4,816 research outputs found
Photometric Redshift Techniques: Reliability and Applications
This article describes the various photometric techniques currently being
used, including some preliminary results from the large CNOC2 redshift survey.
It also presents a critical look at the reliability of the photometric redshift
technique, in part using the HDF results from various groups as a case study.Comment: 11 pages, Latex, 3 postscript figures. A review article to appear in
the proceedings of the Xth Recontres de Blois: Birth of Galaxies; Blois,
France, July 199
Estimating Luminosities and Stellar Masses of Galaxies Photometrically without Determining Redshifts
Large direct-imaging surveys usually use a template-fitting technique to
estimate photometric redshifts for galaxies, which are then applied to derive
important galaxy properties such as luminosities and stellar masses. These
estimates can be noisy and suffer from systematic biases because of the
possible mis-selection of templates and the propagation of the photometric
redshift uncertainty. We introduce an algorithm, the Direct Empirical
Photometric method (DEmP), which can be used to directly estimate these
quantities using training sets, bypassing photometric redshift determination.
DEmP also applies two techniques to minimize the effects arising from the
non-uniform distribution of training-set galaxy redshifts from a flux-limited
sample. First, for each input galaxy, fitting is performed using a subset of
the training-set galaxies with photometry and colors closest to those of the
input galaxy. Second, the training set is artificially resampled to produce a
flat distribution in redshift, or other properties, e.g., luminosity. To test
the performance of DEmP, we use a 4-filter-band mock catalog to examine its
ability to recover redshift, luminosity, stellar mass, and luminosity and
stellar-mass functions. We also compare the results to those from two publicly
available template-fitting methods, finding that the DEmP algorithm outperforms
both. We find resampling the training set to have a uniform redshift
distribution produces the best results not only in photometric redshift, but
also in estimating luminosity and stellar mass. The DEmP method is especially
powerful in estimating quantities such as near-IR luminosities and stellar mass
using only data from a small number of optical bands.Comment: 17 Pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
The Red-Sequence Cluster Survey
The Red-Sequence Cluster Survey (RCS) is a new galaxy cluster survey designed
to provide a large sample of optically selected 0.1z1.4 clusters. The
planned survey data are 100 square degrees of two color ( and ) imaging,
with a 5 depth 2 mag past M at . The combined depth
and area of the RCS make it the widest field, moderately deep survey ever
undertaken using 4m class telescopes. This paper gives a brief outline of the
RCS survey, with particular emphasis on the data reduction strategy. The
remainder of the paper focuses on preliminary results from the first set of
completely reduced data (10 deg, of the 60 deg in hand). We
provide a new example of a rich cluster, illustrative of the dozens
discovered in the data so far. Some of the possible science to come from the
RCS is illustrated by a qualitative indication of from the first
1/10th of the survey data. A high-precision measurement of the 2-point
correlation function of luminous early-type galaxies at is also
shown.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, to appear in the proceedings of "The New Era of
Wide-Field Astronomy
The Red-Sequence Cluster Survey: The Value of and
The Red-Sequence Cluster Survey (RCS) is a 100 deg optical survey for
high-redshift galaxy clusters. One of the goals of the survey is a measurement
of and via the evolution of the mass spectrum of galaxy
clusters. Herein we briefly describe how this will initially be done, and also
demonstrate the eventual power of the RCS for this type of measurement by a
qualitative analysis of the first 1/10th of the survey data.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, to appear in the proceedings of IAU S201: New
Cosmological Data and the Values of the Fundemental Parameter
The Toronto Red-Sequence Cluster Survey: First Results
The Toronto Red-Sequence Cluster Survey (TRCS) is a new galaxy cluster survey
designed to provide a large sample of optically selected 0.1 < z < 1.4
clusters. The planned survey data is 100 square degrees of two color (R and z')
imaging, with a 5-sigma depth ~2 mag past M* at z=1. The primary scientific
drivers of the survey are a derivation of Omega_m and sigma_8 (from N(M,z) for
clusters) and a study of cluster galaxy evolution with a complete sample. This
paper gives a brief outline of the TRCS survey parameters and sketches the
methods by which we intend to pursue the main scientific goals, including an
explicit calculation of the expected survey completeness limits. Some
preliminary results from the first set of data (~6 deg^2) are also given. These
preliminary results provide new examples of rich z~1 clusters, strong cluster
lensing, and a possible filament at z~1.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, to be published in "Cosmic Evolution and Galaxy
Formation: Structure, Interactions and Feedback", ASP Conference Serie
Photometric Redshifts in the Hubble Deep Field
Photometric redshifts for galaxies in the Hubble Deep Field are measured.
Luminosity functions show steepening of the faint-end slope and mild
brightening of M* out to z~3, followed by a decline at higher z; an excess of
faint, star-forming galaxies is seen at low z. Our results are consistent with
the formation of large galaxies at z=2-3, followed by that of dwarfs at z<1.Comment: 2 pages. To appear in the proceedings of the 37th Herstmonceux
conference, "HST and the High Redshift Universe
Star Formation and Galaxy Environment
The dependence of star formation rate on galaxian environment is a key issue in the understanding of galaxy formation and evolution. However, the study of this subject is complex and observationally challenging. This paper reviews some of the current results, drawing mostly from recent large redshift surveys such the LCRS, the MORPH collaboration, and the CNOC1 and CNOC2 redshift surveys
Mergers in Galaxy Groups - I. Structure and Properties of Elliptical Remnants
We present collisionless simulations of dry mergers in groups of three to
twenty-five galaxies to test the hypothesis that elliptical galaxies form at
the centers of such groups. Mock observations of the central remnants confirm
their similarity to ellipticals, despite having no dissipational component. We
vary the profile of the original spiral's bulge and find that ellipticals
formed from spirals with exponential bulges have too low Sersic indices.
Mergers of spirals with de Vaucouleurs (classical) bulges produce remnants with
larger Sersic indices correlated with luminosity, as with SDSS ellipticals.
Exponential bulge mergers are better fits to faint ellipticals, whereas
classical bulge mergers better match luminous ellipticals. Similarly, luminous
ellipticals are better reproduced by remnants undergoing many (>5) mergers, and
fainter ellipticals by those with fewer mergers.
The remnants follow tight size-luminosity and velocity dispersion-luminosity
(Faber-Jackson) relations (<0.12 dex scatter), demonstrating that stochastic
merging can produce tight scaling relations if the merging galaxies also follow
tight scaling relations. The slopes of the size-luminosity and Faber-Jackson
relations are close to observations but slightly shallower in the former case.
Both relations' intercepts are offset - remnants are too large but have too low
dispersions at fixed luminosity. Some remnants show substantial (v/\sigma >
0.1) rotational support, although most are slow rotators and few are very fast
rotators (v/\sigma > 0.5).
These findings contrast with previous studies concluding that dissipation
necessary to produce ellipticals from binary mergers of spirals. Multiple,
mostly minor and dry mergers can produce bright ellipticals, whereas
significant dissipation could be required to produce faint, rapidly-rotating
ellipticals.Comment: ApJ accepte
Population Gradients in Galaxy Clusters at 0.2 < Z < 0.6
We present a principal component analysis of galaxy spectra from the CNOC
sample of rich X-ray luminous clusters at 0.18 < z < 0.55. Composite radial
distributions of different stellar populations show strong gradients as a
function of cluster-centric redshift. The composite population is dominated by
evolved populations in the core, and gradually changes to one which is similar
to coeval field galaxies at radii greater than the virial radius. We do not see
evidence in the clusters for an excess of star formation over that seen in the
coeval field. Within this redshift range, significant evolution in the gradient
shape is seen, with higher redshift clusters showing steeper gradients. This
results in larger numbers of younger galaxies seen towards the inner regions of
the clusters-- in effect, a restatement of the Butcher-Oemler effect.
Luminosity density profiles are consistent with a scenario where this
phenomenon is due to a decline over time in the infall rate of field galaxies
into clusters. Depending on how long galaxies reside in clusters before their
star formation rates are diminished, this suggests an epoch for maximal infall
into clusters at z > 0.7. We also discuss alternative scenarios for the
evolution of cluster populations.Comment: to appear in the PASP proceedings of the conference "The Hy-Redshift
Universe: Galaxy Formation and Evolution at High Redshift," eds. Andrew J.
Bunker & Wil J. M. van Breuge
Optical-IR Spectral Energy Distribution of the Proto-Galaxy Candidate MS1512-cB58
The spectral energy distribution of the proto-galaxy candidate MS1512-cB58 at
discovered by Yee et al. (1996) is presented. Photometry in seven
bands ranging from to (1300--6000 \AA~rest wavelength) are fitted
with population synthesis models from Bruzual \& Charlot (1993). The data
confirm a very young age for this galaxy, in agreement with ages estimated from
preliminary \CIV~P-Cygni profile modeling. Single-burst models with ages
greater than about 20 Myr can be discarded at the 99\% confidence level, and
continuous star formation models with ages greater than about 35 Myr can be
discarded at the 95\% confidence level. The spectral energy distribution is
most consistent with a continuous star formation model of about 10--20 Myr,
with reddening of . No evidence for an older population of
stars is seen, but the possibility of an older population with as much as 90\%
of the galaxy mass cannot be ruled out. We discuss the possible ramifications
of a non-standard IMF and gravitational lensing on the galaxy's age and mass.Comment: LaTeX and 3 .ps figures, accepted by ApJ
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