979 research outputs found

    Physical Properties of Four SZE-Selected Galaxy Clusters in the Southern Cosmology Survey

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    We present the optical and X-ray properties of four clusters recently discovered by the South Pole Telescope (SPT) using the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (SZE). The four clusters are located in one of the common survey areas of the southern sky that is also being targeted by the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) and imaged by the CTIO Blanco 4-m telescope. Based on publicly available griz optical images and XMM-Newton and ROSAT X-ray observations we analyse the physical properties of these clusters and obtain photometric redshifts, luminosities, richness and mass estimates. Each cluster contains a central elliptical whose luminosity is consistent with SDSS cluster studies. Our mass estimates are well above the nominal detection limit of SPT and ACT; the new SZE clusters are very likely massive systems with M>~5x10^14 M_sun.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. ApJL accepte

    Southern Cosmology Survey III: QSO's from Combined GALEX and Optical Photometry

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    We present catalogs of QSO candidates selected using photometry from GALEX combined with SDSS in the Stripe 82 region and Blanco Cosmology Survey (BCS) near declination -55 degrees. The SDSS region contains ~700 objects with magnitude i < 20 and ~3600 objects with i < 21.5 in a ~60 square degree sky region, while the BCS region contains ~280 objects with magnitude i < 20 and ~2000 objects with i < 21.5 for a 11 square degree sky region that is being observed by three current microwave Sunyaev-Zeldovich surveys. Our QSO catalog is the first one in the BCS region. Deep GALEX exposures (~2000 seconds in FUV and NUV, except in three fields) provide high signal-to-noise photometry in the GALEX bands (FUV, NUV < 24.5 mag). From this data, we select QSO candidates using only GALEX and optical r-band photometry, using the method given by Atlee and Gould (2008). In the Stripe 82 field, 60% (30%) of the GALEX selected QSO's with optical magnitude i<20 (i<21.5) also appear in the Richards et al. (2008) QSO catalog constructed using 5-band optical SDSS photometry. Comparison with the same catalog by Richards et al. shows that the completeness of the sample is approximately 40%(25%). However, for regions of the sky with very low dust extinction, like the BCS 23hr field and the Stripe 82 between 0 and 10 degrees in RA, our completeness is close to 95%, demonstrating that deep GALEX observations are almost as efficient as multi-wavelength observations at finding QSO's. GALEX observations thus provide a viable alternate route to QSO catalogs in sky regions where u-band optical photometry is not available. The full catalog is available at http://www.ice.csic.es/personal/jimenez/PHOTOZComment: Submitted to ApJ

    New XMM-Newton observation of the Phoenix cluster: properties of the cool core

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    (Abridged) We present a spectral analysis of a deep (220 ks) XMM-Newton observation of the Phoenix cluster (SPT-CL J2344-4243), which we also combine with Chandra archival ACIS-I data. We extract CCD and RGS X-ray spectra from the core region to search for the signature of cold gas, and constrain the mass deposition rate in the cooling flow which is thought to be responsible of the massive star formation episode observed in the BCG. We find an average mass deposition rate of M˙=620(190+200)stat(50+150)systM\dot M = 620 (-190 +200)_{stat} (-50 +150)_{syst} M_\odot/yr in the temperature range 0.3-3.0 keV from MOS data. A temperature-resolved analysis shows that a significant amount of gas is deposited only above 1.8 keV, while upper limits of the order of hundreds of MM_\odot/yr can be put in the 0.3-1.8 keV temperature range. From pn data we obtain M˙=210(80+85)stat(35+60)systM\dot M = 210 (-80 +85)_{stat} ( -35 +60)_{syst} M_\odot/yr, and the upper limits from the temperature-resolved analysis are typically a factor of 3 lower than MOS data. In the RGS spectrum, no line emission from ionization states below Fe XXIII is seen above 12A˚12 \AA, and the amount of gas cooling below 3\sim 3 keV has a best-fit value M˙=122122+343\dot M = 122_{-122}^{+343} MM_{\odot}/yr. In addition, our analysis of the FIR SED of the BCG based on Herschel data provides SFR=(530±50)MSFR = (530 \pm 50) M_\odot/yr, significantly lower than previous estimates by a factor 1.5. Current data are able to firmly identify substantial amount of cooling gas only above 1.8 keV in the core of the Phoenix cluster. While MOS data analysis is consistent with values as high as M˙1000\dot M \sim 1000 within 1σ1 \sigma, pn data provide M˙<500M\dot M < 500 M_\odot yr1^{-1} at 3σ3\sigma c.l. at temperature below 1.8 keV. At present, this discrepancy cannot be explained on the basis of known calibration uncertainties or other sources of statistical noise.Comment: A&A in press, typos corrected, revised text according to published versio

    Southern Cosmology Survey II: Massive Optically-Selected Clusters from 70 square degrees of the SZE Common Survey Area

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    We present a catalog of 105 rich and massive (M>3\times10^{14}M_{\sun}) optically-selected clusters of galaxies extracted from 70 square-degrees of public archival griz imaging from the Blanco 4-m telescope acquired over 45 nights between 2005 and 2007. We use the clusters' optically-derived properties to estimate photometric redshifts, optical luminosities, richness, and masses. We complement the optical measurements with archival XMM-Newton and ROSAT X-ray data which provide additional luminosity and mass constraints on a modest fraction of the cluster sample. Two of our clusters show clear evidence for central lensing arcs; one of these has a spectacular large-diameter, nearly-complete Einstein Ring surrounding the brightest cluster galaxy. A strong motivation for this study is to identify the massive clusters that are expected to display prominent signals from the Sunyaev-Zeldovich Effect (SZE) and therefore be detected in the wide-area mm-band surveys being conducted by both the Atacama Cosmology Telescope and the South Pole Telescope. The optical sample presented here will be useful for verifying new SZE cluster candidates from these surveys, for testing the cluster selection function, and for stacking analyzes of the SZE data.Comment: 13 pages, 7 Figures. Accepted for publication to ApJSS. Full resolution plots and additional material available at http://peumo.rutgers.edu/~felipe/e-prints

    Colour gradients in normal and compact early-type galaxies at 1<z<2

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    We have derived colour gradients for a sample of 20 early-type galaxies (ETGs) at 1 < z_spec < 2 selected from the GOODS-South field. The sample includes both normal ETGs (13) having effective radii comparable to the mean radius of local ones and compact ETGs (7) having effective radii from two to six times smaller. Colour gradients have been derived in the F606W-F850LP bands (UV-U rest-frame) taking advantage of the ultradeep HST-ACS observations covering this field and providing a spatial resolution of about 0.8 kpc at the redshift of the galaxies. Despite of the narrow wavelength baseline covered (1000 Angstrom), sampling approximatively the emission dominated by the same stellar population, we detect significant radial colour variations in 50 per cent of our sample. In particular, we find five ETGs with positive colour gradients (cores bluer than the external regions), and five galaxies with negative colour gradients (cores redder than the external regions), as commonly observed in the local Universe. These results show that at 1 < z < 2, when the Universe was only 3-4 Gyr old, ETGs constituted a composite population of galaxies whose different assembly histories have generated different stellar distributions with the bluest stellar population either in the center or in the outskirts as well as throughout the whole galaxy. Moreover, we find that compact galaxies seem to preferentially show a blue cores while moving towards normal galaxies, central stellar populations become progressively redder. Nonetheless, the narrow baseline covered together with the low statistics still prevent us to be conclusive about a possible physical connection between colour gradients and the degree of compactness of high-z ETGs.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    A robust morphological classification of high-redshift galaxies using support vector machines on seeing limited images. II. Quantifying morphological k-correction in the COSMOS field at 1<z<2: Ks band vs. I band

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    We quantify the effects of \emph{morphological k-correction} at 1<z<21<z<2 by comparing morphologies measured in the K and I-bands in the COSMOS area. Ks-band data have indeed the advantage of probing old stellar populations for z<2z<2, enabling a determination of galaxy morphological types unaffected by recent star formation. In paper I we presented a new non-parametric method to quantify morphologies of galaxies on seeing limited images based on support vector machines. Here we use this method to classify \sim5000050 000 KsKs selected galaxies in the COSMOS area observed with WIRCam at CFHT. The obtained classification is used to investigate the redshift distributions and number counts per morphological type up to z2z\sim2 and to compare to the results obtained with HST/ACS in the I-band on the same objects from other works. We associate to every galaxy with Ks<21.5Ks<21.5 and z<2z<2 a probability between 0 and 1 of being late-type or early-type. The classification is found to be reliable up to z2z\sim2. The mean probability is p0.8p\sim0.8. It decreases with redshift and with size, especially for the early-type population but remains above p0.7p\sim0.7. The classification is globally in good agreement with the one obtained using HST/ACS for z<1z<1. Above z1z\sim1, the I-band classification tends to find less early-type galaxies than the Ks-band one by a factor \sim1.5 which might be a consequence of morphological k-correction effects. We argue therefore that studies based on I-band HST/ACS classifications at z>1z>1 could be underestimating the elliptical population. [abridged]Comment: accepted for publication in A&A, updated with referee comments, 12 pages, 10 figure

    Imprints of Environment on Cluster and Field Late-type Galaxies at z~1

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    We present a comparison of late-type galaxies (Sa and later) in intermediate redshift clusters and the field using ACS imaging of four cluster fields: CL0152-1357, CL1056-0337 (MS1054), CL1604+4304, and CL1604+4321. Concentration, asymmetry, and clumpiness parameters are calculated for each galaxy in blue (F606W or F625W) and red (F775W or F814W) filters. Galaxy half-light radii, disk scale lengths, color gradients, and overall color are compared. We find marginally significant differences in the asymmetry distributions of spiral and irregular galaxies in the X-ray luminous and X-ray faint clusters. The massive clusters contain fewer galaxies with large asymmetries. The physical sizes of the cluster and field populations are similar; no significant differences are found in half-light radii or disk scale lengths. The most significant difference is in rest-frame UBU-B color. Late-type cluster galaxies are significantly redder, 0.3\sim 0.3 magnitudes at rest-frame UBU-B, than their field counterparts. Moreover, the intermediate-redshift cluster galaxies tend to have blue inward color gradients, in contrast to the field galaxies, but similar to late-type galaxies in low redshift clusters. These blue inward color gradients are likely to be the result of enhanced nuclear star formation rates relative to the outer disk. Based on the significant rest-frame color difference, we conclude that late-type cluster members at z0.9z\sim0.9 are not a pristine infalling field population; some difference in past and/or current star formation history is already present. This points to high redshift ``groups'', or filaments with densities similar to present-day groups, as the sites where the first major effects of environment are imprinted.Comment: updated titl
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