51 research outputs found
Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer Advancing from Conceptual Design
The Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer (MSE) project has completed its
Conceptual Design Phase. This paper is a status report of the MSE project
regarding its technical and programmatic progress. The technical status
includes its conceptual design and system performance, and highlights findings
and recommendations from the System and various subsystems design reviews. The
programmatic status includes the project organization and management plan for
the Preliminary Design Phase. In addition, this paper provides the latest
information related to the permitting process for Maunakea construction.Comment: 15 pages; Proceedings of SPIE Astronomical Telescopes +
Instrumentation 2018; Ground-based and Airborne Telescopes VI
New Exoplanet Surveys in the Canadian High Arctic at 80 Degrees North
Observations from near the Eureka station on Ellesmere Island, in the
Canadian High Arctic at 80 degrees North, benefit from 24-hour darkness
combined with dark skies and long cloud-free periods during the winter. Our
first astronomical surveys conducted at the site are aimed at transiting
exoplanets; compared to mid-latitude sites, the continuous darkness during the
Arctic winter greatly improves the survey's detection efficiency for
longer-period transiting planets. We detail the design, construction, and
testing of the first two instruments: a robotic telescope, and a set of very
wide-field imaging cameras. The 0.5m Dunlap Institute Arctic Telescope has a
0.8-square-degree field of view and is designed to search for potentially
habitable exoplanets around low-mass stars. The very wide field cameras have
several-hundred-square-degree fields of view pointed at Polaris, are designed
to search for transiting planets around bright stars, and were tested at the
site in February 2012. Finally, we present a conceptual design for the Compound
Arctic Telescope Survey (CATS), a multiplexed transient and transit search
system which can produce a 10,000-square-degree snapshot image every few
minutes throughout the Arctic winter.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, SPIE vol 8444, 201
Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer (MSE): Implementing systems engineering methodology for the development of a new facility
Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer will be a 10-m class highly multiplexed
survey telescope, including a segmented primary mirror and robotic fiber
positioners at the prime focus. MSE will replace the Canada France Hawaii
Telescope (CFHT) on the summit of Mauna Kea, Hawaii. The multiplexing includes
an array of over four thousand fibres feeding banks of spectrographs several
tens of meters away. We present an overview of the requirements flow-down for
MSE, from Science Requirements Document to Observatory Requirements Document.
We have developed the system performance budgets, along with updating the
budget architecture of our evolving project. We have also identified the links
between subsystems and system budgets (and subsequently science requirements)
and included system budget that are unique to MSE as a fiber-fed facility. All
of this has led to a set of Observatory Requirements that is fully consistent
with the Science Requirements.Comment: 20 pages; Proceedings of SPIE Astronomical Telescopes +
Instrumentation 2018; Modeling, Systems Engineering, and Project Management
for Astronomy VII
Cosmic Star Formation History and its Dependence on Galaxy Stellar Mass
We examine the cosmic star formation rate (SFR) and its dependence on galaxy
stellar mass over the redshift range 0.8 < z < 2 using data from the Gemini
Deep Deep Survey (GDDS). The SFR in the most massive galaxies (M > 10^{10.8}
M_sun) was six times higher at z = 2 than it is today. It drops steeply from z
= 2, reaching the present day value at z ~ 1. In contrast, the SFR density of
intermediate mass galaxies (10^{10.2} < M < 10^{10.8} M_sun) declines more
slowly and may peak or plateau at z ~ 1.5. We use the characteristic growth
time t_SFR = rho_M / rho_SFR to provide evidence of an associated transition in
massive galaxies from a burst to a quiescent star formation mode at z ~ 2.
Intermediate mass systems transit from burst to quiescent mode at z ~ 1, while
the lowest mass objects undergo bursts throughout our redshift range. Our
results show unambiguously that the formation era for galaxies was extended and
proceeded from high to low mass systems. The most massive galaxies formed most
of their stars in the first ~3 Gyr of cosmic history. Intermediate mass objects
continued to form their dominant stellar mass for an additional ~2 Gyr, while
the lowest mass systems have been forming over the whole cosmic epoch spanned
by the GDDS. This view of galaxy formation clearly supports `downsizing' in the
SFR where the most massive galaxies form first and galaxy formation proceeds
from larger to smaller mass scales.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
Evolved Galaxies at z > 1.5 from the Gemini Deep Deep Survey: The Formation Epoch of Massive Stellar Systems
We present spectroscopic evidence from the Gemini Deep Deep Survey (GDDS) for
a significant population of color-selected red galaxies at 1.3 < z < 2.2 whose
integrated light is dominated by evolved stars. Unlike radio-selected objects,
the z > 1.5 old galaxies have a sky density > 0.1 per sq. arcmin. Conservative
age estimates for 20 galaxies with z > 1.3; = 1.49, give a median age of
1.2 Gyr and = 2.4. One quarter of the galaxies have inferred z_f > 4.
Models restricted to abundances less than or equal to solar give median ages
and z_f of 2.3 Gyr and 3.3, respectively. These galaxies are among the most
massive and contribute approximately 50% of the stellar mass density at 1 < z <
2. The derived ages and most probable star formation histories suggest a high
star-formation-rate (300-500 solar masses per year) phase in the progenitor
population. We argue that most of the red galaxies are not descendants of the
typical z=3 Lyman break galaxies. Galaxies associated with luminous sub-mm
sources have the requisite star formation rates to be the progenitor
population. Our results point toward early and rapid formation for a
significant fraction of present day massive galaxies.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, Accepted for publication, ApJ Letter
Gemini Deep Deep Survey VI: Massive Hdelta-strong galaxies at z=1
We show that there has been a dramatic decline in the abundance of massive
galaxies with strong Hdelta stellar absorption lines from z=1.2 to the present.
These ``Hdelta-strong'', or HDS, galaxies have undergone a recent and rapid
break in their star-formation activity. Combining data from the Gemini Deep
Deep and the Sloan Digital Sky Surveys to make mass-matched samples
(M*>=10^10.2 Msun), with 25 and 50,255 galaxies, respectively), we find that
the fraction of galaxies in an HDS phase has decreased from about 50% at z=1.2
to a few percent today. This decrease in fraction is due to an actual decrease
in the number density of massive HDS systems by a factor of 2-4, coupled with
an increase in the number density of massive galaxies by about 30 percent. We
show that this result depends only weakly on the threshold chosen for the
Hdelta equivalent width to define HDS systems (if greater than 4 A) and
corresponds to a (1+z)^{2.5\pm 0.7} evolution. Spectral synthesis studies of
the high-redshift population using the PEGASE code, treating Hdelta_A, EW[OII],
Dn4000, and rest-frame colors, favor models in which the Balmer absorption
features in massive Hdelta-strong systems are the echoes of intense episodes of
star-formation that faded about 1 Gyr prior to the epoch of observation. The
z=1.4-2 epoch appears to correspond to a time at which massive galaxies are in
transition from a mode of sustained star formation to a relatively quiescent
mode with weak and rare star-formation episodes. We argue that the most likely
local descendants of the distant massive HDS galaxies are passively evolving
massive galaxies in the field and small groups.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures, 3 tables, uses emulateapj.sty; updated to match
the version accepted by ApJ. One figure added, conclusions unchange
The Gemini Deep Deep Survey: I. Introduction to the Survey, Catalogs and Composite Spectra
The Gemini Deep Deep Survey (GDDS) is an ultra-deep (K<20.6 mag, I<24.5 mag)
redshift survey targeting galaxies in the "redshift desert" between 1<z<2. The
primary goal of the survey is to constrain the space density at high redshift
of evolved high-mass galaxies. We obtained 309 spectra in four widely-separated
30 arcmin^2 fields using the Gemini North telescope and the Gemini Multi-Object
Spectrograph (GMOS). The spectra define a one-in-two sparse sample of the
reddest and most luminous galaxies near the I-K vs. I color-magnitude track
mapped out by passively evolving galaxies in the redshift interval 0.8<z<1.8.
This sample is augmented by a one-in-seven sparse sample of the remaining
high-redshift galaxy population. Typical exposures times were 20-30 hours per
field (in Nod & Shuffle mode), and the resulting spectra are the deepest ever
obtained. In this paper we present our sample of 309 spectra, along with
redshifts, identifications of spectral features, and photometry. The infrared
selection underlying the survey means that the GDDS is observing not only
star-forming galaxies, as in most high-redshift galaxy surveys, but also
quiescent evolved galaxies. The median redshift of the whole GDDS sample is
z=1.1. Together with the data and catalogs, we present a summary of the
criteria for selecting the GDDS fields, the rationale behind our mask designs,
an analysis of the completeness of the survey, and a description of the data
reduction procedures used. All data from the GDDS are publicly available.
(ABRIDGED)Comment: Accepted for publication in AJ. This paper makes very heavy use of
color. A nicer PDF version of this paper with full-resolution figures is
available at the GDDS web site: http://www.ociw.edu/lcirs/gdds.htm
Red Nuggets at z~1.5: Compact passive galaxies and the formation of the Kormendy Relation
We present the results of NICMOS imaging of a sample of 16 high mass
passively evolving galaxies with 1.3<z<2, taken primarily from the Gemini Deep
Deep Survey. Around 80% of galaxies in our sample have spectra dominated by
stars with ages >1 Gyr. Our rest-frame R-band images show that most of these
objects have compact regular morphologies which follow the classical R^1/4 law.
These galaxies scatter along a tight sequence in the Kormendy relation. Around
one-third of the massive red objects are extraordinarily compact, with
effective radii under one kiloparsec. Our NICMOS observations allow the
detection of such systems more robustly than is possible with optical
(rest-frame UV) data, and while similar systems have been seen at z>2, this is
the first time such systems have been detected in a rest-frame optical survey
at 1.3<z<2. We refer to these compact galaxies as "red nuggets". Similarly
compact massive galaxies are completely absent in the nearby Universe. We
introduce a new "stellar mass Kormendy relation" (stellar mass density vs size)
which isolates the effects of size evolution from those of luminosity and color
evolution. The 1.1 < z < 2 passive galaxies have mass densities that are an
order of magnitude larger then early type galaxies today and are comparable to
the compact distant red galaxies at 2 < z < 3. We briefly consider mechanisms
for size evolution in contemporary models focusing on equal-mass mergers and
adiabatic expansion driven by stellar mass loss. Neither of these mechanisms
appears able to transform the high-redshift Kormendy relation into its local
counterpart. Comment: Accepted version (to appear in ApJ
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