235 research outputs found
Hubble Space Telescope Imaging in the Chandra Deep Field South: III. Quantitative Morphology of the 1Ms Chandra Counterparts and Comparison with the Field Population
We present quantitative morphological analyses of 37 HST/WFPC2 counterparts
of X-ray sources in the 1 Ms Chandra Deep Field-South (CDFS). We investigate:
1) 1-D surface brightness profiles via isophotal ellipse fitting; 2) 2-D, PSF-
convolved, bulge+disk+nucleus profile-fitting; 3) asymmetry and concentration
indices compared with all ~3000 sources in our three WFPC2 fields; and 4) near-
neighbor analyses comparing local environments of X-ray sources versus the
field control sample. Significant nuclear point-source optical components
appear in roughly half of the resolved HST/WFPC2 counterparts, showing a narrow
range of F_X/F_{opt,nuc} consistent with the several HST-unresolved X-ray
sources (putative type-1 AGN) in our fields. We infer roughly half of the
HST/WFPC2 counterparts host unobscured AGN, which suggests no steep decline in
the type-1/type-2 ratio out to the redshifts z~0.5-1 typical of our sources.
The concentration indices of the CDFS counterparts are clearly larger on
average than those of the field distribution, at 5-sigma, suggesting that the
strong correlation between central black hole mass and host galaxy properties
(including concentration index) observed in nearby galaxies is already evident
by z~0.5-1. By contrast, the asymmetry index distribution of the 21 resolved
CDFS sources at I<23 is indistinguishable from the I<23 field. Moreover, the
frequency of I<23 near neighbors around the CDFS counterparts is not
significantly different from the field sample. These results, combined with
previous similar findings for local samples, suggest that recent merger/
interaction history is not a good indicator of AGN activity over a substantial
range of look-back time.Comment: 30 pages, incl. 8 figures; accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
Imprints of Environment on Cluster and Field Late-type Galaxies at z~1
We present a comparison of late-type galaxies (Sa and later) in intermediate
redshift clusters and the field using ACS imaging of four cluster fields:
CL0152-1357, CL1056-0337 (MS1054), CL1604+4304, and CL1604+4321. Concentration,
asymmetry, and clumpiness parameters are calculated for each galaxy in blue
(F606W or F625W) and red (F775W or F814W) filters. Galaxy half-light radii,
disk scale lengths, color gradients, and overall color are compared. We find
marginally significant differences in the asymmetry distributions of spiral and
irregular galaxies in the X-ray luminous and X-ray faint clusters. The massive
clusters contain fewer galaxies with large asymmetries. The physical sizes of
the cluster and field populations are similar; no significant differences are
found in half-light radii or disk scale lengths. The most significant
difference is in rest-frame color. Late-type cluster galaxies are
significantly redder, magnitudes at rest-frame , than their
field counterparts. Moreover, the intermediate-redshift cluster galaxies tend
to have blue inward color gradients, in contrast to the field galaxies, but
similar to late-type galaxies in low redshift clusters. These blue inward color
gradients are likely to be the result of enhanced nuclear star formation rates
relative to the outer disk. Based on the significant rest-frame color
difference, we conclude that late-type cluster members at are not a
pristine infalling field population; some difference in past and/or current
star formation history is already present. This points to high redshift
``groups'', or filaments with densities similar to present-day groups, as the
sites where the first major effects of environment are imprinted.Comment: updated titl
A Puzzling X-Ray Source Found in the chandra Deep Field South
In this letter we report the detection of an extremely strong X-ray emission
line in the 940ks chandra ACIS-I spectrum of CXO CDFS J033225.3-274219. The
source was identified as a Type1 AGN at redshift of z = 1.617, with 2.0 -- 10.0
keV rest frame X-ray luminosity of ~ 10^44 ergs s^-1. The emission line was
detected at 6.2^{+0.2}_{-0.1} keV, with an equivalent width (EW) of
4.4^{+3.2}_{-1.4} keV, both quantities referring to the observed frame. In the
rest frame, the line is at 16.2^{+0.4}_{-0.3} keV with an EW of
11.5^{+8.3}_{-3.7} keV. An X-ray emission line at similar energy (~ 17 keV,
rest frame) in QSO PKS 2149-306 was discovered before using ASCA data. We
reject the possibility that the line is due to a statistical or instrumental
artifact. The line is most likely due to blueshifted Fe-K emission from an
relativistic outflow, probably an inner X-ray jet, with velocities of the order
of ~ 0.6-0.7c. Other possible explanations are also discussed
Photometric Redshift of X-Ray Sources in the Chandra Deep Field South
Based on the photometry of 10 near-UV, optical, and near-infrared bands of
the Chandra Deep Field South, we estimate the photometric redshifts for 342
X-ray sources, which constitute ~99% of all the detected X-ray sources in the
field. The models of spectral energy distribution are based on galaxies and a
combination of power-law continuum and emission lines. Color information is
useful for source classifications: Type-I AGN show non-thermal spectral
features that are distinctive from galaxies and Type-II AGN. The hardness ratio
in X-ray and the X-ray-to-optical flux ratio are also useful discriminators.
Using rudimentary color separation techniques, we are able to further refine
our photometric redshift estimations. Among these sources, 137 have reliable
spectroscopic redshifts, which we use to verify the accuracy of photometric
redshifts and to modify the model inputs. The average relative dispersion in
redshift distribution is ~8%, among the most accurate for photometric surveys.
The high reliability of our results is attributable to the high quality and
broad coverage of data as well as the applications of several independent
methods and a careful evaluation of every source. We apply our redshift
estimations to study the effect of redshift on broadband colors and to study
the redshift distribution of AGN. Our results show that both the hardness ratio
and U-K color decline with redshift, which may be the result of a K-correction.
The number of Type-II AGN declines significantly at z>2 and that of galaxies
declines at z>1. However, the distribution of Type-I AGN exhibits less redshift
dependence. As well, we observe a significant peak in the redshift distribution
at z=0.6. We demonstrate that our photometric redshift estimation produces a
reliable database for the study of X-ray luminosity of galaxies and AGN.Comment: 40 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
HST Imaging in the Chandra Deep Field South: II. WFPC2 Observations of an X-Ray Flux-Limited Sample from the 1 Msec Chandra Catalog
We present HST/WFPC2 observations of a well-defined sample of 40 X-ray
sources with X-ray fluxes above the detection threshold of the full 1 Msec
Chandra Deep Field South (CDFS). The sensitivity and spatial resolution of our
HST observations are sufficient to detect the optical counterparts of 37 of the
X-ray sources, yielding information on their morphologies and environments. In
this paper we extend the results obtained in our previous study on the 300 ks
CDFS X-ray data (Schreier et al. 2001, Paper I). Specifically, we show that the
optical counterparts to the X-ray sources are divided into two distinct
populations: 1) an optically faint group with relatively blue colors, similar
to the faint blue field galaxy population, and 2) an optically brighter group,
including resolved galaxies with average colors significantly redder than the
corresponding bright field galaxy population. The brighter objects comprise a
wide range of types, including early and late type galaxies, starbursts, and
AGN. By contrast, we show that the faint blue X-ray population are most
consistent with being predominantly Type 2 AGN of low to moderate luminosity,
located at higher redshifts (z ~ 1 - 2). This conclusion is supported by
luminosity function models of the various classes of objects. Hence, the
combination of deep X-ray data with the high spatial resolution of HST are for
the first time allowing us to probe the faint end of the AGN luminosity
function at cosmologically interesting redshifts.Comment: AASTEX-Latex, 25 pages, 4 postscript figures, 9 jpg figures. Accepted
by the Astrophysical Journal. Full-size postscript images and figures,
included in the preprint, are available from:
http://www.stsci.edu/~koekemoe/papers/cdfs-hst
Galaxy protocluster candidates around z ~ 2.4 radio galaxies
We study the environments of 6 radio galaxies at 2.2 < z < 2.6 using
wide-field near-infrared images. We use colour cuts to identify galaxies in
this redshift range, and find that three of the radio galaxies are surrounded
by significant surface overdensities of such galaxies. The excess galaxies that
comprise these overdensities are strongly clustered, suggesting they are
physically associated. The colour distribution of the galaxies responsible for
the overdensity are consistent with those of galaxies that lie within a narrow
redshift range at z ~ 2.4. Thus the excess galaxies are consistent with being
companions of the radio galaxies. The overdensities have estimated masses in
excess of 10^14 solar masses, and are dense enough to collapse into virizalised
structures by the present day: these structures may evolve into groups or
clusters of galaxies. A flux-limited sample of protocluster galaxies with K <
20.6 mag is derived by statistically subtracting the fore- and background
galaxies. The colour distribution of the protocluster galaxies is bimodal,
consisting of a dominant blue sequence, comprising 77 +/- 10% of the galaxies,
and a poorly populated red sequence. The blue protocluster galaxies have
similar colours to local star-forming irregular galaxies (U -V ~ 0.6),
suggesting most protocluster galaxies are still forming stars at the observed
epoch. The blue colours and lack of a dominant protocluster red sequence
implies that these cluster galaxies form the bulk of their stars at z < 3.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
The Nascent Red Sequence at z~2
We present new constraints on the evolution of the early-type galaxy
color-magnitude relation (CMR) based on deep near-infrared imaging of a galaxy
protocluster at z=2.16 obtained using NICMOS on-board the Hubble Space
Telescope. This field contains a spectroscopically confirmed space-overdensity
of Lyman-alpha and H-alpha emitting galaxies which surrounds the powerful radio
galaxy MRC 1138-262. Using these NICMOS data we identify a significant
surface-overdensity (= 6.2x) of red J-H galaxies in the color-magnitude diagram
(when compared with deep NICMOS imaging from the HDF-N and UDF). The
optical-NIR colors of these prospective red-sequence galaxies indicate the
presence of on-going dust-obscured star-formation or recently formed (<~ 1.5
Gyr)stellar populations in a majority of the red galaxies. We measure the slope
and intrinsic scatter of the CMR for three different red galaxy samples
selected by a wide color cut, and using photometric redshifts both with and
without restrictions on rest-frame optical morphology. In all three cases both
the rest-frame slope and intrinsic color scatter are considerably higher
than corresponding values for lower redshift galaxy clusters. These results
suggest that while some relatively quiescent galaxies do exist in this
protocluster both the majority of the galaxy population and hence the
color-magnitude relation are still in the process of forming, as expected.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ (to appear June
1, 2008, v679n2
Galaxy Size Problem at z=3: Simulated Galaxies Are Too Small
Using state-of-the-art adaptive mesh refinement cosmological hydrodynamic
simulations with a spatial resolution of proper 0.21kpc/h in refined subregions
embedded within a comoving cosmological volume (27.4Mpc/h)^3, we investigate
the sizes of galaxies at z=3 in the standard cold dark matter model where
reionization is assumed to complete at zri~6. Our simulated galaxies are found
to be significantly smaller than the observed ones: while more than one half of
the galaxies observed by HST and VLT ranging from rest-frame UV to optical
bands with stellar masses larger than 2E10 Msun have half-light radii larger
than 2kpc/h, none of the simulated massive galaxies in the same mass range have
half-light radii larger than 2kpc/h, after taking into account dust extinction.
Corroborative evidence is provided by the rotation curves of the simulated
galaxies with total masses of 1E11-1E12Msun, which display values 300-1000km/s
at small radii (0.5kpc/h) due to high stellar concentration in the central
regions, larger than those of any well observed galaxies. Possible physical
mechanisms to resolve this serious problem include: (1) an early reionization
at zri>>6 to suppress gas condensation hence star formation, (2) a strong,
internal energetic feedback from stars or central black holes to reduce the
overall star formation efficiency, or (3) a substantial small-scale cutoff in
the matter power spectrum.Comment: high resolution pdf file is available at
http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~cen/galaxysize.pdf 15 pages, 3 figures, in
press of ApJ Letter
Deep Absorption Line Studies of Quiescent Galaxies at z~2: The Dynamical Mass-Size Relation, and First Constraints on the Fundamental plane
We present dynamical and structural scaling relations of quiescent galaxies
at z=2, including the dynamical mass-size relation and the first constraints on
the fundamental plane (FP). The backbone of the analysis is a new, very deep
VLT/X-shooter spectrum of a massive, compact, quiescent galaxy at z=2.0389. We
detect the continuum between 3700-22000A and several strong absorption features
(Balmer series, Ca H+K, G-band), from which we derive a stellar velocity
dispersion of 318 +/- 53 km/s. We perform detailed modeling of the continuum
emission and line indices and derive strong simultaneous constraints on the
age, metallicity, and stellar mass. The galaxy is a dusty (A_V=0.77
(+0.36,-0.32)) solar metallicity (log(Z/Zsun) = 0.02 (+0.20,-0.41)) post
starburst galaxy, with a mean luminosity weighted log(age/yr) of 8.9 +/- 0.1.
The galaxy formed the majority of its stars at z>3 and currently has little or
no ongoing star formation. We compile a sample of three other z~2 quiescent
galaxies with measured velocity dispersions, two of which are also post
starburst like. Their dynamical mass-size relation is offset significantly less
than the stellar mass-size relation from the local early type relations, which
we attribute to a lower central dark matter fraction. Recent cosmological
merger simulations qualitatively agree with the data, but can not fully account
for the evolution in the dark matter fraction. The z~2 FP requires additional
evolution beyond passive stellar aging, to be in agreement with the local FP.
The structural evolution predicted by the cosmological simulations is
insufficient, suggesting that additional, possibly non-homologous structural
evolution is needed.Comment: Re-submitted to ApJ after implementing the comments of the refere
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