420 research outputs found
Soft X-ray Absorption by High-Redshift Intergalactic Helium
The Lyman alpha absorption from intergalactic, once-ionized helium (HeII) has
been measured with HST in four quasars over the last few years, over the
redshift range 2.4 < z < 3.2. These observations have indicated that the HeII
reionization may not have been completed until z\simeq 2.8, and that large
fluctuations in the intensity of the HeII-ionizing background were present
before this epoch. The detailed history of HeII reionization at higher
redshifts is, however, model-dependent and difficult to determine from these
observations, because the IGM can be completely optically thick to Lya photons
when only a small fraction of the helium remains as HeII. In addition, finding
quasars in which the HeII Lya absorption can be observed becomes increasingly
difficult at higher redshift, owing to the large abundance of hydrogen Lyman
limit systems.
It is pointed out here that HeII in the IGM should also cause detectable
continuum absorption in the soft X-rays. The spectrum of a high-redshift source
seen behind the IGM when most of the helium was HeII should recover from the
HeII Lyman continuum absorption at an observed energy \sim 0.1 keV. Galactic
absorption will generally be stronger, but not by a large factor; the
intergalactic HeII absorption can be detected as an excess over the expected
Galactic absorption from the 21cm HI column density. In principle, this method
allows a direct determination of the fraction of helium that was singly ionized
as a function of redshift, if the measurement is done on a large sample of
high-redshift sources over a range of redshift.Comment: accepted to The Astrophysical Journal Letter
Mapping Global Star Formation in the Interacting Galaxy Pair Arp32
A multi-wavelength set of photometric data including UV (GALEX), optical, near-IR, infrared (Spitzer) and radio (VLA 20cm) images and spectroscopic observations are used to map the dust-obscured and unobscured star formation in the galaxy pair Arp 32. The system consists of an actively starforming galaxy and another one with depressed star formation. The most active galaxy has disrupted morphology and different sites of star formation. Spectroscopic data show hints of nuclear activity in its core, intense star formation in limited regions of the galaxy as well as an underlying population of stars witnessing a past episode of star formation. Current star formation rates are estimated from UV and bolometric IR luminosities
Imaging and spectroscopy of galaxies associated with two z~0.7 damped Lyman-alpha absorption systems
We have identified galaxies near two quasars which are at the redshift of
damped Lyman-alpha (DLA) systems in the UV spectra of the quasars. Both
galaxies are actively forming stars. One galaxy has a luminosity close to the
break in the local galaxy luminosity function, L*, the other is significantly
fainter than L* and appears to be interacting with a nearby companion. Despite
the strong selection effects favoring spectroscopic identification of the most
luminous DLA galaxies, many of the spectroscopically-identified DLA galaxies in
the literature are sub-L*, suggesting that the majority of the DLA population
is probably sub-L*, in contrast to MgII absorbers at similar redshifts whose
mean luminosity is close to L*.Comment: 9 pages, to appear in AJ, November 2003 issu
The Porcupine Survey: A Distributed Survey and WISE Followup
Spitzer post-cryogen observations to perform a moderate depth survey distributed around the sky are proposed. Field centers are chosen to be WISE brown dwarf candidates, which will typically be 160 ”Jy at 4.7 ”m and randomly distributed around the sky. The Spitzer observations will give much higher sensitivity, higher angular resolution, and a time baseline to measure both proper motions and possibly parallaxes. The distance and velocity data obtained on the WISE brown dwarf candidates will greatly improve our knowledge of the mass and age distribution of brown dwarfs. The outer parts of the Spitzer fields surrounding the WISE positions will provide a deep survey in many narrow fields of view distributed around the sky, and the volume of this survey will contain many more distant brown dwarfs, and many extragalactic objects
Discovery of Damped Lyman-Alpha Systems at Redshifts Less Than 1.65 and Results on their Incidence and Cosmological Mass Density
We report results on the incidence and cosmological mass density of damped
Lyman-alpha (DLA) systems at redshifts less that 1.65. We used HST and an
efficient non-traditional (but unbiased) survey technique to discover DLA
systems at redshifts z<1.65, where we observe the Lyman-alpha line in known
MgII absorption-line systems. We uncovered 14 DLA lines including 2
serendipitously. We find that (1) The DLA absorbers are drawn almost
exclusively from the population of MgII absorbers which have rest equivalent
widths W(2796)>0.6A. (2) The incidence of DLA systems per unit redshift,
n(DLA), is observed to decrease with decreasing redshift. (3) On the other
hand, the cosmological mass density of neutral gas in low-redshift DLA
absorbers, Omega(DLA), is observed to be comparable to that observed at high
redshift. (4) The low-redshift DLA absorbers exhibit a significantly larger
fraction of very high column density systems in comparison to determinations at
both high redshift and locally.Comment: 47 pages in LaTeX - emulateapj style with included tables and
encapsulated postscript figures. Accepted for Publication in Astrophysical
Journal Supplements. Results unchanged, text revise
High-resolution O VI absorption line observations at 1.2 < z < 1.7 in the bright QSO HE 0515-4414
STIS Echelle observations at a resolution of 10 km/s and UVES/VLT
spectroscopy at a resolution of 7 km/s of the luminous QSO HE 0515-4414 (z_em =
1.73, B = 15.0) reveal four intervening O VI absorption systems in the redshift
range 1.2 < z_abs < 1.7 (1.38503, 1.41601, 1.60175, 1.67359). In addition two
associated systems at z = 1.69707 and z = 1.73585 are present. For the first
time high resolution observations allow to measure radial velocities of H I, C
IV and O VI simultaneously in several absorption systems (1.385, 1.674, 1.697)
with the result that significant velocity differences (up to 18 km/s) are
observed between H I and O VI, while smaller differences (up to 5 km/s) are
seen between C IV and O VI. We tentatively conclude that H I, O VI, and C IV
are not formed in the same volumes and that therefore implications on
ionization mechanisms are not possible from observed column density ratios O
VI/H I or O VI/C IV. The number density of O VI absorbers with W_rest > 25 mA
is dN/dz < 10, roughly a factor of 5 less than what has been found by Tripp at
al. (2000) at low redshift. An estimate of the cosmological mass-density of the
O VI-phase yields Omega_b(O VI) = 0.0003 h^{-1}_{75} for [O/H] = -1 and an
assumed ionization fraction O VI/O = 0.2. This corresponds to an increase by
roughly a factor of 15 between z = 1.5 (this work) and the value found by Tripp
et al. (2000) at z = 0.21, if the same oxygen abundance [O/H] = -1 is assumed.
Agreement with the simulations by Dave et al. (2001) can be obtained, if the
oxygen abundance increases by a factor of 3 over the same redshift interval.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in A&
Robust Machine Learning Applied to Astronomical Datasets I: Star-Galaxy Classification of the SDSS DR3 Using Decision Trees
We provide classifications for all 143 million non-repeat photometric objects
in the Third Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) using decision
trees trained on 477,068 objects with SDSS spectroscopic data. We demonstrate
that these star/galaxy classifications are expected to be reliable for
approximately 22 million objects with r < ~20. The general machine learning
environment Data-to-Knowledge and supercomputing resources enabled extensive
investigation of the decision tree parameter space. This work presents the
first public release of objects classified in this way for an entire SDSS data
release. The objects are classified as either galaxy, star or nsng (neither
star nor galaxy), with an associated probability for each class. To demonstrate
how to effectively make use of these classifications, we perform several
important tests. First, we detail selection criteria within the probability
space defined by the three classes to extract samples of stars and galaxies to
a given completeness and efficiency. Second, we investigate the efficacy of the
classifications and the effect of extrapolating from the spectroscopic regime
by performing blind tests on objects in the SDSS, 2dF Galaxy Redshift and 2dF
QSO Redshift (2QZ) surveys. Given the photometric limits of our spectroscopic
training data, we effectively begin to extrapolate past our star-galaxy
training set at r ~ 18. By comparing the number counts of our training sample
with the classified sources, however, we find that our efficiencies appear to
remain robust to r ~ 20. As a result, we expect our classifications to be
accurate for 900,000 galaxies and 6.7 million stars, and remain robust via
extrapolation for a total of 8.0 million galaxies and 13.9 million stars.
[Abridged]Comment: 27 pages, 12 figures, to be published in ApJ, uses emulateapj.cl
C IV and other metal absorption line systems in 18 z=4 quasars
We present a modest survey of quasar metal line absorption systems at redshifts 2.3-4.5. Relatively high signal-to-noise ratio (similar to25 pixel(-1)) spectra of 18 quasars at 2 Angstrom FWHM resolution show many absorption systems with strong metal lines in the region redward of the Lyalpha emission lines. We conducted a systematic search and found 55 C IV doublets, 19 Si IV doublets, three Mg II doublets, and seven N v doublets. The present data alone hint that the number of C IV absorption doublets per unit redshift, N(z), decreases with increasing redshift for 2.3 0.3 Angstrom are approximately 55% of all C IV systems with W > 0.15 Angstrom, but by z similar or equal to 4 that percentage is less than 37%. Similar conclusions were reached by Sargent, Boksenberg, & Steidel and by Steidel, primarily at lower redshifts. However, we measure approximately twice the density of C IV systems at 2.3 0.15 Angstrom that was reported by Steidel. The probability that our sample and previous samples come from the same distribution is only similar to2%. But this could be a statistical accident because it is an a posteriori comparison. We believe that the systems that we report are real, and we have no other explanation for this difference. For Si IV absorption lines, there is a 1 sigma hint of evolution with the same sense. In contrast, Lyalpha and Mg II systems are known to show evolution of the opposite sense with more absorbers at larger redshifts. The physical cause of this difference may be a mixture of ionization and chemical evolution effects.ArticleASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL. 123(4):1847-1863 (2002)journal articl
Quasars and Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies: At the Limit?
We have detected the host galaxies of 16 nearby, radio-quiet quasars using
images obtained with the Near-Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer
(NICMOS). We confirm that these luminous quasars tend to live in luminous,
early-type host galaxies, and we use the host-galaxy magnitudes to refine the
luminosity/host-mass limit inferred from ground-based studies. If quasars obey
the relation found for massive dark
objects in nonactive galaxies, then our analysis implies that they radiate at
up to of the Eddington rate. An analogous analysis for ultraluminous
infrared galaxies shows them to accrete at up to similar Eddington fractions,
consistent with the hypothesis that some of them are powered by embedded
quasars.Comment: 9 pages, includes 2 eps figs, accepted to ApJLet
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