27 research outputs found
ESO Imaging survey: Optical Deep Public Survey
This paper presents new five passbands (UBVRI) optical wide-field imaging
data accumulated as part of the DEEP Public Survey (DPS) carried out as a
public survey by the ESO Imaging Survey (EIS) project. Out of the 3 square
degrees originally proposed, the survey covers 2.75 square degrees, in at least
one band (normally R), and 1.00 square degrees in five passbands. The median
seeing, as measured in the final stacked images, is 0.97", ranging from 0.75"
to 2.0". The median limiting magnitudes (AB system, 2" aperture, 5 sigma
detection limit) are U_(AB)=25.65, B_(AB)=25.54, V_(AB)=25.18, R_(AB) = 24.8
and I_(AB)=24.12 mag, consistent with those proposed in the original survey
design. The paper describes the observations and data reduction using the EIS
Data Reduction System and its associated EIS/MVM library. The quality of the
individual images were inspected, bad images discarded and the remaining used
to produce final image stacks in each passband, from which sources have been
extracted. Finally, the scientific quality of these final images and associated
catalogs was assessed qualitatively by visual inspection and quantitatively by
comparison of statistical measures derived from these data with those of other
authors as well as model predictions, and from direct comparison with the
results obtained from the reduction of the same dataset using an independent
(hands-on) software system. Finally to illustrate one application of this
survey, the results of a preliminary effort to identify sub-mJy radio sources
are reported. To the limiting magnitude reached in the R and I passbands the
success rate ranges from 66 to 81% (depending on the fields). These data are
publicly available at CDS.Comment: 24 pages, 26 figures. Accepted for pubblication in A&
Globular Clusters in Dense Clusters of Galaxies
Deep imaging data from the Keck II telescope are employed to study the
globular cluster (GC) populations in the cores of six rich Abell clusters. The
sample includes A754, A1644, A2124, A2147, A2151, and A2152, and spans the
redshift range z = 0.035-0.066. The clusters also range in morphology from
spiral-rich, irregular systems to centrally concentrated cD clusters rich in
early-type galaxies. Globular cluster specific frequencies S_N and luminosity
function dispersions are measured for a total of 9 galaxies in six central
fields. The measured values of S_N for the six brightest cluster galaxies
(BCGs) are all higher than typical values for giant ellipticals, in accord with
the known S_N-density correlations. The three non-BCGs analyzed also have
elevated values of S_N, confirming that central location is a primary factor.
The number of GCs per unit mass for these fields are consistent with those
found in an earlier sample, giving further evidence that GC number scales with
mass and that the S_N variations are due to a deficit of halo light, i.e., S_N
reflects mass-to-light ratio.
The discussion builds on an earlier suggestion that the GCs (both metal rich
and metal poor) around the central cluster galaxies were assembled at early
times, and that star formation halted prematurely in the central galaxies at
the epoch of cluster collapse. This is consistent with recent simulations of
BCG/cluster formation. The subsequent addition of luminous material through
cluster dynamical evolution can cause S_N to decrease, and we may be seeing the
first evidence of this. Finally, the GC luminosity function measurements are
used to constrain the relative distances of the three clusters that make up the
Hercules supercluster.Comment: Uses emulateapj.sty (included); 17 pages with 9 included PostScript
figures. Figures 1-6 are separate GIF images (so 15 figures total) available
from http://astro.caltech.edu/~jpb/clusters -- the full PostScript version of
the paper (20 pages; 2.2 Mb compressed) incorporating Figures 1-6 can also be
grabbed from this URL. Accepted for publication in A
ESO Imaging Survey: Infrared Deep Public Survey
This paper presents new J and Ks data obtained from observations conducted at
the ESO 3.5m New Technology Telescope using the SOFI camera. These data were
taken as part of the ESO Imaging Survey Deep Public Survey (DPS) and
significantly extend the earlier optical/infrared EIS-DEEP survey presented in
a previous paper. The DPS-IR survey comprises two observing strategies: shallow
Ks observations providing nearly full coverage of pointings with complementary
multi-band optical data and deeper J and Ks observations of the central parts
of these fields. The DPS-IR survey provides a coverage of roughly 2.1 square
degrees in Ks with 0.63 square degrees to fainter magnitudes and also covered
in J, over three independent regions of the sky. The goal of the present paper
is to describe the observations, the data reduction procedures, and to present
the final survey products. The astrometric solution with an estimated accuracy
of <0.15" is based on the USNO catalog. The final stacked images presented here
number 89 and 272, in J and Ks, respectively, the latter reflecting the larger
surveyed area. The J and Ks images were taken with a median seeing of 0.77" and
0.8". The images reach a median 5sigma limiting magnitude of J_AB~23.06 in an
aperture of 2", while the corresponding limiting magnitude in Ks_AB is ~21.41
and ~22.16 mag for the shallow and deep strategies. Overall, the observed
limiting magnitudes are consistent with those originally proposed. The quality
of the data has been assessed by comparing the measured magnitude of sources at
the bright end directly with those reported by the 2MASS survey and at the
faint end by comparing the counts of galaxies and stars with those of other
surveys to comparable depth and to model predictions. The final science-grade
catalogs and images are available at CDS.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 14 pages, 8 figures, a full
resolution version of the paper is available from
http://www.astro.ku.dk/~lisbeth/eisdata/papers/5019.pd
Dry Mergers in GEMS: The Dynamical Evolution of Massive Early-Type Galaxies
We have used the 28'x 28' HST image mosaic from the GEMS (Galaxy Evolution
from Morphology and SEDs) survey in conjunction with the COMBO-17 photometric
redshift survey to constrain the incidence of major mergers between
spheroid-dominated galaxies with little cold gas (dry mergers) since z = 0.7. A
set of N-body merger simulations was used to explore the morphological
signatures of such interactions: they are recognizable either as < 5kpc
separation close pairs or because of broad, low surface brightness tidal
features and asymmetries. Data with the depth and resolution of GEMS are
sensitive to dry mergers between galaxies with M_V < -20.5 for z < 0.7; dry
mergers at higher redshifts are not easily recovered in single-orbit HST
imaging. Six dry mergers (12 galaxies) with luminosity ratios between 1:1 and
4:1 were found from a sample of 379 red early-type galaxies with M_V < -20.5
and 0.1 < z < 0.7. The simulations suggest that the morphological signatures of
dry merging are visible for ~250Myr and we use this timescale to convert the
observed merger incidence into a rate. On this basis we find that present day
spheroidal galaxies with M_V < -20.5 on average have undergone between 0.5 and
2 major dry mergers since z ~ 0.7. We have compared this result with the
predictions of a Cold Dark Matter based semi-analytic galaxy formation model.
The model reproduces the observed declining major merger fraction of bright
galaxies and the space density of luminous early-type galaxies reasonably well.
The predicted dry merger fraction is consistent with our observational result.
Hence, hierarchical models predict and observations now show that major dry
mergers are an important driver of the evolution of massive early-type galaxies
in recent epochs.Comment: ApJ, in press. The paper has been extensively modified, detailing the
automated+visual selection and dry merger classification. 11 pages emulateapj
with 9 reduced-quality figures. A high quality copy is available at
http://www.mpia-hd.mpg.de/homes/bell/papers/dry.ps.g
ESO Imaging Survey. The Stellar Catalogue in the Chandra Deep Field South
(abridged) Stellar catalogues in five passbands (UBVRI) over an area of
approximately 0.3 deg^2, comprising about 1200 objects, and in seven passbands
(UBVRIJK) over approximately 0.1 deg^2, comprising about 400 objects, in the
direction of the Chandra Deep Field South are presented.
The 90% completeness level of the number counts is reached at approximately U
= 23.8, B = 24.0, V = 23.5, R = 23.0, I = 21.0, J = 20.5, K = 19.0.
A scheme is presented to select point sources from these catalogues, by
combining the SExtractor parameter CLASS_STAR from all available passbands.
Probable QSOs and unresolved galaxies are identified by using the previously
developed \chi^2-technique (Hatziminaoglou et al 2002), that fits the overall
spectral energy distributions to template spectra and determines the best
fitting template.
The observed number counts, colour-magnitude diagrams, colour-colour diagrams
and colour distributions are presented and, to judge the quality of the data,
compared to simulations based on the predictions of a Galactic Model convolved
with the estimated completeness functions and the error model used to describe
the photometric errors of the data.
The resulting stellar catalogues and the objects identified as likely QSOs
and unresolved galaxies with coordinates, observed magnitudes with errors and
assigned spectral types by the -technique are presented and are
publicly available.Comment: Paper as it will appear in print. Complete figures and tables can be
obtained from: http://www.eso.org/science/eis/eis_pub/eis_pub.html. Astronomy
& Astrophysics, accepted for publicatio
The Mysterious Merger of NGC6868 and NGC6861 in the Telescopium Group
We use Chandra X-ray observations of the hot gas in and around NGC6868 and
NGC6861 in the Telescopium galaxy group (AS0851) to probe the interaction
history between these galaxies. Mean surface brightness profiles for NGC6868
and NGC6861 are each well described by double beta-models, suggesting that they
are each the dominant galaxy in a galaxy subgroup about to merge. Surface
brightness and temperature maps of the brightest group galaxy NGC6868 show a
cold front edge ~23 kpc to the north, and a cool 0.62 keV spiral-shaped tail to
the south. Analysis of the temperature and density across the cold front
constrains the relative motion between NGC6868 and the ambient group gas to be
at most transonic; while the spiral morphology of the tail strongly suggests
that the cold front edge and tail are the result of gas sloshing due to the
subgroup merger. The cooler central region of NGC6861 is surrounded by a sheath
of hot gas to the east and hot, bifurcated tails of X-ray emission to the west
and northwest. We discuss supersonic infall of the NGC6861 subroup, sloshing
from the NGC6868 and NGC6861 subgroup merger, and AGN heating as possible
explanations for these features, and discuss possible scenarios that may
contribute to the order of magnitude discrepancy between the Margorrian and
black hole mass - sigma predictions for its central black hole.Comment: 17 pages, 23 figures, submitted to Ap
ESO Imaging Survey. Deep Public Survey: Multi-Color Optical Data for the Chandra Deep Field South
This paper presents multi-passband optical data obtained from observations of
the Chandra Deep Field South (CDF-S), located at alpha ~ 3h 32m, delta ~ -27d
48m. The observations were conducted at the ESO/MPG 2.2m telescope at La Silla
using the 8kx8k Wide-Field Imager (WFI). This data set, taken over a period of
one year, represents the first field to be completed by the ongoing Deep Public
Survey (DPS) being carried out by the ESO Imaging Survey (EIS) project. This
paper describes the optical observations, the techniques employed for
un-supervised pipeline processing and the general characteristics of the final
data set. The paper includes data taken in six different filters U'UBVRI. The
data cover an area of about 0.25 square degrees reaching 5 sigma limiting
magnitudes of U'_AB=26.0, U_AB=25.7, B_AB=26.4$, V_AB=25.4, R_AB=25.5 and I_AB=
24.7 mag, as measured within a 2xFWHM aperture. The optical data covers the
area of ~ 0.1Comment: 13 pages, 19 postscript figures, Figure 3,4,7,10 are available in
jpeg format, use aa.cls style. The full postscript of the paper is available
at http://www.eso.org/science/eis/eis_pub/eis_pub.htm
Pre-FLAMES Survey: Observations of Selected Stellar Fields
This paper presents the first set of fully calibrated images and associated
stellar catalogs of the Pre-FLAMES survey being carried out by the ESO Imaging
Survey (EIS) project. The primary goal of this survey is to provide the ESO
community with data sets from which suitable target lists can be extracted for
follow-up observations with the new VLT facility FLAMES. For this purpose 160
stellar fields have been selected for observations in B, V and I using the
8kx8k Wide Field Imager (WFI) at the MPG/ESO 2.2 m telescope at La Silla. These
data have been used to assess the observing strategy adopted and to define
suitable reduction techniques and procedures for the preparation of input
catalogs for FLAMES. The images and catalogs presented here are publicly
available and can be requested from the URL address ``http://www.eso.org/eis''.Comment: 18 pages, 28 figures available in gif format. The postscript version
of the paper with all the figures encapsulated is available at
http://www.eso.org/science/eis/eis_pub/eis_pub.html. Astronomy &
Astrophysics, accepte
A Symmetry-induced Model of Elliptical Galaxy Patterns
S\'ersic (1968) generalized the de Vaucouleurs law which follows the
projected (observed) one dimensional radial profile of elliptical galaxies
closely and Dehnen (1993) proposed an analytical formula of the 3-dimensional
light distributions whose projected line profile resembles the de Vaucouleurs
law. This paper is involved to recover the Dehnen model and generalize the
model to account for galaxy elliptical shapes by means of curvilinear
coordinate systems and employing a symmetry principle. The symmetry principle
maps an orthogonal coordinate system to a light distribution pattern. The
coordinate system for elliptical galaxy patterns turns out to be the one which
is formed by the complex-plane reciprocal transformation . The resulting
spatial (3-dimensional) light distribution is spherically symmetric and has
infinite gradient at its centre, which is called spherical-nucleus solution and
is used to model galaxy central area. We can make changes of the coordinate
system by cutting out some column areas of its definition domain, the areas
containing the galaxy centre. The resulting spatial (3-dimensional) light
distributions are axisymmetric or triaxial and have zero gradient at the
centre, which are called elliptical-shape solutions and are used to model
global elliptical patterns. The two types of logarithmic light distributions
are added together to model full elliptical galaxy patterns. The model is a
generalization of the Dehnen model. One of the elliptical-shape solutions
permits realistic numerical calculation and is fitted to all R-band elliptical
images from the Frei {\it et al.}(1996)'s galaxy sample. The fitting is
satisfactory. This suggests that elliptical galaxy patterns can be represented
in terms of a few basic parameters.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figure