external processes responsible for quenching. The methods outlined in this paper can be easily adapted to other observables and, with upcoming surveys, will provide a stringent direct test of physical models for environmental transformation

    Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): end of survey report and data release 2

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    The Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey is one of the largest contemporary spectroscopic surveys of low redshift galaxies. Covering an area of ˜286 deg2 (split among five survey regions) down to a limiting magnitude of r < 19.8 mag, we have collected spectra and reliable redshifts for 238 000 objects using the AAOmega spectrograph on the Anglo-Australian Telescope. In addition, we have assembled imaging data from a number of independent surveys in order to generate photometry spanning the wavelength range 1 nm-1 m. Here, we report on the recently completed spectroscopic survey and present a series of diagnostics to assess its final state and the quality of the redshift data. We also describe a number of survey aspects and procedures, or updates thereof, including changes to the input catalogue, redshifting and re-redshifting, and the derivation of ultraviolet, optical and near-infrared photometry. Finally, we present the second public release of GAMA data. In this release, we provide input catalogue and targeting information, spectra, redshifts, ultraviolet, optical and near-infrared photometry, single-component Sérsic fits, stellar masses, Hα-derived star formation rates, environment information, and group properties for all galaxies with r < 19.0 mag in two of our survey regions, and for all galaxies with r < 19.4 mag in a third region (72 225 objects in total). The data base serving these data is available at http://www.gama-survey.org/

    The Galaxy Stellar Mass Function and Low Surface Brightness Galaxies from Core-Collapse Supernovae

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    We introduce a method for producing a galaxy sample unbiased by surface brightness and stellar mass, by selecting star-forming galaxies via the positions of core-collapse supernovae (CCSNe). Whilst matching ∼\sim2400 supernovae from the SDSS-II Supernova Survey to their host galaxies using IAC Stripe 82 legacy coadded imaging, we find ∼\sim150 previously unidentified low surface brightness galaxies (LSBGs). Using a sub-sample of ∼\sim900 CCSNe, we infer CCSN-rate and star-formation rate densities as a function of galaxy stellar mass, and the star-forming galaxy stellar mass function. Resultant star-forming galaxy number densities are found to increase following a power-law down to our low mass limit of ∼106.4\sim10^{6.4} M⊙_{\odot} by a single Schechter function with a faint-end slope of α=−1.41\alpha = -1.41. Number densities are consistent with those found by the EAGLE simulations invoking a Λ\Lambda-CDM cosmology. Overcoming surface brightness and stellar mass biases is important for assessment of the sub-structure problem. In order to estimate galaxy stellar masses, a new code for the calculation of galaxy photometric redshifts, zMedIC, is also presented, and shown to be particularly useful for small samples of galaxies

    The origin of galaxy scaling laws in LCDM

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    It has long been recognized that tight relations link the mass, size, and characteristic velocity of galaxies. These scaling laws reflect the way in which baryons populate, cool, and settle at the center of their host dark matter halos; the angular momentum they retain in the assembly process; as well as the radial distribution and mass scalings of the dark matter halos. There has been steady progress in our understanding of these processes in recent years, mainly as sophisticated N-body and hydrodynamical simulation techniques have enabled the numerical realization of galaxy models of ever increasing complexity, realism, and appeal. These simulations have now clarified the origin of these galaxy scaling laws in a universe dominated by cold dark matter: these relations arise from the tight (but highly non-linear) relations between (i) galaxy mass and halo mass, (ii) galaxy size and halo characteristic radius; and (iii) from the self-similar mass nature of cold dark matter halo mass profiles. The excellent agreement between simulated and observed galaxy scaling laws is a resounding success for the LCDM cosmogony on the highly non-linear scales of individual galaxies.Comment: Contribution to the Proceedings of the Simons Conference "Illuminating Dark Matter", held in Kruen, Germany, in May 2018, eds. R. Essig, K. Zurek, J. Fen

    And the winner is: galaxy mass

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    The environment is known to affect the formation and evolution of galaxies considerably best visible through the well-known morphology-density relationship. We study the effect of environment on the evolution of early-type galaxies for a sample of 3,360 galaxies morphologically selected by visual inspection from the SDSS in the redshift range 0.05<z<0.06, and analyse luminosity-weighted age, metallicity, and alpha/Fe ratio as function of environment and galaxy mass. We find that on average 10 per cent of early-type galaxies are rejuvenated through minor recent star formation. This fraction increases with both decreasing galaxy mass and decreasing environmental density. However, the bulk of the population obeys a well-defined scaling of age, metallicity, and alpha/Fe ratio with galaxy mass that is independent of environment. Our results contribute to the growing evidence in the recent literature that galaxy mass is the major driver of galaxy formation. Even the morphology-density relationship may actually be mass-driven, as the consequence of an environment dependent characteristic galaxy mass coupled with the fact that late-type galaxy morphologies are more prevalent in low-mass galaxies.Comment: 5 pages, proceedings of JENAM 2010, Symposium 2: "Environment and the formation of galaxies: 30 years later

    Reproducible kk-means clustering in galaxy feature data from the GAMA survey

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    A fundamental bimodality of galaxies in the local Universe is apparent in many of the features used to describe them. Multiple sub-populations exist within this framework, each representing galaxies following distinct evolutionary pathways. Accurately identifying and characterising these sub-populations requires that a large number of galaxy features be analysed simultaneously. Future galaxy surveys such as LSST and Euclid will yield data volumes for which traditional approaches to galaxy classification will become unfeasible. To address this, we apply a robust kk-means unsupervised clustering method to feature data derived from a sample of 7338 local-Universe galaxies selected from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey. This allows us to partition our sample into kk clusters without the need for training on pre-labelled data, facilitating a full census of our high dimensionality feature space and guarding against stochastic effects. We find that the local galaxy population natively splits into 22, 33, 55 and a maximum of 66 sub-populations, with each corresponding to a distinct ongoing evolutionary mechanism. Notably, the impact of the local environment appears strongly linked with the evolution of low-mass (M∗<1010M_{*} < 10^{10} M⊙_{\odot}) galaxies, with more massive systems appearing to evolve more passively from the blue cloud onto the red sequence. With a typical run time of ∼3\sim3 minutes per value of kk for our galaxy sample, we show how kk-means unsupervised clustering is an ideal tool for future analysis of large extragalactic datasets, being scalable, adaptable, and providing crucial insight into the fundamental properties of the local galaxy population

    The Wide Area VISTA Extra-galactic Survey (WAVES)

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    The "Wide Area VISTA Extra-galactic Survey" (WAVES) is a 4MOST Consortium Design Reference Survey which will use the VISTA/4MOST facility to spectroscopically survey ~2million galaxies to rAB<22r_{\rm AB} < 22 mag. WAVES consists of two interlocking galaxy surveys ("WAVES-Deep" and "WAVES-Wide"), providing the next two steps beyond the highly successful 1M galaxy Sloan Digital Sky Survey and the 250k Galaxy And Mass Assembly survey. WAVES will enable an unprecedented study of the distribution and evolution of mass, energy, and structures extending from 1-kpc dwarf galaxies in the local void to the morphologies of 200-Mpc filaments at z∼1z\sim1. A key aim of both surveys will be to compare comprehensive empirical observations of the spatial properties of galaxies, groups, and filaments, against state-of-the-art numerical simulations to distinguish between various Dark Matter models
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