1,267 research outputs found
Low, Milky-Way like, Molecular Gas Excitation of Massive Disk Galaxies at z~1.5
We present evidence for Milky-Way-like, low-excitation molecular gas
reservoirs in near-IR selected massive galaxies at z~1.5, based on IRAM Plateau
de Bure Interferometer CO[3-2] and NRAO Very Large Array CO[1-0] line
observations for two galaxies that had been previously detected in CO[2-1]
emission. The CO[3-2] flux of BzK-21000 at z=1.522 is comparable within the
errors to its CO[2-1] flux, implying that the CO[3-2] transition is
significantly sub-thermally excited. The combined CO[1-0] observations of the
two sources result in a detection at the 3 sigma level that is consistent with
a higher CO[1-0] luminosity than that of CO[2-1]. Contrary to what is observed
in submillimeter galaxies and QSOs, in which the CO transitions are thermally
excited up to J>=3, these galaxies have low-excitation molecular gas, similar
to that in the Milky Way and local spirals. This is the first time that such
conditions have been observed at high redshift. A Large Velocity Gradient
analysis suggests that molecular clouds with density and kinetic temperature
comparable to local spirals can reproduce our observations. The similarity in
the CO excitation properties suggests that a high, Milky-Way-like, CO to H_2
conversion factor could be appropriate for these systems. If such
low-excitation properties are representative of ordinary galaxies at high
redshift, centimeter telescopes such as the Expanded Very Large Array and the
longest wavelength Atacama Large Millimeter Array bands will be the best tools
for studying the molecular gas content in these systems through the
observations of CO emission lines.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. ApJ Letters in pres
Very High Gas Fractions and Extended Gas Reservoirs in z=1.5 Disk Galaxies
We present evidence for very high gas fractions and extended molecular gas
reservoirs in normal, near-infrared selected (BzK) galaxies at z~1.5, based on
multi-configuration CO[2-1] observations obtained at the IRAM PdBI. Six of the
six galaxies observed were securely detected. High resolution observations
resolve the CO emission in four of them, implying sizes of order of 6-11 kpc
and suggesting the presence of rotation. The UV morphologies are consistent
with clumpy, unstable disks, and the UV sizes are consistent with the CO sizes.
The star formation efficiencies are homogeneously low and similar to local
spirals - the resulting gas depletion times are ~0.5 Gyr, much higher than what
is seen in high-z submm galaxies and quasars. The CO luminosities can be
predicted to within 0.15 dex from the star formation rates and stellar masses,
implying a tight correlation of the gas mass with these quantities. We use
dynamical models of clumpy disk galaxies to derive dynamical masses. These
models are able to reproduce the peculiar spectral line shapes of the CO
emission. After accounting for the stellar and dark matter masses we derive gas
masses of 0.4-1.2x10^11 Msun. The conversion factor is very high:
alpha_CO=3.6+-0.8, consistent with the Galaxy but four times higher than that
of local ultra-luminous IR galaxies. The gas accounts for an impressive 50-65%
of the baryons within the galaxies' half light radii. We are witnessing truly
gas-dominated galaxies at z~1.5, a finding that explains the high specific SFRs
observed for z>1 galaxies. The BzK galaxies can be viewed as scaled-up versions
of local disk galaxies, with low efficiency star formation taking place inside
extended, low excitation gas disks. They are markedly different than local
ULIRGs and high-z submm galaxies, which have more excited and compact gas.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal, 22 pages, 18
figures, minor revision
Near-IR bright galaxies at z~2. Entering the spheroid formation epoch ?
Spectroscopic redshifts have been measured for 9 K-band luminous galaxies at
1.7 < z < 2.3, selected with Ks < 20 in the "K20 survey" region of the Great
Observatories Origins Deep Survey area. Star formation rates (SFRs) of ~100-500
Msun/yr are derived when dust extinction is taken into account. The fitting of
their multi-color spectral energy distributions indicates stellar masses M ~
10^11 Msun for most of the galaxies. Their rest-frame UV morphology is highly
irregular, suggesting that merging-driven starbursts are going on in these
galaxies. Morphologies tend to be more compact in the near-IR, a hint for the
possible presence of older stellar populations. Such galaxies are strongly
clustered, with 7 out of 9 belonging to redshift spikes, which indicates a
correlation length r_0 ~ 9-17 h^-1 Mpc (1 sigma range). Current semianalytical
models of galaxy formation appear to underpredict by a large factor (about 30)
the number density of such a population of massive and powerful starburst
galaxies at z ~ 2. The high masses and SFRs together with the strong clustering
suggest that at z ~ 2 we may have started to explore the major formation epoch
of massive early-type galaxies.Comment: accepted on June 17. To appear on ApJ Letter
‘Lots of Black people are on meds because they're seen as aggressive’: STOMP, COVID-19 and anti-racism in community learning disability services
Background
The STOMP agenda (Stopping Over-Medication of People with learning disabilities, autism, or both) drew focus to individuals with a diagnosis of a learning disability being prescribed psychotropic medication to manage ‘behaviours that challenge’. The following study is an audit of two community learning disability services in the London boroughs of Westminster and Kensington and Chelsea for compliance with national guidance on the use of medication in this population, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, and equality, diversity and anti-racism.
Method
Routinely collected data were audited relating to clients identified in each service, totalling 54 participants. Data were audited against five standards: minimum effective dose, medication reviews, alternative multidisciplinary input, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and equality, diversity and anti–racism. Comparisons were made to the overall caseload (N = 365) where appropriate.
Results
Evidence demonstrated a greater risk of receiving psychotropic medication to manage behaviours that challenge for service users from racialised backgrounds, further evidencing institutional and/or individualised racism within practice for this population. Prescriptions also increased in dosage during the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated by insufficient provision of alternative input and regular multi-disciplinary review as required by national guidance.
Conclusions
Community learning disability teams require dedicated, co-produced STOMP pathways to review those at risk of over-medication. Additional research is required to explore individual and systemic factors contributing to ethnic disparities in medication prescription for behaviours that challenge among people with learning disabilities. Further recommendations are considered around developing data collection, service user involvement, and future directions.Accessible summary:
- Abuse at care home (Winterbourne View) led the NHS to start a campaign known as STOMP to make sure people with learning disabilities and/or autism got the right medication.
- We looked at the medications people with learning disabilities in our area were given. We looked at how often these medications were checked by a doctor. We looked at what other support people were given.
- We also looked at how people with learning disabilities were affected by COVID-19. We also looked at differences between people from different racial backgrounds.
- We found that some people were given more medications to manage their behaviour. We found that the medications were not checked as often as they should be. This happened most for Black, Brown, and Asian people.
- We spoke to a local service user project about our findings. They said they think racism is one of the reasons for more medications. They also said it is bad that people are on too much medication and that people should get more support
A wide area survey for high-redshift massive galaxies. I. Number counts and clustering of BzKs and EROs
We have combined deep BRIz' imaging over 2x940 arcmin^2 fields obtained with
the Suprime-Cam on the Subaru telescope with JKs imaging with the SOFI camera
at the New Technology Telescope to search for high-redshift massive galaxies.
K-band selected galaxies have been identified over an area of ~920 arcmin^2 to
K_Vega=19.2, of which 320 arcmin^2 are complete to K_Vega=20. The BzK selection
technique was used to obtain complete samples of ~500 candidate massive
star-forming galaxies (sBzKs) and ~160 candidate massive, passively-evolving
galaxies (pBzKs), both at 1.4 5 criterion we also
identified ~850 extremely red objects (EROs). The surface density of sBzKs and
pBzKs is found to 1.20+/-0.05 arcmin^{-2} and 0.38+/-0.03 arcmin^{-2},
respectively. Both sBzKs and pBzKs are strongly clustered, at a level at least
comparable to that of EROs, with pBzKs appearing more clustered than sBzKs. We
estimate the reddening, star formation rates (SFRs) and stellar masses (M_*) of
the sBzKs, confirming that to K_Vega~20 median values are M_*~10^{11}M_sun, SFR
190M_sun yr^{-1}, and E(B-V)~0.44. The most massive sBzKs are also the most
actively star-forming, an effect which can be seen as a manifestation of
downsizing at early epochs. The space density of massive pBzKs at z~1.4-2 is
20%+/-7% that of similarly massive early-type galaxies at z~0, and similar to
that of sBzKs of the same mass. We argue that star formation quenching in these
sBzKs will result in nearly doubling the space density of massive early-type
galaxies, thus matching their local density.Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures, accepted by ApJ. While checking the proofs we
became aware of a material mistake of non-trivial scientific relevance. In
the original it was reported that the comoving volume density of passive
BzK-selected galaxies with =1.7 and more massive than 10^{11}M_sun was
45%+/-15% of the local number density of similarly massive early-type
galaxies. This fraction actually turns out to be 20%+/-7%. Section 6.4, point
5 in section 7, and the abstract have been modified accordingl
Expanded Very Large Arrays Observations of a Proto-Cluster of Molecular Gas-Rich Galaxies at z = 4.05
We present observations of the molecular gas in the GN20 proto-cluster of galaxies at z = 4.05 using the Expanded Very Large Array (EVLA). This group of galaxies is the ideal laboratory for studying the formation of massive galaxies via luminous, gas-rich starbursts within 1.6 Gyr of the big bang. We detect three galaxies in the proto-cluster in CO 2-1 emission, with gas masses (H_2) between 10^(10) and 10^(11) × (α/0.8) M_⊙. The emission from the brightest source, GN20, is resolved with a size ~2'' and has a clear north-south velocity gradient, possibly indicating ordered rotation. The gas mass in GN20 is comparable to the stellar mass (1.3 × 10^(11) × (α/0.8) M_⊙ and 2.3 × 10^(11) M_⊙, respectively), and the sum of gas plus stellar mass is comparable to the dynamical mass of the system (~3.4 × 10^(11)[sin (i)/sin (45°)]^(–2) M_⊙), within a 5 kpc radius. There is also evidence for a tidal tail extending another 2'' north of the galaxy with a narrow velocity dispersion. GN20 may be a massive, gas-rich disk that is gravitationally disturbed, but not completely disrupted. There is one Lyman-break galaxy (BD29079) in the GN20 proto-cluster with an optical spectroscopic redshift within our search volume, and we set a 3σ limit to the molecular gas mass of this galaxy of 1.1 × 10^(10) × (α/0.8) M_⊙
A new photometric technique for the joint selection of star-forming and passive galaxies at 1.4<z<2.5
A simple two color selection based on B-, z-, and K- band photometry is
proposed for culling galaxies at 1.4<z<2.5 in K-selected samples and
classifying them as star-forming or passive systems. The method is calibrated
on the highly complete spectroscopic redshift database of the K20 survey,
verified with simulations and tested on other datasets. Requiring
BzK=(z-K)-(B-z)>-0.2 (AB) allows to select actively star-forming galaxies at
z>1.4, independently on their dust reddening. Instead, objects with BzK<-0.2
and (z-K)>2.5 (AB) colors include passively evolving galaxies at z>1.4, often
with spheroidal morphologies. Simple recipes to estimate the reddening, SFRs
and masses of BzK-selected galaxies are derived, and calibrated on K<20
galaxies. Based on their UV (reddening-corrected), X-ray and radio
luminosities, the BzK-selected star-forming galaxies with K<20 turn out to have
average SFR ~ 200 Msun yr^-1, and median reddening E(B-V)~0.4. Besides missing
the passively evolving galaxies, the UV selection appears to miss some relevant
fraction of the z~2 star-forming galaxies with K<20, and hence of the
(obscured) star-formation rate density at this redshift. The high SFRs and
masses add to other existing evidence that these z=2 star-forming galaxies may
be among the precursors of z=0 early-type galaxies. Theoretical models cannot
reproduce simultaneously the space density of both passively evolving and
highly star-forming galaxies at z=2. In view of Spitzer Space Telescope
observations, an analogous technique based on the RJL photometry is proposed to
complement the BzK selection and to identify massive galaxies at 2.5<z<4.0.
These color criteria should help in completing the census of the stellar mass
and of the star-formation rate density at high redshift (abridged).Comment: 19 pages, 17 figures, to appear on ApJ (20 December 2004 issue
The kiloparsec-scale star formation law at redshift 4: wide-spread, highly efficient star formation in the dust-obscured starburst galaxy GN20
We present high-resolution observations of the 880 m (rest-frame FIR)
continuum emission in the z4.05 submillimeter galaxy GN20 from the IRAM
Plateau de Bure Interferometer (PdBI). These data resolve the obscured star
formation in this unlensed galaxy on scales of
0.30.2 (2.11.3 kpc).
The observations reveal a bright (161 mJy) dusty starburst centered on the
cold molecular gas reservoir and showing a bar-like extension along the major
axis. The striking anti-correlation with the HST/WFC3 imaging suggests that the
copious dust surrounding the starburst heavily obscures the rest-frame
UV/optical emission. A comparison with 1.2 mm PdBI continuum data reveals no
evidence for variations in the dust properties across the source within the
uncertainties, consistent with extended star formation, and the peak star
formation rate surface density (1198 M yr kpc)
implies that the star formation in GN20 remains sub-Eddington on scales down to
3 kpc. We find that the star formation efficiency is highest in the central
regions of GN20, leading to a resolved star formation law with a power law
slope of , and that
GN20 lies above the sequence of normal star-forming disks, implying that the
dispersion in the star formation law is not due solely to morphology or choice
of conversion factor. These data extend previous evidence for a fixed star
formation efficiency per free-fall time to include the star-forming medium on
kpc-scales in a galaxy 12 Gyr ago.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, accepted to ApJ
Evidence for a clumpy, rotating gas disk in a submillimeter galaxy at z=4
We present Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) observations of the CO(2-1)
emission in the z=4.05 submillimeter galaxy (SMG) GN20. These high-resolution
data allow us to image the molecular gas at 1.3 kpc resolution just 1.6 Gyr
after the Big Bang. The data reveal a clumpy, extended gas reservoir, 14 +/- 4
kpc in diameter, in unprecedented detail. A dynamical analysis shows that the
data are consistent with a rotating disk of total dynamical mass 5.4 +/- 2.4 X
10^11 M_sun. We use this dynamical mass estimate to constrain the CO-to-H_2
mass conversion factor (alpha_CO), finding alpha_CO=1.1 +/- 0.6 M_sun (K km
s^-1 pc^2)^-1. We identify five distinct molecular gas clumps in the disk of
GN20 with masses a few percent of the total gas mass, brightness temperatures
of 16-31K, and surface densities of >3,200-4,500 X (alpha_CO/0.8) M_sun pc^-2.
Virial mass estimates indicate they could be self-gravitating, and we constrain
their CO-to-H_2 mass conversion factor to be <0.2-0.7 M_sun (K km s^-1
pc^2)^-1. A multiwavelength comparison demonstrates that the molecular gas is
concentrated in a region of the galaxy that is heavily obscured in the
rest-frame UV/optical. We investigate the spatially-resolved gas excitation and
find that the CO(6-5)/CO(2-1) ratio is constant with radius, consistent with
star formation occuring over a large portion of the disk. We discuss the
implications of our results in the context of different fueling scenarios for
SMGs.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
A molecular line scan in the Hubble Deep Field North
We present a molecular line scan in the Hubble Deep Field North (HDF-N) that covers the entire 3mm window (79-115 GHz) using the IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer. Our CO redshift coverage spans z2. We reach a CO detection limit that is deep enough to detect essentially all z>1 CO lines reported in the literature so far. We have developed and applied different line searching algorithms, resulting in the discovery of 17 line candidates. We estimate that the rate of false positive line detections is ~2/17. We identify optical/NIR counterparts from the deep ancillary database of the HDF-N for seven of these candidates and investigate their available SEDs. Two secure CO detections in our scan are identified with star-forming galaxies at z=1.784 and at z=2.047. These galaxies have colors consistent with the `BzK' color selection and they show relatively bright CO emission compared with galaxies of similar dust continuum luminosity. We also detect two spectral lines in the submillimeter galaxy HDF850.1 at z=5.183. We consider an additional 9 line candidates as high quality. Our observations also provide a deep 3mm continuum map (1-sigma noise level = 8.6 μJy/beam). Via a stacking approach, we find that optical/MIR bright galaxies contribute only to <50% of the SFR density at 1<z<3, unless high dust temperatures are invoked. The present study represents a first, fundamental step towards an unbiased census of molecular gas in `normal' galaxies at high-z, a crucial goal of extragalactic astronomy in the ALMA era
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