38 research outputs found
First results from the VIMOS-IFU survey of gravitationally lensing clusters at z~0.2
We present the on-going observational program of a VIMOS Integral Field Unit
survey of the central regions of massive, gravitational lensing galaxy clusters
at redshift z~0.2. We have observed six clusters using the low-resolution blue
grism (R about 200), and the spectroscopic survey is complemented by a wealth
of photometric data, including Hubble Space Telescope optical data and near
infrared VLT data. The principal scientific aims of this project are: the study
of the high-z lensed galaxies, the transformation and evolution of galaxies in
cluster cores and the use of multiple images to constrain cosmography. We
briefly report here on the first results from this project on the clusters
Abell 2667 and Abell 68.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures. To appear in "Sciences Perspectives for 3D
Spectroscopy. ESO Astrophysics Symposia". Ed by M.Kissler-Patig, M.M. Roth
and J.R. Wals
The VIMOS Ultra Deep Survey. Luminosity and stellar mass dependence of galaxy clustering at z~3
We present the study of the dependence of galaxy clustering on luminosity and
stellar mass in the redshift range 2z3.5 using 3236 galaxies with robust
spectroscopic redshifts from the VIMOS Ultra Deep Survey (VUDS). We measure the
two-point real-space correlation function for four volume-limited
stellar mass and four luminosity, M absolute magnitude selected,
sub-samples. We find that the scale dependent clustering amplitude
significantly increases with increasing luminosity and stellar mass indicating
a strong galaxy clustering dependence on these properties. This corresponds to
a strong relative bias between these two sub-samples of b/b=0.43.
Fitting a 5-parameter HOD model we find that the most luminous and massive
galaxies occupy the most massive dark matter haloes with
M = 10 h M. Similar to the
trends observed at lower redshift, the minimum halo mass M depends on
the luminosity and stellar mass of galaxies and grows from M
=10 hM to M=10 hM
from the faintest to the brightest among our galaxy sample, respectively. We
find the difference between these halo masses to be much more pronounced than
is observed for local galaxies of similar properties. Moreover, at z~3, we
observe that the masses at which a halo hosts, on average, one satellite and
one central galaxy is M4M over all luminosity ranges,
significantly lower than observed at z~0 indicating that the halo satellite
occupation increases with redshift. The luminosity and stellar mass dependence
is also reflected in the measurements of the large scale galaxy bias, which we
model as b(L)=1.92+25.36(L/L). We conclude our study
with measurements of the stellar-to-halo mass ratio (SHMR).Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, A&A in press, v2. revised discussion in sec.
5.5, changed Fig. 4 and Fig. 11, added reference
Anomalous radial expansion in central heavy-ion reactions
The expansion velocity profile in central heavy-ion reactions in the Fermi
energy domain is examined. The radial expansion is non-hubblean and in the
surface region it scales proportional to a higher exponent () of
the radius. The anomalous expansion velocity profile is accompanied by a power
law nucleon density profile in the surface region. Both these features of
central heavy-ion reactions disappear at higher energies, and the system
follows a uniform Hubble expansion ()
Rapidity distribution as a probe for elliptical flow at intermediate energies
Interplay between the spectator and participant matter in heavy-ion
collisions is investigated within isospin dependent quantum molecular dynamics
(IQMD) model in term of rapidity distribution of light charged particles. The
effect of different types and size rapidity distributions is studied in
elliptical flow. The elliptical flow patterns show important role of the nearby
spectator matter on the participant zone. This role is further explained on the
basis of passing time of the spectator and expansion time of the participant
zone. The transition from the in-plane to out-of-plane is observed only when
the mid-rapidity region is included in the rapidity bin, otherwise no
transition occurs. The transition energy is found to be highly sensitive
towards the size of the rapidity bin, while weakly on the type of the rapidity
distribution. The theoretical results are also compared with the experimental
findings and are found in good agreement.Comment: 8 figure
Mass and Isospin Effects in Multifragmentation
A systematic study of isospin effects in the breakup of projectile spectators
at relativistic energies has been performed with the ALADiN spectrometer at the
GSI laboratory (Darmstadt). Four different projectiles 197Au, 124La, 124Sn and
107Sn, all with an incident energy of 600 AMeV, have been used, thus allowing a
study of various combinations of masses and N/Z ratios in the entrance channel.
The measurement of the momentum vector and of the charge of all projectile
fragments with Z>1 entering the acceptance of the ALADiN magnet has been
performed with the high efficiency and resolution achieved with the TP-MUSIC IV
detector. The Rise and Fall behavior of the mean multiplicity of IMFs as a
function of Zbound and its dependence on the isotopic composition has been
determined for the studied systems. Other observables investigated so far
include mean N/Z values of the emitted light fragments and neutron
multiplicities. Qualitative agreement has been obtained between the observed
gross properties and the predictions of the Statistical Multifragmentation
Model.Comment: 10 pages,7 figure, 18th Nuclear Physics Division Conference of the
EPS, Prague, submitted to Nucl. Phys.
Photometric redshifts in the SWIRE Survey
We present the SWIRE Photometric Redshift Catalogue, 1025119 redshifts of
unprecedented reliability and accuracy. Our method is based on fixed galaxy and
QSO templates applied to data at 0.36-4.5 mu, and on a set of 4 infrared
emission templates fitted to infrared excess data at 3.6-170 mu. The code
involves two passes through the data, to try to optimize recognition of AGN
dust tori. A few carefully justified priors are used and are the key to
supression of outliers. Extinction, A_V, is allowed as a free parameter. We use
a set of 5982 spectroscopic redshifts, taken from the literature and from our
own spectroscopic surveys, to analyze the performance of our method as a
function of the number of photometric bands used in the solution and the
reduced chi^2. For 7 photometric bands the rms value of
(z_{phot}-z_{spec})/(1+z_{spec}) is 3.5%, and the percentage of catastrophic
outliers is ~1%.
We discuss the redshift distributions at 3.6 and 24 mu. In individual fields,
structure in the redshift distribution corresponds to clusters which can be
seen in the spectroscopic redshift distribution. 10% of sources in the SWIRE
photometric redshift catalogue have z >2, and 4% have z>3, so this catalogue is
a huge resource for high redshift galaxies.
A key parameter for understanding the evolutionary status of infrared
galaxies is L_{ir}/L_{opt}, which can be interpreted as the specific
star-formation rate for starbursts. For dust tori around Type 1 AGN,
L_{tor}/L_{opt} is a measure of the torus covering factor and we deduce a mean
covering factor of 40%.Comment: 22 pages, 23 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Revised
28/2/08. Version with figures at full resolution at
http://astro.ic.ac.uk/~mrr/swirephotzcat/swirephotz5.pdf.g
Tracing the cosmic growth of supermassive black holes to z~3 with Herschel
We study a sample of Herschel selected galaxies within the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey-South and the Cosmic Evolution Survey fields in the framework of the Photodetector Array Camera and Spectrometer (PACS) Evolutionary Probe project. Starting from the rich multiwavelength photometric data sets available in both fields, we perform a broad-band spectral energy distribution decomposition to disentangle the possible active galactic nucleus (AGN) contribution from that related to the host galaxy. We find that 37 per cent of the Herschel-selected sample shows signatures of nuclear activity at the 99 per cent confidence level. The probability of revealing AGN activity increases for bright (L 1â1000 > 10 11 L ? ) star-forming galaxies at z > 0.3, becoming about 80 per cent for the brightest (L 1â1000 > 10 12 L ? )
Infrared (IR) galaxies at zâ„1. Finally, we reconstruct the AGN bolometric luminosity function and the supermassive black hole growth rate across cosmic time up to z ⌠3 from a far-IR perspective. This work shows general agreement with most of the panchromatic estimates from the literature, with the global black hole growth peaking at z ⌠2 and reproducing the observed local black hole mass density with consistent values of the radiative efficiency Erad (âŒ0.07)
The ALPINE-ALMA [CII] survey: Star-formation-driven outflows and circumgalactic enrichment in the early Universe
We study the efficiency of galactic feedback in the early Universe by
stacking the [C II] 158 um emission in a large sample of normal star-forming galaxies at 4 < z < 6 from the ALMA Large Program to INvestigate [C II] at Early times (ALPINE) survey. Searching for typical signatures of outflows in the high-velocity tails of the stacked [C II] profile, we observe (i) deviations from a single-component Gaussian model in the combined residuals and (ii) broad emission in the stacked [C II] spectrum, with velocities of |v|<~ 500 km/s. The significance of these features increases when stacking the subset of galaxies with star formation rates (SFRs) higher than the median (SFRmed = 25 Msun/yr), thus confirming their star-formation-driven nature. The estimated mass outflow rates are comparable to the SFRs, yielding mass-loading factors of
the order of unity (similarly to local star-forming galaxies), suggesting that
star-formation-driven feedback may play a lesser role in quenching galaxies at z > 4. From the stacking analysis of the datacubes, we find that the combined [C II] core emission (|v|< 200 km/s) of the higher-SFR galaxies is extended on physical sizes of ~ 30 kpc (diameter scale), well beyond the analogous [C II] core emission of lower-SFR galaxies and the stacked far-infrared continuum. The detection of such extended metal-enriched gas, likely tracing circumgalactic gas enriched by past outflows, corroborates previous similar studies, confirming that baryon cycle and gas exchanges with the circumgalactic medium are at work in normal star-forming galaxies already at early epochs
Model-independent tracking of criticality signals in nuclear multifragmentation data
We look for signals of criticality in multifragment production in heavy-ion
collisions using model-independent universal fluctuations theory. The
phenomenon is studied as a function of system size, bombarding energy, and
impact parameter in a wide range of INDRA data. For very central collisions
(b/b_ma
The zCOSMOS redshift survey: the three-dimensional classification cube and bimodality in galaxy physical properties
Aims. We investigate the relationships between three main optical galaxy
observables (spectral properties, colours, and morphology), exploiting the data
set provided by the COSMOS/zCOSMOS survey. The purpose of this paper is to
define a simple galaxy classification cube, using a carefully selected sample
of around 1000 galaxies. Methods. Using medium resolution spectra of the first
1k zCOSMOS-bright sample, optical photometry from the Subaru/COSMOS
observations, and morphological measurements derived from ACS imaging, we
analyze the properties of the galaxy population out to z~1. Applying three
straightforward classification schemes (spectral, photometric, and
morphological), we identify two main galaxy types, which appear to be linked to
the bimodality of galaxy population. The three parametric classifications
constitute the axes of a "classification cube". Results. A very good agreement
exists between the classification from spectral data (quiescent/star-forming
galaxies) and that based on colours (red/blue galaxies). The third parameter
(morphology) is less well correlated with the first two: in fact a good
correlation between the spectral classification and that based on morphological
analysis (early-/late-type galaxies) is achieved only after partially
complementing the morphological classification with additional colour
information. Finally, analyzing the 3D-distribution of all galaxies in the
sample, we find that about 85% of the galaxies show a fully concordant
classification, being either quiescent, red, bulge-dominated galaxies (~20%) or
star-forming, blue, disk-dominated galaxies (~65%). These results imply that
the galaxy bimodality is a consistent behaviour both in morphology, colour and
dominant stellar population, at least out to z~1.Comment: 11 pages, Accepted for publication in A&