420 research outputs found
The MgII Cross-section of Luminous Red Galaxies
We describe a search for MgII(2796,2803) absorption lines in Sloan Digital
Sky Survey (SDSS) spectra of QSOs whose lines of sight pass within impact
parameters of 200 kpc of galaxies with photometric redshifts of z=0.46-0.6 and
redshift errors Delta z~0.05. The galaxies selected have the same colors and
luminosities as the Luminous Red Galaxy (LRG) population previously selected
from the SDSS. A search for Mg II lines within a redshift interval of +/-0.1 of
a galaxy's photometric redshift shows that absorption by these galaxies is
rare: the covering fraction is ~ 10-15% between 20 and 100 kpc, for Mg II lines
with rest equivalent widths of Wr >= 0.6{\AA}, falling to zero at larger
separations. There is no evidence that Wr correlates with impact parameter or
galaxy luminosity. Our results are consistent with existing scenarios in which
cool Mg II-absorbing clouds may be absent near LRGs because of the environment
of the galaxies: if LRGs reside in high-mass groups and clusters, either their
halos are too hot to retain or accrete cool gas, or the galaxies themselves -
which have passively-evolving old stellar populations - do not produce the
rates of star formation and outflows of gas necessary to fill their halos with
Mg II absorbing clouds. In the rarer cases where Mg II is detected, however,
the origin of the absorption is less clear. Absorption may arise from the
little cool gas able to reach into cluster halos from the intergalactic medium,
or from the few star-forming and/or AGN-like LRGs that are known to exist.Comment: Accepted by ApJ; minor correction
A group-galaxy cross-correlation function analysis in zCOSMOS
We present a group-galaxy cross-correlation analysis using a group catalog
produced from the 16,500 spectra from the optical zCOSMOS galaxy survey. Our
aim is to perform a consistency test in the redshift range 0.2 < z < 0.8
between the clustering strength of the groups and mass estimates that are based
on the richness of the groups. We measure the linear bias of the groups by
means of a group-galaxy cross-correlation analysis and convert it into mass
using the bias-mass relation for a given cosmology, checking the systematic
errors using realistic group and galaxy mock catalogs. The measured bias for
the zCOSMOS groups increases with group richness as expected by the theory of
cosmic structure formation and yields masses that are reasonably consistent
with the masses estimated from the richness directly, considering the scatter
that is obtained from the 24 mock catalogs. An exception are the richest groups
at high redshift (estimated to be more massive than 10^13.5 M_sun), for which
the measured bias is significantly larger than for any of the 24 mock catalogs
(corresponding to a 3-sigma effect), which is attributed to the extremely large
structure that is present in the COSMOS field at z ~ 0.7. Our results are in
general agreement with previous studies that reported unusually strong
clustering in the COSMOS field.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, published in Ap
The zCOSMOS Survey. The dependence of clustering on luminosity and stellar mass at z=0.2-1
We study the dependence of galaxy clustering on luminosity and stellar mass
at redshifts z ~ [0.2-1] using the first zCOSMOS 10K sample.
We measure the redshift-space correlation functions xi(rp,pi) and its
projection wp(rp) for sub-samples covering different luminosity, mass and
redshift ranges. We quantify in detail the observational selection biases and
we check our covariance and error estimate techniques using ensembles of
semi-analytic mock catalogues. We finally compare our measurements to the
cosmological model predictions from the mock surveys.
At odds with other measurements, we find a weak dependence of galaxy
clustering on luminosity in all redshift bins explored. A mild dependence on
stellar mass is instead observed. At z~0.7, wp(rp) shows strong excess power on
large scales. We interpret this as produced by large-scale structure dominating
the survey volume and extending preferentially in direction perpendicular to
the line-of-sight. We do not see any significant evolution with redshift of the
amplitude of clustering for bright and/or massive galaxies.
The clustering measured in the zCOSMOS data at 0.5<z<1 for galaxies with
log(M/M_\odot)>=10 is only marginally consistent with predictions from the mock
surveys. On scales larger than ~2 h^-1 Mpc, the observed clustering amplitude
is compatible only with ~1% of the mocks. Thus, if the power spectrum of matter
is LCDM with standard normalization and the bias has no unnatural
scale-dependence, this result indicates that COSMOS has picked up a
particularly rare, ~2-3 sigma positive fluctuation in a volume of ~10^6 h^-1
Mpc^3. These findings underline the need for larger surveys of the z~1 Universe
to appropriately characterize the level of structure at this epoch.Comment: 18 pages, 21 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Clustering properties of galaxies selected in stellar mass: Breaking down the link between luminous and dark matter in massive galaxies from z=0 to z=2
We present a study on the clustering of a stellar mass selected sample of
18,482 galaxies with stellar masses M*>10^10M(sun) at redshifts 0.4<z<2.0,
taken from the Palomar Observatory Wide-field Infrared Survey. We examine the
clustering properties of these stellar mass selected samples as a function of
redshift and stellar mass, and discuss the implications of measured clustering
strengths in terms of their likely halo masses. We find that galaxies with high
stellar masses have a progressively higher clustering strength, and amplitude,
than galaxies with lower stellar masses. We also find that galaxies within a
fixed stellar mass range have a higher clustering strength at higher redshifts.
We furthermore use our measured clustering strengths, combined with models from
Mo & White (2002), to determine the average total masses of the dark matter
haloes hosting these galaxies. We conclude that for all galaxies in our sample
the stellar-mass-to-total-mass ratio is always lower than the universal
baryonic mass fraction. Using our results, and a compilation from the
literature, we furthermore show that there is a strong correlation between
stellar-mass-to-total-mass ratio and derived halo masses for central galaxies,
such that more massive haloes contain a lower fraction of their mass in the
form of stars over our entire redshift range. For central galaxies in haloes
with masses M(halo)>10^13M(sun) we find that this ratio is <0.02, much lower
than the universal baryonic mass fraction. We show that the remaining baryonic
mass is included partially in stars within satellite galaxies in these haloes,
and as diffuse hot and warm gas. We also find that, at a fixed stellar mass,
the stellar-to-total-mass ratio increases at lower redshifts. This suggests
that galaxies at a fixed stellar mass form later in lower mass dark matter
haloes, and earlier in massive haloes. We interpret this as a "halo downsizing"
effect, however some of this evolution could be attributed to halo assembly
bias.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 19 pages, 8 figures and 3 tables
Cosmic shear statistics in cosmologies with non-Gaussian initial conditions
We computed the power spectrum of weak cosmic shear in models with
non-Gaussian primordial density fluctuations. Cosmological initial conditions
deviating from Gaussianity have recently attracted much attention in the
literature, especially with respect to their effect on the formation of
non-linear structures and because of the bounds that they can put on the
inflationary epoch. The fully non-linear matter power spectrum was evaluated
with the use of the physically motivated, semi-analytic halo model, where the
mass function and linear halo bias were suitably corrected for non-Gaussian
cosmologies. In agreement with previous work, we found that a level of
non-Gaussianity compatible with CMB bounds and with positive skewness produces
an increase in power of the order of a few percent at intermediate scales. We
then used the matter power spectrum, together with observationally motivated
background source redshift distributions in order to compute the cosmological
weak lensing power spectrum. We found that the degree of deviation from the
power spectrum of the reference Gaussian model is small compared to the
statistical error expected from even future weak lensing surveys. However,
summing the signal over a large range of multipoles can beat down the noise,
bringing to a significant detection of non-Gaussianity at the level of
few tens, when all other cosmological parameters are
held fixed. Finally, we have shown that the constraints on the level of
non-Gaussianity can be improved by with the use of weak lensing
tomography.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures. Accepted by MNRA
BLAST: Correlations in the Cosmic Far-Infrared Background at 250, 350, and 500 microns Reveal Clustering of Star-Forming Galaxies
We detect correlations in the cosmic far-infrared background due to the
clustering of star-forming galaxies in observations made with the Balloon-borne
Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope, BLAST, at 250, 350, and 500 microns. We
perform jackknife and other tests to confirm the reality of the signal. The
measured correlations are well fit by a power law over scales of 5-25
arcminutes, with Delta I/I = 15.1 +/- 1.7%. We adopt a specific model for
submillimeter sources in which the contribution to clustering comes from
sources in the redshift ranges 1.3 <= z <= 2.2, 1.5 <= z <= 2.7, and 1.7 <= z
<= 3.2, at 250, 350, and 500 microns, respectively. With these distributions,
our measurement of the power spectrum, P(k_theta), corresponds to linear bias
parameters, b = 3.8 +/- 0.6, 3.9 +/- 0.6 and 4.4 +/- 0.7, respectively. We
further interpret the results in terms of the halo model, and find that at the
smaller scales, the simplest halo model fails to fit our results. One way to
improve the fit is to increase the radius at which dark matter halos are
artificially truncated in the model, which is equivalent to having some
star-forming galaxies at z >= 1 located in the outskirts of groups and
clusters. In the context of this model we find a minimum halo mass required to
host a galaxy is log (M_min / M_sun) = 11.5 (+0.4/-0.1), and we derive
effective biases $b_eff = 2.2 +/- 0.2, 2.4 +/- 0.2, and 2.6 +/- 0.2, and
effective masses log (M_eff / M_sun) = 12.9 +/- 0.3, 12.8 +/- 0.2, and 12.7 +/-
0.2, at 250, 350, and 500 microns, corresponding to spatial correlation lengths
of r_0 = 4.9, 5.0, and 5.2 +/- 0.7 h^-1 Mpc, respectively. Finally, we discuss
implications for clustering measurement strategies with Herschel and Planck.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Maps and other
results available at http://blastexperiment.info
The Morphology of Galaxies in the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey
We study the morphology of luminous and massive galaxies at 0.3<z<0.7
targeted in the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) using publicly
available Hubble Space Telescope imaging from COSMOS. Our sample (240 objects)
provides a unique opportunity to check the visual morphology of these galaxies
which were targeted based solely on stellar population modelling. We find that
the majority (74+/-6%) possess an early-type morphology (elliptical or S0),
while the remainder have a late-type morphology. This is as expected from the
goals of the BOSS target selection which aimed to predominantly select slowly
evolving galaxies, for use as cosmological probes, while still obtaining a fair
fraction of actively star forming galaxies for galaxy evolution studies. We
show that a colour cut of (g-i)>2.35 selects a sub-sample of BOSS galaxies with
90% early-type morphology - more comparable to the earlier Luminous Red Galaxy
(LRG) samples of SDSS-I/II. The remaining 10% of galaxies above this cut have a
late-type morphology and may be analogous to the "passive spirals" found at
lower redshift. We find that 23+/-4% of the early-type galaxies are unresolved
multiple systems in the SDSS imaging. We estimate that at least 50% of these
are real associations (not projection effects) and may represent a significant
"dry merger" fraction. We study the SDSS pipeline sizes of BOSS galaxies which
we find to be systematically larger (by 40%) than those measured from HST
images, and provide a statistical correction for the difference. These details
of the BOSS galaxies will help users of the data fine-tune their selection
criteria, dependent on their science applications. For example, the main goal
of BOSS is to measure the cosmic distance scale and expansion rate of the
Universe to percent-level precision - a point where systematic effects due to
the details of target selection may become important.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures; v2 as accepted by MNRA
Ubiquitous outflows in DEEP2 spectra of star-forming galaxies at z=1.4
Galactic winds are a prime suspect for the metal enrichment of the
intergalactic medium and may have a strong influence on the chemical evolution
of galaxies and the nature of QSO absorption line systems. We use a sample of
1406 galaxy spectra at z~1.4 from the DEEP2 redshift survey to show that
blueshifted Mg II 2796, 2803 A absorption is ubiquitous in starforming galaxies
at this epoch. This is the first detection of frequent outflowing galactic
winds at z~1. The presence and depth of absorption are independent of AGN
spectral signatures or galaxy morphology; major mergers are not a prerequisite
for driving a galactic wind from massive galaxies. Outflows are found in
coadded spectra of galaxies spanning a range of 30x in stellar mass and 10x in
star formation rate (SFR), calibrated from K-band and from MIPS IR fluxes. The
outflows have column densities of order N_H ~ 10^20 cm^-2 and characteristic
velocities of ~ 300-500 km/sec, with absorption seen out to 1000 km/sec in the
most massive, highest SFR galaxies. The velocities suggest that the outflowing
gas can escape into the IGM and that massive galaxies can produce
cosmologically and chemically significant outflows. Both the Mg II equivalent
width and the outflow velocity are larger for galaxies of higher stellar mass
and SFR, with V_wind ~ SFR^0.3, similar to the scaling in low redshift
IR-luminous galaxies. The high frequency of outflows in the star-forming galaxy
population at z~1 indicates that galactic winds occur in the progenitors of
massive spirals as well as those of ellipticals. The increase of outflow
velocity with mass and SFR constrains theoretical models of galaxy evolution
that include feedback from galactic winds, and may favor momentum-driven models
for the wind physics.Comment: Accepted by ApJ. 25 pages, 17 figures. Revised to add discussions of
intervening absorbers and AGN-driven outflows; conclusions unchange
The Persistence of Cool Galactic Winds in High Stellar Mass Galaxies Between z~1.4 and ~1
We present an analysis of the MgII 2796, 2803 and FeII 2586, 2600 absorption
line profiles in coadded spectra of 468 galaxies at 0.7 < z < 1.5. The galaxy
sample, drawn from the Team Keck Treasury Redshift Survey of the GOODS-N field,
has a range in stellar mass (M_*) comparable to that of the sample at z~1.4
analyzed in a similar manner by Weiner et al. (2009; W09), but extends to lower
redshifts and has specific star formation rates which are lower by ~0.6 dex. We
identify outflows of cool gas from the Doppler shift of the MgII absorption
lines and find that the equivalent width (EW) of absorption due to outflowing
gas increases on average with M_* and star formation rate (SFR). We attribute
the large EWs measured in spectra of the more massive, higher-SFR galaxies to
optically thick absorbing clouds having large velocity widths. The outflows
have hydrogen column densities N(H) > 10^19.3 cm^-2, and extend to velocities
of ~500 km/s. While galaxies with SFR > 10 Msun/yr host strong outflows in both
this and the W09 sample, we do not detect outflows in lower-SFR (i.e., log
M_*/Msun < 10.5) galaxies at lower redshifts. Using a simple galaxy evolution
model which assumes exponentially declining SFRs, we infer that strong outflows
persist in galaxies with log M_*/Msun > 10.5 as they age between z=1.4 and z~1,
presumably because of their high absolute SFRs. Finally, using high resolution
HST/ACS imaging in tandem with our spectral analysis, we find evidence for a
weak trend (at 1 sigma significance) of increasing outflow absorption strength
with increasing galaxy SFR surface density.Comment: Submitted to ApJ. 25 pages, 19 figures, Figure 2 reduced in
resolution. Uses emulateapj forma
The XMM-Newton Wide field survey in the COSMOS field: redshift evolution of AGN bias and subdominant role of mergers in triggering moderate luminosity AGN at redshift up to 2.2
We present a study of the redshift evolution of the projected correlation
function of 593 X-ray selected AGN with I_AB<23 and spectroscopic redshifts
z<4, extracted from the 0.5-2 keV X-ray mosaic of the 2.13 deg^2 XMM-COSMOS
survey. We introduce a method to estimate the average bias of the AGN sample
and the mass of AGN hosting halos, solving the sample variance using the halo
model and taking into account the growth of the structure over time. We find
evidence of a redshift evolution of the bias factor for the total population of
XMM-COSMOS AGN from b(z=0.92)=2.30 +/- 0.11 to b(z=1.94)=4.37 +/- 0.27 with an
average mass of the hosting DM halos logM [h^-1 M_sun] ~ 13.12 +/- 0.12 that
remains constant at all z < 2. Splitting our sample into broad optical lines
AGN (BL), AGN without broad optical lines (NL) and X-ray unobscured and
obscured AGN, we observe an increase of the bias with redshift in the range
z=0.7-2.25 and z=0.6-1.5 which corresponds to a constant halo mass logM [h^-1
M_sun] ~ 13.28 +/- 0.07 and logM [h^-1 M_sun] ~ 13.00 +/- 0.06 for BL /X-ray
unobscured AGN and NL/X-ray obscured AGN, respectively. The theoretical models
which assume a quasar phase triggered by major mergers can not reproduce the
high bias factors and DM halo masses found for X-ray selected BL AGN with L_BOL
~ 2e45 erg s^-1. Our work extends up to z ~ 2.2 the z <= 1 statement that, for
moderate luminosity X-ray selected BL AGN, the contribution from major mergers
is outnumbered by other processes, possibly secular such as tidal disruptions
or disk instabilities.Comment: 16 emulateapj pages, 18 figures and 3 tables. Accepted for the
publication in The Astrophysical Journa
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