454 research outputs found
Ferrimagnetism in sputtered MnxCoGe thin films
Investigations into the magnetic properties of sputtered MnxCoGe films in the
range 0.8 <= x <= 2.5 uncovered ferrimagnetic order, unlike the ferromagnetic
order reported in bulk samples. These films formed hexagonal Ni2In-type
structures in all measured compositions. While the Curie temperatures of the
films are comparable to those of hexagonal bulk MnCoGe, here is a reduction in
the magnetization of the MnxCoGe film relative to bulk MnCoGe, and a
magnetization compensation point is observed in the x < 1 samples. To
understand the behavior, we calculated the magnetic moments of Mn-antisite
defects in MnCoGe with density-function theory calculations. Models constructed
from the calculation suggest that films become ferrimagnetic due to the
presence of Mn on the Co and Ge sites. In the x < 1 samples, these defects
arose from the disorder in the films, whereas for x > 1, the excess Mn was
driven onto the antisites and produced ferrimagnetic order.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
CLASH-VLT: spectroscopic confirmation of a z=6.11 quintuply lensed galaxy in the Frontier Fields Cluster RXC J2248.7-4431
We present VIsible Multi-Object Spectrograph (VIMOS) observations of a z 6
galaxy quintuply imaged by the Frontier Fields galaxy cluster RXC J2248.7-4431
(z=0.348). This sub-L^*, high-z galaxy has been recently discovered by Monna et
al. (2013) using dropout techniques with the 16-band HST photometry acquired as
part of the Cluster Lensing And Supernova survey with Hubble (CLASH). Obtained
as part of the CLASH-VLT survey, the VIMOS medium-resolution spectra of this
source show a very faint continuum between ~8700A and ~9300A and a prominent
emission line at 8643A, which can be readily identified with Lyman-alpha at
z=6.110. The emission line exhibits an asymmetric profile, with a more
pronounced red wing. The rest-frame equivalent width of the line is EW=79+-10A.
After correcting for magnification, the star-formation rate (SFR) estimated
from the Lya line is SFR(Lya)=11 M_{sol}/yr and that estimated from the UV data
is SFR(UV)=3 M_{sol}/yr. We estimate that the effective radius of the source is
R_e6
M_{sol}/yr/kpc^2 and, using the Kennicutt-Schmidt relation, a gas surface mass
density Sigma_{gas}>10^3 M_{sol}/pc^2. Our results support the idea that this
magnified, distant galaxy is a young and compact object with 0.4 L^* at z=6,
with comparable amount of mass in gas and stars. Future follow-up observations
with ALMA will provide valuable insight into the SFR and molecular gas content
of this source. In the spirit of the Frontier Fields initiative, we also
publish the redshifts of several multiply imaged sources and other background
objects which will help improving the strong lensing model of this galaxy
cluster.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, Accepted for publication in A&A (minor
changes, published version
The ALHAMBRA Survey: Bayesian Photometric Redshifts with 23 bands for 3 squared degrees
The ALHAMBRA (Advance Large Homogeneous Area Medium Band Redshift
Astronomical) survey has observed 8 different regions of the sky, including
sections of the COSMOS, DEEP2, ELAIS, GOODS-N, SDSS and Groth fields using a
new photometric system with 20 contiguous ~ filters covering the
optical range, combining them with deep imaging. The observations,
carried out with the Calar Alto 3.5m telescope using the wide field (0.25 sq.
deg FOV) optical camera LAICA and the NIR instrument Omega-2000, correspond to
~700hrs on-target science images. The photometric system was designed to
maximize the effective depth of the survey in terms of accurate spectral-type
and photo-zs estimation along with the capability of identification of
relatively faint emission lines. Here we present multicolor photometry and
photo-zs for ~438k galaxies, detected in synthetic F814W images, complete down
to I~24.5 AB, taking into account realistic noise estimates, and correcting by
PSF and aperture effects with the ColorPro software. The photometric ZP have
been calibrated using stellar transformation equations and refined internally,
using a new technique based on the highly robust photometric redshifts measured
for emission line galaxies. We calculate photometric redshifts with the BPZ2
code, which includes new empirically calibrated templates and priors. Our
photo-zs have a precision of for I<22.5 and 1.4% for
22.5<I<24.5. Precisions of less than 0.5% are reached for the brighter
spectroscopic sample, showing the potential of medium-band photometric surveys.
The global shows a mean redshift =0.56 for I=0.86 for
I<24.5 AB. The data presented here covers an effective area of 2.79 sq. deg,
split into 14 strips of 58.5'x15.5' and represents ~32 hrs of on-target.Comment: The catalog data and a full resolution version of this paper is
available at https://cloud.iaa.csic.es/alhambra
CLASH: New Multiple-Images Constraining the Inner Mass Profile of MACS J1206.2-0847
We present a strong-lensing analysis of the galaxy cluster MACS J1206.2-0847
(=0.44) using UV, Optical, and IR, HST/ACS/WFC3 data taken as part of the
CLASH multi-cycle treasury program, with VLT/VIMOS spectroscopy for some of the
multiply-lensed arcs. The CLASH observations, combined with our mass-model,
allow us to identify 47 new multiply-lensed images of 12 distant sources. These
images, along with the previously known arc, span the redshift range 1\la
z\la5.5, and thus enable us to derive a detailed mass distribution and to
accurately constrain, for the first time, the inner mass-profile of this
cluster. We find an inner profile slope of (in the range [1\arcsec, 53\arcsec], or 5\la r \la300 kpc), as
commonly found for relaxed and well-concentrated clusters. Using the many
systems uncovered here we derive credible critical curves and Einstein radii
for different source redshifts. For a source at , the critical
curve encloses a large area with an effective Einstein radius of
\theta_{E}=28\pm3\arcsec, and a projected mass of . From the current understanding of structure formation in
concordance cosmology, these values are relatively high for clusters at
, so that detailed studies of the inner mass distribution of clusters
such as MACS J1206.2-0847 can provide stringent tests of the CDM
paradigm.Comment: 7 pages, 1 table, 4 figures; submitted to ApJ Letters; V3: minor
correction
The ALHAMBRA survey: evolution of galaxy spectral segregation
We study the clustering of galaxies as a function of spectral type and
redshift in the range using data from the Advanced Large
Homogeneous Area Medium Band Redshift Astronomical (ALHAMBRA) survey. The data
cover 2.381 deg in 7 fields, after applying a detailed angular selection
mask, with accurate photometric redshifts [] down to
. From this catalog we draw five fixed number density,
redshift-limited bins. We estimate the clustering evolution for two different
spectral populations selected using the ALHAMBRA-based photometric templates:
quiescent and star-forming galaxies. For each sample, we measure the real-space
clustering using the projected correlation function. Our calculations are
performed over the range Mpc, allowing us to find a
steeper trend for Mpc, which is especially clear for
star-forming galaxies. Our analysis also shows a clear early differentiation in
the clustering properties of both populations: star-forming galaxies show
weaker clustering with evolution in the correlation length over the analysed
redshift range, while quiescent galaxies show stronger clustering already at
high redshifts, and no appreciable evolution. We also perform the bias
calculation where similar segregation is found, but now it is among the
quiescent galaxies where a growing evolution with redshift is clearer. These
findings clearly corroborate the well known colour-density relation, confirming
that quiescent galaxies are mainly located in dark matter halos that are more
massive than those typically populated by star-forming galaxies.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, accepted by Ap
The ALHAMBRA survey : Estimation of the clustering signal encoded in the cosmic variance
The relative cosmic variance () is a fundamental source of
uncertainty in pencil-beam surveys and, as a particular case of count-in-cell
statistics, can be used to estimate the bias between galaxies and their
underlying dark-matter distribution. Our goal is to test the significance of
the clustering information encoded in the measured in the ALHAMBRA
survey. We measure the cosmic variance of several galaxy populations selected
with band luminosity at as the intrinsic dispersion in
the number density distribution derived from the 48 ALHAMBRA subfields. We
compare the observational with the cosmic variance of the dark
matter expected from the theory, . This provides an
estimation of the galaxy bias . The galaxy bias from the cosmic variance is
in excellent agreement with the bias estimated by two-point correlation
function analysis in ALHAMBRA. This holds for different redshift bins, for red
and blue subsamples, and for several band luminosity selections. We find
that increases with the band luminosity and the redshift, as expected
from previous work. Moreover, red galaxies have a larger bias than blue
galaxies, with a relative bias of . Our results
demonstrate that the cosmic variance measured in ALHAMBRA is due to the
clustering of galaxies and can be used to characterise the affecting
pencil-beam surveys. In addition, it can also be used to estimate the galaxy
bias from a method independent of correlation functions.Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics, in press. 9 pages, 4 figures, 3 table
The ALHAMBRA survey: Accurate merger fractions by PDF analysis of photometric close pairs
Our goal is to develop and test a novel methodology to compute accurate close
pair fractions with photometric redshifts. We improve the current methodologies
to estimate the merger fraction f_m from photometric redshifts by (i) using the
full probability distribution functions (PDFs) of the sources in redshift
space, (ii) including the variation in the luminosity of the sources with z in
both the selection of the samples and in the luminosity ratio constrain, and
(iii) splitting individual PDFs into red and blue spectral templates to deal
robustly with colour selections. We test the performance of our new methodology
with the PDFs provided by the ALHAMBRA photometric survey. The merger fractions
and rates from the ALHAMBRA survey are in excellent agreement with those from
spectroscopic work, both for the general population and for red and blue
galaxies. With the merger rate of bright (M_B <= -20 - 1.1z) galaxies evolving
as (1+z)^n, the power-law index n is larger for blue galaxies (n = 2.7 +- 0.5)
than for red galaxies (n = 1.3 +- 0.4), confirming previous results.
Integrating the merger rate over cosmic time, we find that the average number
of mergers per galaxy since z = 1 is N_m = 0.57 +- 0.05 for red galaxies and
N_m = 0.26 +- 0.02 for blue galaxies. Our new methodology exploits
statistically all the available information provided by photometric redshift
codes and provides accurate measurements of the merger fraction by close pairs
only using photometric redshifts. Current and future photometric surveys will
benefit of this new methodology.Comment: Submitted to A&A, 15 pages, 15 figures, 6 tables. Comments are
welcome. Close pair systems available at
https://cloud.iaa.csic.es/alhambra/catalogues/ClosePairs
Stellar populations of galaxies in the ALHAMBRA survey up to . I. MUFFIT: A Multi-Filter Fitting code for stellar population diagnostics
We present MUFFIT, a new generic code optimized to retrieve the main stellar
population parameters of galaxies in photometric multi-filter surveys, and we
check its reliability and feasibility with real galaxy data from the ALHAMBRA
survey. Making use of an error-weighted -test, we compare the
multi-filter fluxes of galaxies with the synthetic photometry of mixtures of
two single stellar populations at different redshifts and extinctions, to
provide through a Monte Carlo method the most likely range of stellar
population parameters (mainly ages and metallicities), extinctions, redshifts,
and stellar masses. To improve the diagnostic reliability, MUFFIT identifies
and removes from the analysis those bands that are significantly affected by
emission lines. We highlight that the retrieved age-metallicity locus for a
sample of early-type galaxies in ALHAMBRA at different stellar
mass bins are in very good agreement with the ones from SDSS spectroscopic
diagnostics. Moreover, a one-to-one comparison between the redshifts, ages,
metallicities, and stellar masses derived spectroscopically for SDSS and by
MUFFIT for ALHAMBRA reveals good qualitative agreements in all the parameters.
In addition, and using as input the results from photometric-redshift codes,
MUFFIT improves the photometric-redshift accuracy by -, and it
also detects nebular emissions in galaxies, providing physical information
about their strengths. Our results show the potential of multi-filter galaxy
data to conduct reliable stellar population studies with the appropiate
analysis techniques, as MUFFIT.Comment: 31 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The ALHAMBRA survey : band luminosity function of quiescent and star-forming galaxies at by PDF analysis
Our goal is to study the evolution of the band luminosity function (LF)
since using ALHAMBRA data. We used the photometric redshift and the
band selection magnitude probability distribution functions (PDFs) of those
ALHAMBRA galaxies with mag to compute the posterior LF. We
statistically studied quiescent and star-forming galaxies using the template
information encoded in the PDFs. The LF covariance matrix in
redshift-magnitude-galaxy type space was computed, including the cosmic
variance. That was estimated from the intrinsic dispersion of the LF
measurements in the 48 ALHAMBRA sub-fields. The uncertainty due to the
photometric redshift prior is also included in our analysis. We modelled the LF
with a redshift-dependent Schechter function affected by the same selection
effects than the data. The measured ALHAMBRA LF at and the
evolving Schechter parameters both for quiescent and star-forming galaxies
agree with previous results in the literature. The estimated redshift evolution
of is and , and of is
and . The measured faint-end slopes are and . We find a significant
population of faint quiescent galaxies, modelled by a second Schechter function
with slope . We find a factor decrease in the
luminosity density of star-forming galaxies, and a factor
increase in the of quiescent ones since , confirming the continuous
build-up of the quiescent population with cosmic time. The contribution of the
faint quiescent population to increases from 3% at to 6% at .
The developed methodology will be applied to future multi-filter surveys such
as J-PAS.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. 25 pages, 20
figures, 7 table
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