100 research outputs found
Non-cooled near infrared spectroscopy
We investigate the use of non-cryogenic instrumentation for near-infrared spectroscopy
Properties of galaxies at the faint end of the H luminosity function at
Studies measuring the star formation rate density, luminosity function, and
properties of star-forming galaxies are numerous. However, it exists a gap at
in H-based studies. Our main goal is to study the
properties of a sample of faint H emitters at . We focus on
their contribution to the faint end of the luminosity function and derived star
formation rate density, characterising their morphologies and basic photometric
and spectroscopic properties. We use a narrow-band technique in the
near-infrared, with a filter centred at 1.06 m. The data come from
ultra-deep VLT/HAWK-I observations in the GOODS-S field with a total of 31.9 h
in the narrow-band filter. We perform a visual classification of the sample and
study their morphologies from structural parameters available in CANDELS. Our
28 H-selected sample of faint star-forming galaxies reveals a robust
faint-end slope of the luminosity function . The
derived star formation rate density at is . The sample is
mainly composed of disks, but an important contribution of compact galaxies
with S\'ersic indexes display the highest specific star formation
rates. The luminosity function at from our ultra-deep data points
towards a steeper when an individual extinction correction for each
object is applied. Compact galaxies are low-mass, low-luminosity, and
starburst-dominated objects with a light profile in an intermediate stage from
early to late types.Comment: Published in Astronomy & Astrophysics. 19 pages, 14 figures. New
version includes language edited by the journa
Narrow band selected high redshift galaxy candidates contaminated by lower redshift O[III] ultrastrong emitter line galaxies
Context. Lyman Break Galaxies (LBG) and Narrow Band (NB) surveys have been
successful at detecting large samples of high-redshift galaxies. Both methods
are subject to contamination from low-redshift interlopers. Aims. In this
paper, our aim is to investigate the nature of low-redshift interlopers in NB
Lyman- emitters (LAE) searches. Methods. From previous HAWK-I NB
imaging at z 7.7 we identify three objects that would have been selected
as high-redshift LAEs had our optical data been one magnitude shallower (but
still one to two magnitudes fainter than the near infrared data). We follow-up
these objects in spectroscopy with XSHOOTER at the VLT. Results. Despite low
quality data due to bad weather conditions, for each of the three objects we
identify one, and only one emission line, in the spectra of the objects, that
we identify as the O[III]5007A line. This result combined to spectral energy
density fitting and tests based on line ratios of several populations of
galaxies we infer that the 3 objects are ultrastrong line emitters at redshifts
1.1. Conclusions. From this work and the literature we remark that the
O[III] line appears to be a common source of contamination in high-redshift LBG
and LAE samples and we suggest that efforts be put to characterize with high
accuracy the O[III] luminosity function out to redshift 3 or higher.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, accepted by A&
Deep Observations of Lyman Break Galaxies
We summarise the main results of recent work on the Lyman break galaxy
population which takes advantage of newly commissioned instrumentation on the
VLT and Keck telescopes to push the detection of these objects to new
wavelengths and more sensitive limits. We focus in particular on near-infrared
observations targeted at detecting emission lines of [O II], [O III], and
H-beta and on the first tentative detection of Lyman continuum emission from
star forming galaxies at z = 3.Comment: 9 pages, LaTeX, 6 Postscript Figures. To appear in the Proceedings of
the ESO Symposium: Deep Fields, ed. S. Cristiani (Berlin: Springer
Deep Observations of Lyman Break Galaxies
We summarise the main results of recent work on the Lyman break galaxy population which takes advantage of newly commissioned instrumentation on the VLT and Keck telescopes to push the detection of these objects to new wavelengths and more sensitive limits
The EAGLE instrument for the E-ELT: developments since delivery of Phase A
The EAGLE instrument is a Multi-Object Adaptive Optics (MOAO) fed, multiple
Integral Field Spectrograph (IFS), working in the Near Infra-Red (NIR), on the
European Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT). A Phase A design study was
delivered to the European Southern Observatory (ESO) leading to a successful
review in October 2009. Since that time there have been a number of
developments, which we summarize here. Some of these developments are also
described in more detail in other submissions at this meeting. The science case
for the instrument, while broad, highlighted in particular: understanding the
stellar populations of galaxies in the nearby universe, the observation of the
evolution of galaxies during the period of rapid stellar build-up between
redshifts of 2-5, and the search for 'first light' in the universe at redshifts
beyond 7. In the last 2 years substantial progress has been made in these
areas, and we have updated our science case to show that EAGLE is still an
essential facility for the E-ELT. This in turn allowed us to revisit the
science requirements for the instrument, confirming most of the original
decisions, but with one modification. The original location considered for the
instrument (a gravity invariant focal station) is no longer in the E-ELT
Construction Proposal, and so we have performed some preliminary analyses to
show that the instrument can be simply adapted to work at the E-ELT Nasmyth
platform. Since the delivery of the Phase A documentation, MOAO has been
demonstrated on-sky by the CANARY experiment at the William Herschel Telescope.Comment: 10 pages, SPIE Conference proceedings, Amsterdam, July 201
Design and development of a freeform active mirror for an astronomy application
The advent of extremely large telescopes will bring unprecedented
light-collecting power and spatial resolution, but it will also lead to a
significant increase in the size and complexity of focal-plane instruments. The
use of freeform mirrors could drastically reduce the number of components in
optical systems. Currently, manufacturing issues limit the common use of
freeform mirrors at short wavelengths. This article outlines the use of
freeform mirrors in astronomical instruments with a description of two
efficient freeform optical systems. A new manufacturing method is presented
which seeks to overcome the manufacturing issues through hydroforming of thin
polished substrates. A specific design of an active array is detailed, which
will compensate for residual manufacturing errors, thermoelastic deformation,
and gravity-induced errors during observations. The combined hydroformed mirror
and the active array comprise the Freeform Active Mirror Experiment, which will
produce an accurate, compact, and stable freeform optics dedicated to visible
and near-infrared observations.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figure
H-alpha Spectroscopy of Galaxies at z>2: Kinematics and Star Formation
We present near-infrared spectroscopy of H-alpha emission lines in a sample
of 16 star-forming galaxies at redshifts 2.0<z<2.6. Our targets are drawn from
a large sample of galaxies photometrically selected and spectroscopically
confirmed to lie in this redshift range. Six of the galaxies exhibit spatially
extended, tilted H-alpha emission lines; rotation curves for these objects
reach mean velocities of ~150 km/s at radii of ~6 kpc, without corrections for
any observational effects. The velocities and radii give a mean dynamical mass
of M>4e10 M_sun. One-dimensional velocity dispersions for the 16 galaxies range
from ~50 to ~260 km/s, and in cases where we have both virial masses implied by
the velocity dispersions and dynamical masses derived from the spatially
extended emission lines, they are in rough agreement. We compare our kinematic
results to similar measurements made at z~3, and find that both the observed
rotational velocities and velocity dispersions tend to be larger at z~2 than at
z~3. We find a mean SFR_H-alpha of 16 M_sun/yr and an average
SFR_H-alpha/SFR_UV ratio of 2.4, without correcting for extinction. We see
moderate evidence for an inverse correlation between the UV continuum
luminosity and the ratio SFR_H-alpha/SFR_UV, such as might be observed if the
UV-faint galaxies suffered greater extinction. We discuss the effects of dust
and star formation history on the SFRs, and conclude that extinction is the
most likely explanation for the discrepancy between the two SFRs.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures. Accepted by Ap
High-redshift lensed galaxies
We present the results obtained from our deep survey of lensing clusters aimed at constraining the abundance of star-forming galaxies at zâŒ6-1
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