17 research outputs found
Towards Studying Hierarchical Assembly in Real Time: A Milky Way Progenitor Galaxy at z = 2.36 under the Microscope
We use Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging and near-infrared spectroscopy
from Keck/MOSFIRE to study the sub-structure around the progenitor of a Milky
Way-mass galaxy in the Hubble Frontier Fields (HFF). Specifically, we study an
pc, rest-frame
ultra-violet luminous "clump" at a projected distance of 100~pc from a
M galaxy at with a magnification
. We measure the star formation history of the clump and galaxy by
jointly modeling the broadband spectral energy distribution from HST photometry
and H from MOSFIRE spectroscopy. Given our inferred properties (e.g.,
mass, metallicity, dust) of the clump and galaxy, we explore scenarios in which
the clump formed \emph{in-situ} (e.g., a star forming complex) or
\emph{ex-situ} (e.g., a dwarf galaxy being accreted). If it formed
\emph{in-situ}, we conclude that the clump is likely a single entity as opposed
to a aggregation of smaller star clusters, making it one of the most dense star
clusters cataloged. If it formed \emph{ex-situ}, then we are witnessing an
accretion event with a 1:40 stellar mass ratio. However, our data alone are not
informative enough to distinguish between \emph{in-situ} and \emph{ex-situ}
scenarios to a high level of significance. We posit that the addition of
high-fidelity metallicity information, such as [OIII]4363\AA, which can be
detected at modest S/N with only a few hours of JWST/NIRSpec time, may be a
powerful discriminant. We suggest that studying larger samples of moderately
lensed sub-structures across cosmic time can provide unique insight into the
hierarchical formation of galaxies like the Milky Way.Comment: Accepted to MNRA
The Detection of a Red Sequence of Massive Field Galaxies at z~2.3 and its Evolution to z~0
The existence of massive galaxies with strongly suppressed star formation at
z~2.3, identified in a previous paper, suggests that a red sequence may already
be in place beyond z=2. In order to test this hypothesis, we study the
rest-frame U-B color distribution of massive galaxies at 2<z<3. The sample is
drawn from our near-infrared spectroscopic survey for massive galaxies. The
color distribution shows a statistically significant (>3 sigma) red sequence,
which hosts ~60% of the stellar mass at the high-mass end. The red-sequence
galaxies have little or no ongoing star formation, as inferred from both
emission-line diagnostics and stellar continuum shapes. Their strong Balmer
breaks and their location in the rest-frame U-B, B-V plane indicate that they
are in a post-starburst phase, with typical ages of ~0.5-1.0 Gyr. In order to
study the evolution of the red sequence, we compare our sample with
spectroscopic massive galaxy samples at 0.02<z<0.045 and 0.6<z<1.0. The
rest-frame U-B color reddens by ~0.25 mag from z~2.3 to the present at a given
mass. Over the same redshift interval, the number and stellar mass density on
the high-mass end (>10^11 Msol) of the red sequence grow by factors of ~8 and
~6, respectively. We explore simple models to explain the observed evolution.
Passive evolution models predict too strong d(U-B), and produce z~0 galaxies
that are too red. More complicated models that include aging, galaxy
transformations, and red mergers can explain both the number density and color
evolution of the massive end of the red sequence between z~2.3 and the present.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
A high stellar velocity dispersion for a compact massive galaxy at z=2.2
Recent studies have found that the oldest and most luminous galaxies in the
early Universe are surprisingly compact, having stellar masses similar to
present-day elliptical galaxies but much smaller sizes. This finding has
attracted considerable attention as it suggests that massive galaxies have
grown by a factor of ~five in size over the past ten billion years. A key test
of these results is a determination of the stellar kinematics of one of the
compact galaxies: if the sizes of these objects are as extreme as has been
claimed, their stars are expected to have much higher velocities than those in
present-day galaxies of the same mass. Here we report a measurement of the
stellar velocity dispersion of a massive compact galaxy at redshift z=2.186,
corresponding to a look-back time of 10.7 billion years. The velocity
dispersion is very high at 510 (+165, -95) km/s, consistent with the mass and
compactness of the galaxy inferred from photometric data and indicating
significant recent structural and dynamical evolution of massive galaxies. The
uncertainty in the dispersion was determined from simulations which include the
effects of noise and template mismatch. However, we caution that some subtle
systematic effect may influence the analysis given the low signal-to-noise
ratio of our spectrum.Comment: Accepted as a Letter to Nature. A press release will be issued at the
time of publicatio
The Multiwavelength Survey by Yale-Chile (MUSYC): Deep Near-Infrared Imaging and the Selection of Distant Galaxies
We present deep near-infrared JHK imaging of four 10'x10' fields. The
observations were carried out as part of the Multiwavelength Survey by
Yale-Chile (MUSYC) with ISPI on the CTIO 4m telescope. The typical point source
limiting depths are J~22.5, H~21.5, and K~21 (5sigma; Vega). The effective
seeing in the final images is ~1.0". We combine these data with MUSYC UBVRIz
imaging to create K-selected catalogs that are unique for their uniform size,
depth, filter coverage, and image quality. We investigate the rest-frame
optical colors and photometric redshifts of galaxies that are selected using
common color selection techniques, including distant red galaxies (DRGs),
star-forming and passive BzKs, and the rest-frame UV-selected BM, BX, and Lyman
break galaxies (LBGs). These techniques are effective at isolating large
samples of high redshift galaxies, but none provide complete or uniform samples
across the targeted redshift ranges. The DRG and BM/BX/LBG criteria identify
populations of red and blue galaxies, respectively, as they were designed to
do. The star-forming BzKs have a very wide redshift distribution, a wide range
of colors, and may include galaxies with very low specific star formation
rates. In comparison, the passive BzKs are fewer in number, have a different
distribution of K magnitudes, and have a somewhat different redshift
distribution. By combining these color selection criteria, it appears possible
to define a reasonably complete sample of galaxies to our flux limit over
specific redshift ranges. However, the redshift dependence of both the
completeness and sampled range of rest-frame colors poses an ultimate limit to
the usefulness of these techniques.Comment: 17 pages in emulateapj style, 13 figures. Submitted to the
Astronomical Journal. Data will be made available upon publicatio
Galaxy Structure as a Driver of the Star Formation Sequence Slope and Scatter
It is well established that (1) star-forming galaxies follow a relation
between their star formation rate (SFR) and stellar mass (M), the
"star-formation sequence", and (2) the SFRs of galaxies correlate with their
structure, where star-forming galaxies are less concentrated than quiescent
galaxies at fixed mass. Here, we consider whether the scatter and slope of the
star-formation sequence is correlated with systematic variations in the Sersic
indices, , of galaxies across the SFR-M plane. We use a
mass-complete sample of 23,848 galaxies at selected from the 3D-HST
photometric catalogs. Galaxy light profiles parameterized by are based on
Hubble Space Telescope CANDELS near-infrared imaging. We use a single SFR
indicator empirically-calibrated from stacks of Spitzer/MIPS 24m imaging,
adding the unobscured and obscured star formation. We find that the scatter of
the star-formation sequence is related in part to galaxy structure; the scatter
due to variations in at fixed mass for star-forming galaxies ranges from
0.140.02 dex at to 0.300.04 dex at . While the slope of
the log(SFR)-log(M) relation is of order unity for disk-like
galaxies, galaxies with (implying more dominant bulges) have
significantly lower SFR/M than the main ridgeline of the
star-formation sequence. These results suggest that bulges in massive
galaxies are actively building up, where the stars in the central concentration
are relatively young. At , the presence of older bulges within
star-forming galaxies lowers global SFR/M, decreasing the slope and
contributing significantly to the scatter of the star-formation sequence.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letter
The MOSDEF survey:AGN multi-wavelength identification, selection biases and host galaxy properties
We present results from the MOSFIRE Deep Evolution Field (MOSDEF) survey on
the identification, selection biases, and host galaxy properties of 55 X-ray,
IR and optically-selected active galactic nuclei (AGN) at . We
obtain rest-frame optical spectra of galaxies and AGN and use the BPT diagram
to identify optical AGN. We examine the uniqueness and overlap of the AGN
identified at different wavelengths. There is a strong bias against identifying
AGN at any wavelength in low mass galaxies, and an additional bias against
identifying IR AGN in the most massive galaxies. AGN hosts span a wide range of
star formation rate (SFR), similar to inactive galaxies once stellar mass
selection effects are accounted for. However, we find (at
significance) that IR AGN are in less dusty galaxies with relatively higher SFR
and optical AGN in dusty galaxies with relatively lower SFR. X-ray AGN
selection does not display a bias with host galaxy SFR. These results are
consistent with those from larger studies at lower redshifts. Within
star-forming galaxies, once selection biases are accounted for, we find AGN in
galaxies with similar physical properties as inactive galaxies, with no
evidence for AGN activity in particular types of galaxies. This is consistent
with AGN being fueled stochastically in any star-forming host galaxy. We do not
detect a significant correlation between SFR and AGN luminosity for individual
AGN hosts, which may indicate the timescale difference between the growth of
galaxies and their supermassive black holes
The 3D-HST Survey: <i>Hubble Space Telescope</i> WFC3/G141 Grism Spectra, Redshifts, and Emission Line Measurements for ~ 100,000 Galaxies
We present reduced data and data products from the 3D-HST survey, a 248-orbit Treasury program. The survey obtained WFC3 G141 grism spectroscopy in four of the five CANDELS fields: AEGIS, COSMOS, GOODS-S, and UDS, along with WFC3 imaging, parallel ACS G800L spectroscopy, and parallel imaging. In a previous paper, we presented photometric catalogs in these four fields and in GOODS-N, the fifth CANDELS field. Here we describe and present the WFC3 G141 spectroscopic data, again augmented with data from GO-1600 in GOODS-N (PI: B. Weiner). We developed software to automatically and optimally extract interlaced two-dimensional (2D) and one-dimensional (1D) spectra for all objects in the Skelton et al. (2014) photometric catalogs. The 2D spectra and the multi-band photometry were fit simultaneously to determine redshifts and emission line strengths, taking the morphology of the galaxies explicitly into account. The resulting catalog has redshifts and line strengths (where available) for 22,548 unique objects down to (79,609 unique objects down to ). Of these, 5459 galaxies are at and 9621 are at , where Hα falls in the G141 wavelength coverage. The typical redshift error for galaxies is , i.e., one native WFC3 pixel. The limit for emission line fluxes of point sources is erg . All 2D and 1D spectra, as well as redshifts, line fluxes, and other derived parameters, are publicly available