1,933 research outputs found
Simulating Galaxy Evolution
The forwards approach to galaxy formation and evolution is extremely powerful
but leaves several questions unanswered. Foremost among these is the origin of
disks. A backwards approach is able to provide a more realistic treatment of
star formation and feedback and provides a practical guide to eventually
complement galaxy formation ab initio.Comment: 11 pages with 2 figures, to appear in "After the Dark Ages: When
Galaxies were Young", proceedings of the 9th annual October Astrophysics
Conference, ed. S. Holt and E. Smith, simulated images available at
http://astro.berkeley.edu/~bouwens/simulation.htm
Expanded Search for z~10 Galaxies from HUDF09, ERS, and CANDELS Data: Evidence for Accelerated Evolution at z>8?
We search for z~10 galaxies over ~160 arcmin^2 of WFC3/IR data in the Chandra
Deep Field South, using the public HUDF09, ERS, and CANDELS surveys, that reach
to 5sigma depths ranging from 26.9 to 29.4 in H_160 AB mag. z>~9.5 galaxy
candidates are identified via J_125-H_160>1.2 colors and non-detections in any
band blueward of J_125. Spitzer IRAC photometry is key for separating the
genuine high-z candidates from intermediate redshift (z~2-4) galaxies with
evolved or heavily dust obscured stellar populations. After removing 16 sources
of intermediate brightness (H_160~24-26 mag) with strong IRAC detections, we
only find one plausible z~10 galaxy candidate in the whole data set, previously
reported in Bouwens et al. (2011). The newer data cover a 3x larger area and
provide much stronger constraints on the evolution of the UV luminosity
function (LF). If the evolution of the z~4-8 LFs is extrapolated to z~10, six
z~10 galaxies are expected in our data. The detection of only one source
suggests that the UV LF evolves at an accelerated rate before z~8. The
luminosity density is found to increase by more than an order of magnitude in
only 170 Myr from z~10 to z~8. This increase is >=4x larger than expected from
the lower redshift extrapolation of the UV LF. We are thus likely witnessing
the first rapid build-up of galaxies in the heart of cosmic reionization.
Future deep HST WFC3/IR data, reaching to well beyond 29 mag, can enable a more
robust quantification of the accelerated evolution around z~10.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, ApJ resubmitted after referee repor
Inside-Out Infall Formation of Disk Galaxies: Do Predictions Differ from Models without Size Evolution?
We develop an idealized inside-out formation model for disk galaxies to
include a realistic mix of galaxy types and luminosities that provides a fair
match to the traditional observables. The predictions of our infall models are
compared against identical models with no-size evolution by generating fully
realistic simulations of the HDF, from which we recover the angular size
distributions. We find that our infall models produce nearly identical angular
size distributions to those of our no-size evolution models in the case of a
Omega = 0 geometry but produce slightly smaller sizes in the case of a Omega =
1 geometry, a difference we associate with the fact that there is a different
amount of cosmic time in our two models for evolving to relatively low
redshifts (z \approx 1-2). Our infall models also predict a slightly smaller
(11% - 29%) number of large (disk scale lengths > 4 h_{50} ^{-1} kpc) galaxies
at z \approx 0.7 for the CFRS as well as different increases in the central
surface brightness of the disks for early-type spirals, the infall model
predicting an increase by 1.2 magnitudes out to z \approx 2 (Omega = 0), 1
(Omega = 1), while our no-size evolution models predict an increase of only 0.5
magnitude. This result suggests that infall models could be important for
explaining the 1.2-1.6 magnitude increase in surface brightness reported by
Schade et al. (1995, 1996a, 1996b).Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX (aaspp4.sty), accepted by ApJ Letter
Cloning Dropouts: Implications for Galaxy Evolution at High Redshift
The evolution of high redshift galaxies in the two Hubble Deep Fields, HDF-N
and HDF-S, is investigated using a cloning technique that replicates z~ 2-3 U
dropouts to higher redshifts, allowing a comparison with the observed B and V
dropouts at higher redshifts (z ~ 4-5). We treat each galaxy selected for
replication as a set of pixels that are k-corrected to higher redshift,
accounting for resampling, shot-noise, surface-brightness dimming, and the
cosmological model. We find evidence for size evolution (a 1.7x increase) from
z ~ 5 to z ~ 2.7 for flat geometries (Omega_M+Omega_LAMBDA=1.0). Simple scaling
laws for this cosmology predict that size evolution goes as (1+z)^{-1},
consistent with our result. The UV luminosity density shows a similar increase
(1.85x) from z ~ 5 to z ~ 2.7, with minimal evolution in the distribution of
intrinsic colors for the dropout population. In general, these results indicate
less evolution than was previously reported, and therefore a higher luminosity
density at z ~ 4-5 (~ 50% higher) than other estimates. We argue the present
technique is the preferred way to understand evolution across samples with
differing selection functions, the most relevant differences here being the
color cuts and surface brightness thresholds (e.g., due to the (1+z)^4 cosmic
surface brightness dimming effect).Comment: 56 pages, 22 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
z~7 galaxy candidates from NICMOS observations over the HDF South and the CDF-S and HDF-N GOODS fields
We use ~88 arcmin**2 of deep (>~26.5 mag at 5 sigma) NICMOS data over the two
GOODS fields and the HDF South to conduct a search for bright z>~7 galaxy
candidates. This search takes advantage of an efficient preselection over 58
arcmin**2 of NICMOS H-band data where only plausible z>~7 candidates are
followed up with NICMOS J-band observations. ~248 arcmin**2 of deep
ground-based near-infrared data (>~25.5 mag, 5 sigma) is also considered in the
search. In total, we report 15 z-dropout candidates over this area -- 7 of
which are new to these search fields. Two possible z~9 J-dropout candidates are
also found, but seem unlikely to correspond to z~9 galaxies. The present z~9
search is used to set upper limits on the prevalence of such sources. Rigorous
testing is undertaken to establish the level of contamination of our selections
by photometric scatter, low mass stars, supernovae (SNe), and spurious sources.
The estimated contamination rate of our z~7 selection is ~24%. Through careful
simulations, the effective volume available to our z>~7 selections is estimated
and used to establish constraints on the volume density of luminous (L*(z=3),
or -21 mag) galaxies from these searches. We find that the volume density of
luminous star-forming galaxies at z~7 is 13_{-5}^{+8}x lower than at z~4 and
>25x lower (1 sigma) at z~9 than at z~4. This is the most stringent constraint
yet available on the volume density of >~L* galaxies at z~9. The present
wide-area, multi-field search limits cosmic variance to <20%. The evolution we
find at the bright end of the UV LF is similar to that found from recent Subaru
Suprime-Cam, HAWK-I or ERS WFC3/IR searches. The present paper also includes a
complete summary of our final z~7 z-dropout sample (18 candidates) identified
from all NICMOS observations to date (over the two GOODS fields, the HUDF,
galaxy clusters).Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journal, replaced to match accepted version, see
http://firstgalaxies.org/astronomers-area/ for a link to a complete reduction
of the NICMOS observations over the two GOODS field
Very blue UV-continuum slopes of low luminosity z~7 galaxies from WFC3/IR: Evidence for extremely low metallicities?
We use the ultra-deep WFC3/IR data over the HUDF and the Early Release
Science WFC3/IR data over the CDF-South GOODS field to quantify the broadband
spectral properties of candidate star-forming galaxies at z~7. We determine the
UV-continuum slope beta in these galaxies, and compare the slopes with galaxies
at later times to measure the evolution in beta. For luminous L*(z=3) galaxies,
we measure a mean UV-continuum slope beta of -2.0+/-0.2, which is comparable to
the beta~-2 derived at similar luminosities at z~5-6. However, for the lower
luminosity 0.1L*(z=3) galaxies, we measure a mean beta of -3.0+/-0.2. This is
substantially bluer than is found for similar luminosity galaxies at z~4, just
800 Myr later, and even at z~5-6. In principle, the observed beta of -3.0 can
be matched by a very young, dust-free stellar population, but when nebular
emission is included the expected beta becomes >~-2.7. To produce these very
blue beta's (i.e., beta~-3), extremely low metallicities and mechanisms to
reduce the red nebular emission are likely required. For example, a large
escape fraction (i.e., f_{esc}>~0.3) could minimize the contribution from this
red nebular emission. If this is correct and the escape fraction in faint z~7
galaxies is >~0.3, it may help to explain how galaxies reionize the universe.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal
Letter
The Rest Frame UV to Optical Colors and SEDs of z~4-7 Galaxies
We use the ultra-deep HUDF09 and the deep ERS data from the HST WFC3/IR
camera, along with the wide area Spitzer/IRAC data from GOODS-S to derive SEDs
of star-forming galaxies from the rest-frame UV to the optical over a wide
luminosity range (M_1500 ~ -21 to M_1500 ~ -18) from z ~ 7 to z ~ 4. The sample
contains ~ 400 z ~ 4, ~ 120 z ~ 5, ~ 60 z ~ 6, and 36 prior z ~ 7 galaxies.
Median stacking enables the first comprehensive study of very faint high-z
galaxies at multiple redshifts (e.g., [3.6] = 27.4 +/- 0.1 AB mag for the
M_1500 ~ -18 sources at z ~ 4). At z ~ 4 our faint median-stacked SEDs reach to
~ 0.06 L*(z=4) and are combined with recently published results at high
luminosity L > L* that extend to M_1500 ~ -23. We use the observed SEDs and
template fits to derive rest frame UV-to-optical colors (U - V) at all
redshifts and luminosities. We find that this color does not vary significantly
with redshift at a fixed luminosity. The UV-to-optical color does show a weak
trend with luminosity, becoming redder at higher luminosities. This is most
likely due to dust. At z >~ 5 we find blue colors [3.6]-[4.5] ~ -0.3 mag that
are most likely due to rest-frame optical emission lines contributing to the
flux in the IRAC filter bandpasses. The scatter across our derived SEDs remains
substantial, but the results are most consistent with a lack of any evolution
in the SEDs with redshift at a given luminosity. The similarity of the SEDs
suggests a self-similar mode of evolution over a timespan from 0.7 Gyr to 1.5
Gyr that encompasses very substantial growth in the stellar mass density in the
universe (from ~ 4x10^6 to ~ 2x10^7 Msun Mpc^-3).Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures, 3 tables, submitted to Ap
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