141 research outputs found
Evolution in the Clustering of Galaxies for Z < 1
Measuring the evolution in the clustering of galaxies over a large redshift
range is a challenging problem. For a two-dimensional galaxy catalog, however,
we can measure the galaxy-galaxy angular correlation function which provides
information on the density distribution of galaxies. By utilizing photometric
redshifts, we can measure the angular correlation function in redshift shells
(Brunner 1997, Connolly et al. 1998) which minimizes the galaxy projection
effect, and allows for a measurement of the evolution in the correlation
strength with redshift. In this proceedings, we present some preliminary
results which extend our previous work using more accurate photometric
redshifts, and also incorporate absolute magnitudes, so that we can measure the
evolution of clustering with either redshift or intrinsic luminosity.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures requires paspconf.sty. To be published in
"Photometric Redshifts and High Redshift Galaxies", eds. R. Weymann, L.
Storrie-Lombardi, M. Sawicki & R. Brunner, (San Francisco: ASP Conference
Series
The National Virtual Observatory
As a scientific discipline, Astronomy is rather unique. We only have one
laboratory, the Universe, and we cannot, of course, change the initial
conditions and study the resulting effects. On top of this, acquiring
Astronomical data has historically been a very labor-intensive effort. As a
result, data has traditionally been preserved for posterity. With recent
technological advances, however, the rate at which we acquire new data has
grown exponentially, which has generated a Data Tsunami, whose wave train
threatens to overwhelm the field. In this conference proceedings, we present
and define the concept of virtual observatories, which we feel is the only
logical answer to this dilemma.Comment: 5 pages, uses newpasp.sty (included), to appear in "Extragalactic Gas
at Low Redshfit", ASP Conf. Series, J. S. Mulchaey and J. T. Stocke (eds.
Data Mining the SDSS SkyServer Database
An earlier paper (Szalay et. al. "Designing and Mining MultiTerabyte
Astronomy Archives: The Sloan Digital Sky Survey," ACM SIGMOD 2000) described
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey's (SDSS) data management needs by defining twenty
database queries and twelve data visualization tasks that a good data
management system should support. We built a database and interfaces to support
both the query load and also a website for ad-hoc access. This paper reports on
the database design, describes the data loading pipeline, and reports on the
query implementation and performance. The queries typically translated to a
single SQL statement. Most queries run in less than 20 seconds, allowing
scientists to interactively explore the database. This paper is an in-depth
tour of those queries. Readers should first have studied the companion overview
paper Szalay et. al. "The SDSS SkyServer, Public Access to the Sloan Digital
Sky Server Data" ACM SIGMOND 2002.Comment: 40 pages, Original source is at
http://research.microsoft.com/~gray/Papers/MSR_TR_O2_01_20_queries.do
Massive Datasets in Astronomy
Astronomy has a long history of acquiring, systematizing, and interpreting
large quantities of data. Starting from the earliest sky atlases through the
first major photographic sky surveys of the 20th century, this tradition is
continuing today, and at an ever increasing rate.
Like many other fields, astronomy has become a very data-rich science, driven
by the advances in telescope, detector, and computer technology. Numerous large
digital sky surveys and archives already exist, with information content
measured in multiple Terabytes, and even larger, multi-Petabyte data sets are
on the horizon. Systematic observations of the sky, over a range of
wavelengths, are becoming the primary source of astronomical data. Numerical
simulations are also producing comparable volumes of information. Data mining
promises to both make the scientific utilization of these data sets more
effective and more complete, and to open completely new avenues of astronomical
research.
Technological problems range from the issues of database design and
federation, to data mining and advanced visualization, leading to a new toolkit
for astronomical research. This is similar to challenges encountered in other
data-intensive fields today.
These advances are now being organized through a concept of the Virtual
Observatories, federations of data archives and services representing a new
information infrastructure for astronomy of the 21st century. In this article,
we provide an overview of some of the major datasets in astronomy, discuss
different techniques used for archiving data, and conclude with a discussion of
the future of massive datasets in astronomy.Comment: 46 Pages, 21 Figures, Invited Review for the Handbook of Massive
Datasets, editors J. Abello, P. Pardalos, and M. Resende. Due to space
limitations this version has low resolution figures. For full resolution
review see http://www.astro.caltech.edu/~rb/publications/hmds.ps.g
Spectral Decomposition of Broad-Line AGNs and Host Galaxies
Using an eigenspectrum decomposition technique, we separate the host galaxy
from the broad line active galactic nucleus (AGN) in a set of 4666 spectra from
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), from redshifts near zero up to about 0.75.
The decomposition technique uses separate sets of galaxy and quasar
eigenspectra to efficiently and reliably separate the AGN and host
spectroscopic components. The technique accurately reproduces the host galaxy
spectrum, its contributing fraction, and its classification. We show how the
accuracy of the decomposition depends upon S/N, host galaxy fraction, and the
galaxy class. Based on the eigencoefficients, the sample of SDSS broad-line AGN
host galaxies spans a wide range of spectral types, but the distribution
differs significantly from inactive galaxies. In particular, post-starburst
activity appears to be much more common among AGN host galaxies. The
luminosities of the hosts are much higher than expected for normal early-type
galaxies, and their colors become increasingly bluer than early-type galaxies
with increasing host luminosity. Most of the AGNs with detected hosts are
emitting at between 1% and 10% of their estimated Eddington luminosities, but
the sensitivity of the technique usually does not extend to the Eddington
limit. There are mild correlations among the AGN and host galaxy
eigencoefficients, possibly indicating a link between recent star formation and
the onset of AGN activity. The catalog of spectral reconstruction parameters is
available as an electronic table.Comment: 18 pages; accepted for publication in A
The Star Formation History of Galaxies Measured from Individual Pixels. I. The Hubble Deep Field North
We analyze the photometric information contained in individual pixels of
galaxies in the Hubble Deep Field North (HDFN) using a new technique,
_pixel-z_, that combines predictions of evolutionary synthesis models with
photometric redshift template fitting. Each spectral energy distribution
template is a result of modeling of the detailed physical processes affecting
gas properties and star formation efficiency. The criteria chosen to generate
the SED templates is that of sampling a wide range of physical characteristics
such as age, star formation rate, obscuration and metallicity. A key feature of
our method is the sophisticated use of error analysis to generate error maps
that define the reliability of the template fitting on pixel scales and allow
for the separation of the interplay among dust, metallicity and star formation
histories. This technique offers a number of advantages over traditional
integrated color studies. As a first application, we derive the star formation
and metallicity histories of galaxies in the HDFN. Our results show that the
comoving density of star formation rate, determined from the UV luminosity
density of sources in the HDFN, increases monotonically with redshift out to at
least redshift of 5. This behavior can plausibly be explained by a smooth
increase of the UV luminosity density with redshift coupled with an increase in
the number of star forming regions as a function of redshift. We also find that
the information contained in individual pixels in a galaxy can be linked to its
morphological history. Finally, we derive the metal enrichment rate history of
the universe and find it in good agreement with predictions based on the
evolving HI content of Lyman-alpha QSO absorption line systems.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal. Full resolution
figures available at http://www.stsci.edu/~aconti/pixelz.htm
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