2,241 research outputs found
Selection of AGN candidates in the GOODS-South Field through SPITZER/MIPS 24 m variability
We present a study of galaxies showing mid-infrared variability in data taken
in the deepest Spitzer/MIPS 24 m surveys in the GOODS-South field. We
divide the dataset in epochs and subepochs to study the long-term
(months-years) and the short-term (days) variability. We use a
-statistics method to select AGN candidates with a probability
1% that the observed variability is due to statistical errors alone. We find 39
(1.7% of the parent sample) sources that show long-term variability and 55
(2.2% of the parent sample) showing short-term variability. That is, 0.03
sources arcmin for both, long-term and short-term variable
sources. After removing the expected number of false positives inherent to the
method, the estimated percentages are 1.0% and 1.4% of the parent sample for
the long-term and short-term respectively. We compare our candidates with AGN
selected in the X-ray and radio bands, and AGN candidates selected by their IR
emission. Approximately, 50% of the MIPS 24 m variable sources would be
identified as AGN with these other methods. Therefore, MIPS 24 m
variability is a new method to identify AGN candidates, possibly dust obscured
and low luminosity AGN, that might be missed by other methods. However, the
contribution of the MIPS 24 m variable identified AGN to the general AGN
population is small ( 13%) in GOODS-South.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
How is star formation fed and quenched in massive galaxies at high redshift?
Observations of the location and kinematics of the atomic gas (HI) and the continuum radio emission from high redshift galaxies would mean a huge step forward in our understanding of galaxy evolution. We now have a secure global picture of the stellar content of massive galaxies and their precursors up to z~4. But we still have to understand why star formation in these systems started early and quenched some time after, a scenario known as downsizing which, at face value, conflicts with the predictions from the current hierarchical galaxy formation paradigm. SKA will provide the missing piece to solve the puzzle: information about the amounts of gas falling into galaxies to form stars, as well as data to measure when and how the star formation turns off as the gas stops cooling due to still to be understood feedback mechanisms, such as (radio mode) obscured nuclear activity.PGP-G acknowledges support from Spanish Government MINECO AYA2012-31277 Grant. JIGS acknowledges support from the Spanish Ministry for Economy and Competitiveness AYA2011-29517-C03-02. AFS acknowledges support from the Spanish Ministry for Economy
and Competitiveness and FEDER funds through grants AYA2010-22111-C03-02 and
AYA2013-48623-C2-2, and Generalitat Valenciana project PROMETEOII/2014/060.Peer reviewe
Formation of S0 galaxies through mergers. Bulge-disc structural coupling resulting from major mergers
Observations reveal a strong structural coupling between bulge and disc in S0
galaxies, which seems difficult to explain if they have formed from supposedly
catastrophic events such as major mergers. We face this question by quantifying
the bulge-disc coupling in dissipative simulations of major and minor mergers
that result in realistic S0s. We have studied the dissipative N-body binary
merger simulations from the GalMer database that give rise to realistic,
relaxed E/S0 and S0 remnants (67 major and 29 minor mergers). We simulate
surface brightness profiles of these S0-like remnants in the K-band, mimicking
typical observational conditions, to perform bulge-disc decompositions
analogous to those carried out in real S0s. The global bulge-disc structure of
these remnants has been compared with real data, and they distribute in the B/T
- r_e - h_d parameter space consistently with real bright S0s, where B/T is the
bulge-to-total luminosity ratio, r_e is the bulge effective radius, and h_d is
the disc scalelength. Major mergers can rebuild a bulge-disc coupling in the
remnants after having destroyed the structures of the progenitors, whereas
minor mergers directly preserve them. Remnants exhibit B/T and r_e/h_d spanning
a wide range of values, and their distribution is consistent with observations.
Many remnants have bulge Sersic indices ranging 1<n<2, flat appearance, and
contain residual star formation in embedded discs, a result which agrees with
the presence of pseudobulges in real S0s. Contrary to the popular view, mergers
(and in particular, major events) can result in S0 remnants with realistically
coupled bulge-disc structures in less than ~3 Gyr. In conclusion, the
bulge-disc coupling and the presence of pseudobulges in real S0s cannot be used
as an argument against the possible major-merger origin of these galaxies.Comment: 23 pages, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
(version after minor language corrections
Evolution of the anti-truncated stellar profiles of S0 galaxies since in the SHARDS survey: I - Sample and Methods
The controversy about the origin of the structure of S0--E/S0 galaxies may be
due to the difficulty of comparing surface brightness profiles with different
depths, photometric corrections and PSF effects (almost always ignored). We aim
to quantify the properties of Type-III (anti-truncated) discs in a sample of S0
galaxies at 0.2<z<0.6. In this paper, we present the sample selection and
describe in detail the methods to robustly trace the structure in their
outskirts and correct for PSF effects. We have selected and classified a sample
of 150 quiescent galaxies at 0.2<z<0.6 in the GOODS-N field. We perform a
quantitative structural analysis of 44 S0-E/S0 galaxies. We corrected their
surface brightness profiles for PSF distortions and analysed the biases in the
structural and photometric parameters when the PSF correction is not applied.
Additionally, we have developed Elbow, an automatic statistical method to
determine whether a possible break is significant - or not - and its type and
made it publicly available. We found 14 anti-truncated S0-E/S0 galaxies in the
range 0.2<z<0.6 (~30% of the final sample). This fraction is similar to the
those reported in the local Universe. In our sample, ~25% of the Type-III
breaks observed in PSF-uncorrected profiles are artifacts, and their profiles
turn into a Type I after PSF correction. PSF effects also soften Type-II
profiles. We found that the profiles of Type-I S0 and E/S0 galaxies of our
sample are compatible with the inner profiles of the Type-III, in contrast with
the outer profiles. We have obtained the first robust and reliable sample of 14
anti-truncated S0--E/S0 galaxies beyond the local Universe, in the range
0.2<z<0.6. PSF effects significantly affect the shape of the surface brightness
profiles in galaxy discs even in the case of the narrow PSF of HST/ACS images,
so future studies on the subject should make an effort to correct them.Comment: Accepted for publishing in Astronomy & Astrophysics. 75 pages, 57
figure
Selection of AGN candidates in the GOODS-South Field through SPITZER/MIPS 24 ÎŒm variability
We present a study of galaxies showing mid-infrared variability in data taken in the deepest Spitzer/MIPS 24 ÎŒm surveys in the Great Observatory Origins Deep Survey South field. We divide the data set in epochs and subepochs to study the long-term (monthsâyears) and the short-term (days) variability. We use a Ï2-statistics method to select active galactic nucleus (AGN) candidates with a probability â€1âperâcent that the observed variability is due to statistical errors alone. We find 39 (1.7âperâcent of the parent sample) sources that show long-term variability and 55 (2.2âperâcent of the parent sample) showing short-term variability. That is, 0.03 sources Ă arcminâ2 for both, long-term and short-term variable sources. After removing the expected number of false positives inherent to the method, the estimated percentages are 1.0 and 1.4âperâcent of the parent sample for the long term and short term, respectively. We compare our candidates with AGN selected in the X-ray and radio bands, and AGN candidates selected by their IR emission. Approximately, 50âperâcent of the MIPS (Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer) 24 ÎŒm variable sources would be identified as AGN with these other methods. Therefore, MIPS 24 ÎŒm variability is a new method to identify AGN candidates, possibly dust obscured and low-luminosity AGN, that might be missed by other methods. However, the contribution of the MIPS 24 ÎŒm variable identified AGN to the general AGN population is small (â€13âperâcent) in GOODS-South.JG-G, AA-H, and AH-C acknowledge support from the Augusto G. Linares research programme of the Universidad de Cantabria and from the Spanish Plan Nacional through grant AYA2012-31447. PGP-G acknowledges support from MINECO grant AYA2012-31277.Peer Reviewe
Exploring the evolutionary paths of the most massive galaxies since z~2
We use Spitzer MIPS data from the FIDEL Legacy Project in the Extended Groth
Strip to analyze the stellar mass assembly of massive (M>10^11 M_sun) galaxies
at z<2 as a function of structural parameters. We find 24 micron emission for
more than 85% of the massive galaxies morphologically classified as disks, and
for more than 57% of the massive systems morphologically classified as
spheroids at any redshift, with about 8% of sources harboring a bright X-ray
and/or infrared emitting AGN. More noticeably, 60% of all compact massive
galaxies at z=1-2 are detected at 24 micron, even when rest-frame optical
colors reveal that they are dead and evolving passively. For spheroid-like
galaxies at a given stellar mass, the sizes of MIPS non-detections are smaller
by a factor of 1.2 in comparison with IR-bright sources. We find that disk-like
massive galaxies present specific SFRs ranging from 0.04 to 0.2 Gyr^-1 at z<1
(SFRs ranging from 1 to 10 M_sun/yr), typically a factor of 3-6 higher than
massive spheroid-like objects in the same redshift range. At z>1, and more
pronouncedly at z>1.3, the median specific SFRs of the disks and spheroids
detected by MIPS are very similar, ranging from 0.1 to 1 Gyr^-1 (SFR=10-200
M_sun/yr). We estimate that massive spheroid-like galaxies may have doubled (at
the most) their stellar mass from star-forming events at z<2: less than 20%
mass increase at 1.7<z<2.0, up to 40% more at 1.1<z<1.7, and less than 20%
additional increase at z<1. Disk-like galaxies may have tripled (at the most)
their stellar mass at z<2 from star formation alone: up to 40% mass increase at
1.7<z<2.0, and less than 180% additional increase below z=1.7 occurred at a
steady rate.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 10 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
Star-formation histories of local luminous infrared galaxies
We present the analysis of the integrated spectral energy distribution (SED)
from the ultraviolet (UV) to the far-infrared and H of a sample of 29
local systems and individual galaxies with infrared (IR) luminosities between
10^11 Lsun and 10^11.8 Lsun. We have combined new narrow-band H+[NII]
and broad-band g, r optical imaging taken with the Nordic Optical Telescope
(NOT), with archival GALEX, 2MASS, Spitzer, and Herschel data. The SEDs
(photometry and integrated H flux) have been fitted with a modified
version of the MAGPHYS code using stellar population synthesis models for the
UV-near-IR range and thermal emission models for the IR emission taking into
account the energy balance between the absorbed and re-emitted radiation. From
the SED fits we derive the star-formation histories (SFH) of these galaxies.
For nearly half of them the star-formation rate appears to be approximately
constant during the last few Gyrs. In the other half, the current
star-formation rate seems to be enhanced by a factor of 3-20 with respect to
that occured ~1 Gyr ago. Objects with constant SFH tend to be more massive than
starbursts and they are compatible with the expected properties of a
main-sequence (M-S) galaxy. Likewise, the derived SFHs show that all our
objects were M-S galaxies ~1 Gyr ago with stellar masses between 10^10.1 and
10^11.5 Msun. We also derived from our fits the average extinction (A_v=0.6-3
mag) and the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) luminosity to L(IR) ratio
(0.03-0.16). We combined the A_v with the total IR and H luminosities
into a diagram which can be used to identify objects with rapidly changing
(increasing or decreasing) SFR during the last 100 Myr.Comment: 16 pages + online material, accepted for publication in A&
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