38 results on '"Sharp, Rob"'
Search Results
2. The Knee-Fix study: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial evaluating cemented and cementless components in total knee arthroplasty
- Author
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Tay, Mei Lin, Zeng, Nina, Holland, Sherina, Bayan, Ali, Farrington, Bill J., van Rooyen, Rupert, Sharp, Rob, Elliott, Robert S. J., Walker, Matthew L., and Young, Simon W.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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3. Saints and witnesses: Virtue and vocation in the memorialization of the Western conflict journalist.
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Stupart, Richard and Sharp, Rob
- Subjects
JOURNALISTS ,VOCATION ,HUMANITARIANISM ,VIRTUE ,JUSTICE ,SAINTS ,MEMORIALIZATION ,FREEDOM of the press - Abstract
How are Western journalists who are killed in the course of their work remembered? Using the biographies of journalists killed covering conflict, this article investigates the discursive repertoires through which the memorialization of journalists killed while reporting conflict is accomplished. The authors argue that such journalists are consistently constructed as humanitarian, cosmopolitan witnesses engaged in supererogatory moral projects involving justice and voice for those outside of these journalists' geopolitical home communities. This particular articulation appears to herald a recent shift in the memorialization of the journalistic dead, although it is continuous with longer discourses in fields such as photojournalism and its idea of the 'concerned photographer'. We speculate that this shift is consistent with material changes in the field – in particular, the precaritization of conflict reporting driving journalists into the material and social world of professional humanitarianism, whose discourses around the moral worth and cosmopolitan nature of the work have colonized the subfield of conflict reporting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
4. Friends like these: A shift in labour, security and the normative ideals of conflict journalism.
- Author
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Sharp, Rob and Stupart, Richard
- Subjects
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HUMANITARIANISM , *WAR , *JOURNALISM , *FREEDOM of the press - Abstract
This paper draws on previous work in the fields of conflict studies and journalism studies, as well as empirical work by the authors on the normative language of conflict journalism to argue that this subfield of journalism appears to have increasingly 'moved house' from the normative universe of institutional journalism to that of professional humanitarianism. We describe three shifts that are taking (or have taken) place whose effects may include a transformation of ideas around 'what conflict journalism is for' and how it understands its presence in armed conflict. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
5. A relation between the characteristic stellar ages of galaxies and their intrinsic shapes
- Author
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van de Sande, Jesse, Scott, Nicholas, Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Brough, Sarah, Bryant, Julia J., Colless, Matthew, Cortese, Luca, Croom, Scott M., d′Eugenio, Francesco, Foster, Caroline, Goodwin, Michael, Konstantopoulos, Iraklis S., Lawrence, Jon S., McDermid, Richard M., Medling, Anne M., Owers, Matt S., Richards, Samuel N., and Sharp, Rob
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. LZIFU: an emission-line fitting toolkit for integral field spectroscopy data
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Ho, I-Ting, Medling, Anne M., Groves, Brent, Rich, Jeffrey A., Rupke, David S. N., Hampton, Elise, Kewley, Lisa J., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Croom, Scott M., Richards, Samuel, Schaefer, Adam L., Sharp, Rob, and Sweet, Sarah M.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Professional and Personal Identity, Precarity and Discrimination in Global Arts Journalism.
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Sharp, Rob and Vodanovic, Lucia
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SELF , *JOURNALISM , *PRECARITY , *CAPITAL movements , *PROFESSIONAL identity , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Arts journalism, journalism on the arts and entertainment industries, has been primarily defined in a Western European context within Journalism Studies. Yet this neglects the globalised nature of arts and entertainment production and consumption and the mobile reporters who cover it, and the nationally contingent challenges and opportunities they face. In a world still grappling with the Covid-19 pandemic, arts reporters face a triple threat: the precarity of what is often a freelance career, the financial disruption of the global media and entertainment industries, and the biases of a media ecosystem that favours reporters from the Global North. Drawing on 24 interviews with arts journalists from 12 different countries in four continents in 2020–2021, we explore how such journalists are increasingly subsidising their work with employment beyond the media sector. Arts journalists from Europe grapple with complex issues relating to their professional and personal identities, in contrast to journalists from the Global South, where questions relate primarily to economic and structural challenges. Journalists from West Africa interviewed face increasing if sporadic interest from media organisations in global economic centres, and the emerging content possibilities of internationally funded digital and streaming platforms, mirroring broader economic flows of capital and labour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Observational window effects on multi-object reverberation mapping.
- Author
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Malik, Umang, Sharp, Rob, Martini, Paul, Davis, Tamara M, Tucker, Brad E, Yu, Zhefu, Penton, Andrew, Lewis, Geraint F, and Calcino, Josh
- Subjects
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ACTIVE galactic nuclei , *TIME dilation , *CAMPAIGN management , *DARK energy , *ACTIVE galaxies , *SEYFERT galaxies - Abstract
Contemporary reverberation mapping campaigns are employing wide-area photometric data and high-multiplex spectroscopy to efficiently monitor hundreds of active galactic nuclei (AGNs). However, the interaction of the window function(s) imposed by the observation cadence with the reverberation lag and AGN variability time-scales (intrinsic to each source over a range of luminosities) impact our ability to recover these fundamental physical properties. Time dilation effects due to the sample source redshift distribution introduce added complexity. We present comprehensive analysis of the implications of observational cadence, seasonal gaps, and campaign baseline duration (i.e. the survey window function) for reverberation lag recovery. We find that the presence of a significant seasonal gap dominates the efficacy of any given campaign strategy for lag recovery across the parameter space, particularly for those sources with observed-frame lags above 100 d. Using the Australian Dark Energy Survey as a baseline, we consider the implications of this analysis for the 4MOST/Time-Domain Extragalactic Survey campaign providing concurrent follow-up of the Legacy Survey of Space and Time deep-drilling fields, as well as upcoming programmes. We conclude that the success of such surveys will be critically limited by the seasonal visibility of some potential field choices, but show significant improvement from extending the baseline. Optimizing the sample selection to fit the window function will improve survey efficacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. ATLAS, and Wide-Angle Tail Galaxies in ATLAS
- Author
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Mao, Minnie Y., Sharp, Rob, Saikia, D. J., Norris, Ray P., Johnston-Hollitt, Melanie, Middelberg, Enno, and Lovell, Jim E. J.
- Published
- 2011
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10. Extragalactic integral field spectroscopy on the Gemini telescopes
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Bunker, Andrew, Smith, Joanna, Parry, Ian, Ben Metcalf, R., Sharp, Rob, de Grijs, Richard, Bower, Richard, and Swinbank, Mark
- Published
- 2006
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11. Acetabular impaction grafting in total hip replacement
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Rigby, Michael, Kenny, Paddy J., Sharp, Rob, Whitehouse, Sarah L., Gie, Graham A., and Timperley, John A.
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- 2011
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12. Quantifying the effects of spatial resolution and noise on galaxy metallicity gradients.
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Acharyya, Ayan, Krumholz, Mark R, Federrath, Christoph, Kewley, Lisa J, Goldbaum, Nathan J, and Sharp, Rob
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INTEGRAL field spectroscopy ,MILKY Way ,SIGNAL-to-noise ratio ,GALACTIC evolution ,GALAXIES - Abstract
Metallicity gradients are important diagnostics of galaxy evolution, because they record the history of events such as mergers, gas inflow, and star formation. However, the accuracy with which gradients can be measured is limited by spatial resolution and noise, and hence, measurements need to be corrected for such effects. We use high-resolution (∼20 pc) simulation of a face-on Milky Way mass galaxy, coupled with photoionization models, to produce a suite of synthetic high-resolution integral field spectroscopy (IFS) datacubes. We then degrade the datacubes, with a range of realistic models for spatial resolution (2−16 beams per galaxy scale length) and noise, to investigate and quantify how well the input metallicity gradient can be recovered as a function of resolution and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) with the intention to compare with modern IFS surveys like MaNGA and SAMI. Given appropriate propagation of uncertainties and pruning of low SNR pixels, we show that a resolution of 3–4 telescope beams per galaxy scale length is sufficient to recover the gradient to ∼10–20 per cent uncertainty. The uncertainty escalates to ∼60 per cent for lower resolution. Inclusion of the low SNR pixels causes the uncertainty in the inferred gradient to deteriorate. Our results can potentially inform future IFS surveys regarding the resolution and SNR required to achieve a desired accuracy in metallicity gradient measurements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
13. A relation between the characteristic stellar ages of galaxies and their intrinsic shapes.
- Author
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de Sande, Jesse van, Scott, Nicholas, Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Brough, Sarah, Bryant, Julia J., Colless, Matthew, Cortese, Luca, Croom, Scott M., d' Eugenio, Francesco, Foster, Caroline, Goodwin, Michael, Konstantopoulos, Iraklis S., Lawrence, Jon S., McDermid, Richard M., Medling, Anne M., Owers, Matt S., Richards, Samuel N., and Sharp, Rob
- Published
- 2018
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14. The SAMI Galaxy Survey: Data Release One with emission-line physics value-added products.
- Author
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Green, Andrew W., Croom, Scott M., Scott, Nicholas, Cortese, Luca, Medling, Anne M., D'Eugenio, Francesco, Bryant, Julia J., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Allen, J. T., Sharp, Rob, I-Ting Ho, Groves, Brent, Drinkwater, Michael J., Mannering, Elizabeth, Harischandra, Lloyd, de Sande, Jesse van, Thomas, Adam D., O'Toole, Simon, McDermid, Richard M., and Minh Vuong
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GALACTIC redshift ,FIELD emission ,COSMIC dust ,GALAXY spectra ,STAR formation - Abstract
We present the first major release of data from the SAMI Galaxy Survey. This data release focuses on the emission-line physics of galaxies. Data Release One includes data for 772 galaxies, about 20 per cent of the full survey. Galaxies included have the redshift range 0.004 < z < 0.092, a large mass range (7.6 < logM*/M☉ < 11.6), and star formation rates of ∼10-4 to ∼101M☉ yr
-1 . For each galaxy, we include two spectral cubes and a set of spatially resolved 2D maps: single- and multi-component emission-line fits (with dust-extinction corrections for strong lines), local dust extinction, and star formation rate. Calibration of the fibre throughputs, fluxes, and differential atmospheric refraction has been improved over the Early Data Release. The data have average spatial resolution of 2.16 arcsec (full width at half-maximum) over the 15 arcsec diameter field of view and spectral (kinematic) resolution of R = 4263 (σ = 30 km s-1 ) around Hα. The relative flux calibration is better than 5 per cent, and absolute flux calibration has an rms of 10 per cent. The data are presented online through the Australian Astronomical Observatory's Data Central. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Discovery of a z = 0.65 post-starburst BAL quasar in the DES supernova fields.
- Author
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Mudd, Dale, Martini, Paul, Suk Sien Tie, Lidman, Chris, McMahon, Richard, Banerji, Manda, Davis, Tamara, Peterson, Bradley, Sharp, Rob, Seymour, Nicholas, Childress, Michael, Lewis, Geraint, Tucker, Brad, Fang Yuan, Abbot, Tim, Abdalla, Filipe, Allam, Sahar, Benoit-Lévy, Aurélien, Bertin, Emmanuel, and Brooks, David
- Subjects
STARBURSTS ,RADIATION absorption ,GALAXY spectra ,SPECTRA of quasars ,ASTRONOMICAL spectroscopy - Abstract
We present the discovery of a z = 0.65 low-ionization broad absorption line (LoBAL) quasar in a post-starburst galaxy in data from the Dark Energy Survey (DES) and spectroscopy from the Australian Dark Energy Survey (OzDES). LoBAL quasars are a minority of all BALs, and rarer still is that this object also exhibits broad Fe II (an FeLoBAL) and Balmer absorption. This is the first BAL quasar that has signatures of recently truncated star formation, which we estimate ended about 40 Myr ago. The characteristic signatures of an FeLoBAL require high column densities, which could be explained by the emergence of a young quasar from an early, dust-enshrouded phase, or by clouds compressed by a blast wave. The age of the starburst component is comparable to estimates of the lifetime of quasars, so if we assume the quasar activity is related to the truncation of the star formation, this object is better explained by the blast wave scenario. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
16. The SAMI Galaxy Survey: extraplanar gas, galactic winds and their association with star formation history.
- Author
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I-Ting Ho, Medling, Anne M., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Groves, Brent, Kewley, Lisa J., Kobayashi, Chiaki, Dopita, Michael A., Leslie, Sarah K., Sharp, Rob, Allen, James T., Bourne, Nathan, Bryant, Julia J., Cortese, Luca, Croom, Scott M., Dunne, Loretta, Fogarty, L. M. R., Goodwin, Michael, Green, Andy W., Konstantopoulos, Iraklis S., and Lawrence, Jon S.
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STAR formation ,INTEGRAL field spectroscopy ,GALACTIC dynamics ,GALACTIC evolution ,GALAXY formation ,STARBURSTS - Abstract
We investigate a sample of 40 local, main-sequence, edge-on disc galaxies using integral field spectroscopy with the Sydney-AAO Multi-object Integral field spectrograph (SAMI) Galaxy Survey to understand the link between properties of the extraplanar gas and their host galaxies. The kinematics properties of the extraplanar gas, including velocity asymmetries and increased dispersion, are used to differentiate galaxies hosting large-scale galactic winds from those dominated by the extended diffuse ionized gas. We find rather that a spectrum of diffuse gas-dominated to wind-dominated galaxies exist. The wind-dominated galaxies span a wide range of star formation rates (SFRs; -1 ≲ log?(SFR/M⊙?yr
-1 ) ≲ 0.5) across the whole stellar mass range of the sample (8.5 ≲ log (M*/M⊙) ≲ 11). The wind galaxies also span a wide range in SFR surface densities (10-3 -10-1.5 ?M⊙?yr-1 ?kpc-2 ) that is much lower than the canonical threshold of 0.1?M⊙?yr-1 ?kpc-2 . The wind galaxies on average have higher SFR surface densities and higher HδA values than those without strong wind signatures. The enhanced HδA indicates that bursts of star formation in the recent past are necessary for driving large-scale galactic winds. We demonstrate with Sloan Digital Sky Survey data that galaxies with high SFR surface density have experienced bursts of star formation in the recent past. Our results imply that the galactic winds revealed in our study are indeed driven by bursts of star formation, and thus probing star formation in the time domain is crucial for finding and understanding galactic winds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. HIGH PREGNANCY RATES IN TWO-YEAR-OLD WILD HORSES.
- Author
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Grant, Lisa, Sharp, Rob, Griffin, Paul, Weikel, Julie, and Pielstick, Leon
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WILD horses , *HORSE breeding , *DIGITAL rectal examination , *PREGNANCY , *MARES - Abstract
In November 2018, we screened 315 feral Horse mares via veterinary rectal palpation and trans-rectal ultrasound, approximately 1 mo after their capture and removal from the Warm Springs herd management area in Oregon. We documented a pregnancy rate (58.3%) in 2-y-old mares that was nearly 3 times higher than previously published results. For 1-y-old mares (10.8% pregnant), and for mares pooled over all ages (64.4% pregnant), pregnancy rates were within the range of pregnancy rates reported from other feral Horse populations. High pregnancy rates in 2-y-old mares could contribute to higher than expected herd growth rates in feral Horses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
18. Simulations of the OzDES AGN reverberation mapping project.
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King, Anthea L., Martini, Paul, Davis, Tamara M., Denney, K. D., Kochanek, C. S., Peterson, Bradley M., Skielboe, Andreas, Vestergaard, Marianne, Huff, Eric, Watson, Darach, Banerji, Manda, McMahon, Richard, Sharp, Rob, and Lidman, C.
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GALACTIC nuclei ,REDSHIFT ,PROJECT management ,DARK energy ,COMPUTER simulation ,SUPERNOVAE - Abstract
As part of the Australian spectroscopic dark energy survey (OzDES) we are carrying out a large-scale reverberation mapping study of ≥500 quasars over five years in the 30 deg
2 area of the Dark Energy Survey (DES) supernova fields. These quasars have redshifts ranging up to 4 and have apparent AB magnitudes between 16.8 mag < r < 22.5 mag. The aim of the survey is to measure time lags between fluctuations in the quasar continuum and broad emission-line fluxes of individual objects in order to measure black hole masses for a broad range of active galactic nuclei (AGN) and constrain the radius–luminosity (R–L) relationship. Here we investigate the expected efficiency of the OzDES reverberation mapping campaign and its possible extensions. We expect to recover lags for ∼35–45 per cent of the quasars. AGN with shorter lags and greater variability are more likely to yield a lag measurement, and objects with lags ≲6 months or ∼1 yr are expected to be recovered the most accurately. The baseline OzDES reverberation mapping campaign is predicted to produce an unbiased measurement of the R–L relationship parameters for H β, Mg II λ2798, and C iv λ1549. Extending the baseline survey by either increasing the spectroscopic cadence, extending the survey season, or improving the emission-line flux measurement accuracy will significantly improve the R–L parameter constraints for all broad emission lines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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19. The accretion histories of brightest cluster galaxies from their stellar population gradients.
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Oliva-Altamirano, Paola, Brough, Sarah, Jimmy, Tran, Kim-Vy, Couch, Warrick J., McDermid, Richard M., Lidman, Chris, von der Linden, Anja, and Sharp, Rob
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ACCRETION (Astrophysics) ,GALAXY clusters ,STELLAR populations ,STELLAR rotation ,STELLAR evolution - Abstract
We analyse the spatially resolved stellar populations of nine local (z < 0.1) Brightest Cluster Galaxies (BCGs) observed with VIMOS in Integral Field Unit mode. Our sample is composed of seven slow-rotating and two fast-rotating BCGs. We do not find a connection between stellar kinematics and stellar populations in this small sample. The BCGs have shallow metallicity gradients (median Δ[Fe/H]=-0.11 ± 0.1), high central metallicities (median [Fe/H]
[α/Fe] = 0 = 0.13 ± 0.07), and a wide range of central ages (from 5 to 15 Gyr). We propose that the reason for this is diverse evolutionary paths in BCGs. 67 per cent of the sample (6/9) show ~7 Gyr old central ages, which reflects an active accretion history, and 33 per cent of the sample (3/9) have central ages older than 11 Gyr, which suggest no star formation since z = 2. The BCGs show similar central stellar populations and stellar population gradients to early-type galaxies of similar mass (Mdyn > 1011.3 M☉ ) from the ATLAS3D survey (median [Z/H] = 0.04 ± 0.07, Δ[Z/H] = -0.19 ± 0.1). However, massive early-type galaxies from ATLAS3D have consistently old ages (median Age = 12.0 ± 3.8 Gyr). We also analyse the close massive companion galaxies of two of the BCGs. These galaxies have similar stellar populations to their respective BCGs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. IFU observations of luminous type II AGN - I. Evidence for ubiquitous winds.
- Author
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McElroy, Rebecca, Croom, Scott M., Pracy, Michael, Sharp, Rob, I.-Ting Ho, and Medling, Anne M.
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GALAXY formation ,GALACTIC evolution ,IONIZATION (Atomic physics) ,ASTRONOMICAL observations ,ASTROPHYSICS - Abstract
We present observations of 17 luminous (log(L
[O III] /L☉ ) > 8.7) local (z <0.11) type II AGN. Our aim is to investigate the prevalence and nature of AGN-driven outflows in these galaxies by combining kinematic and ionization diagnostic information. We use non-parametric methods (e.g. W80 , the width containing 80 per cent of the line flux) to assess the line widths in the central regions of our targets. The maximum values of W80 in each galaxy are in the range 400-1600km s-1 , with a mean of 790 ± 90 km s-1 . Such high velocities are strongly suggestive that these AGN are driving ionized outflows. Multi-Gaussian fitting is used to decompose the velocity structure in our galaxies. 14/17 of our targets require three separate kinematic components in the ionized gas in their central regions. The broadest components of these fits have FWHM = 530-2520 km s-1 , with a mean value of 920 ± 50 km s-1 . By simultaneously fitting both the Hβ/[OIII ] and Hα/[NII ] complexes, we construct ionization diagnostic diagrams for each component. 13/17 of our galaxies show a significant (>95 per cent) correlation between the [NII ]/Hα ratio and the velocity dispersion of the gas. Such a correlation is the natural consequence of a contribution to the ionization from shock excitation and we argue that this demonstrates that the outflows from these AGN are directly impacting the surrounding ISM within the galaxies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The SAMI Galaxy Survey: shocks and outflows in a normal star-forming galaxy.
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Ho, I-Ting, Kewley, Lisa J., Dopita, Michael A., Medling, Anne M., Allen, J. T., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Bloom, Jessica V., Bryant, Julia J., Croom, Scott M., Fogarty, L. M. R., Goodwin, Michael, Green, Andy W., Konstantopoulos, Iraklis S., Lawrence, Jon S., López-Sánchez, Á. R., Owers, Matt S., Richards, Samuel, and Sharp, Rob
- Subjects
STAR formation ,BIPOLAR outflows (Astrophysics) ,POTENTIAL theory (Physics) ,GALACTIC dynamics ,GALACTIC evolution - Abstract
We demonstrate the feasibility and potential of using large integral field spectroscopic surveys to investigate the prevalence of galactic-scale outflows in the local Universe. Using integral field data from the Sydney-AAO Multi-object Integral field spectrograph (SAMI) and the Wide Field Spectrograph, we study the nature of an isolated disc galaxy, SDSS J090005.05+000446.7 (z = 0.053 86). In the integral field data sets, the galaxy presents skewed line profiles changing with position in the galaxy. The skewed line profiles are caused by different kinematic components overlapping in the line-of-sight direction. We perform spectral decomposition to separate the line profiles in each spatial pixel as combinations of (1) a narrow kinematic component consistent with H ii regions, (2) a broad kinematic component consistent with shock excitation, and (3) an intermediate component consistent with shock excitation and photoionization mixing. The three kinematic components have distinctly different velocity fields, velocity dispersions, line ratios, and electron densities. We model the line ratios, velocity dispersions, and electron densities with our mappings iv shock and photoionization models, and we reach remarkable agreement between the data and the models. The models demonstrate that the different emission line properties are caused by major galactic outflows that introduce shock excitation in addition to photoionization by star-forming activities. Interstellar shocks embedded in the outflows shock-excite and compress the gas, causing the elevated line ratios, velocity dispersions, and electron densities observed in the broad kinematic component. We argue from energy considerations that, with the lack of a powerful active galactic nucleus, the outflows are likely to be driven by starburst activities. Our results set a benchmark of the type of analysis that can be achieved by the SAMI Galaxy Survey on large numbers of galaxies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The SAMI Pilot Survey: the kinematic morphology–density relation in Abell 85, Abell 168 and Abell 2399.
- Author
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Fogarty, L. M. R., Scott, Nicholas, Owers, Matt S., Brough, S., Croom, Scott M., Pracy, Michael B., Houghton, R. C. W., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Colless, Matthew, Davies, Roger L., Jones, D. Heath, Allen, J. T., Bryant, Julia J., Goodwin, Michael, Green, Andrew W., Konstantopoulos, Iraklis S., Lawrence, J. S., Richards, Samuel, Cortese, Luca, and Sharp, Rob
- Subjects
GALAXY clusters ,KINEMATICS ,SPECTROGRAPHS ,ANGULAR momentum (Nuclear physics) ,SPECTRAL imaging ,ELLIPTICAL galaxies - Abstract
We examine the kinematic morphology of early-type galaxies (ETGs) in three galaxy clusters Abell 85, 168 and 2399. Using data from the Sydney-AAO Multi-object Integral field spectrograph we measure spatially resolved kinematics for 79 ETGs in these clusters. We calculate λR, a proxy for the projected specific stellar angular momentum, for each galaxy and classify the 79 ETGs in our samples as fast or slow rotators. We calculate the fraction of slow rotators in the ETG populations (fSR) of the clusters to be 0.21 ± 0.08, 0.08 ± 0.08 and 0.12 ± 0.06 for Abell 85, 168 and 2399, respectively, with an overall fraction of 0.15 ± 0.04. These numbers are broadly consistent with the values found in the literature, confirming recent work asserting that the fraction of slow rotators in the ETG population is constant across many orders of magnitude in global environment. We examine the distribution of kinematic classes in each cluster as a function of environment using the projected density of galaxies: the kinematic morphology–density relation. We find that in Abell 85 fSR increases in higher density regions but in Abell 168 and 2399 this trend is not seen. We examine the differences between the individual clusters to explain this. In addition, we find slow rotators on the outskirts of two of the clusters studied, Abell 85 and 2399. These galaxies reside in intermediate to low density regions and have clearly not formed at the centre of a cluster environment. We hypothesize that they formed at the centres of groups and are falling into the clusters for the first time. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. ANGULAR MOMENTA, DYNAMICAL MASSES, AND MERGERS OF BRIGHTEST CLUSTER GALAXIES.
- Author
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Jimmy, Tran, Kim-Vy, Brough, Sarah, Gebhardt, Karl, Linden, Anja von der, Couch, Warrick J., and Sharp, Rob
- Subjects
VERY Large Telescope (Chile) ,VERY large telescopes ,ASTRONOMICAL photometry ,STELLAR rotation ,REDSHIFT - Abstract
Using the VIMOS integral field unit (IFU) spectrograph on the Very Large Telescope, we have spatially mapped the kinematic properties of 10 nearby brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs) and 4 BCG companion galaxies located within a redshift of z = 0.1. In the hierarchical formation model, these massive galaxies (10
10.5 M☼ < Mdyn < 1011.9 M☼ ) are expected to undergo more mergers than lower mass galaxies, and simulations show that dry minor mergers can remove angular momentum. We test whether BCGs have low angular momenta by using the λRe parameter developed by the SAURON and ATLAS3D teams and combine our kinematics with Sloan Digital Sky Survey photometry to analyze the BCGs' merger status. We find that 30% (3/10) of the BCGs and 100% of the companion galaxies (4/4) are fast rotators as defined by the ATLAS3D criteria. Our fastest rotating BCG has a λRe = 0.35 ± 0.05. We increase the number of BCGs analyzed from 1 in the combined SAURON and ATLAS3D surveys to 11 BCGs total and find that above Mdyn ∼ 11.5 M☼ , virtually all galaxies, regardless of environment, are slow rotators. To search for signs of recent merging, we analyze the photometry of each system and use the G – M20 selection criteria to identify mergers. We find that 40% ± 20% of our BCGs are currently undergoing or have recently undergone a merger (within 0.2 Gyr). Surprisingly, we find no correlation between galaxies with high angular momentum and morphological signatures of merging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The Australia Telescope Large Area Survey: spectroscopic catalogue and radio luminosity functions.
- Author
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Mao, Minnie Y., Sharp, Rob, Norris, Ray P., Hopkins, Andrew M., Seymour, Nick, Lovell, James E. J., Middelberg, Enno, Randall, Kate E., Sadler, Elaine M., Saikia, D. J., Shabala, Stanislav S., and Zinn, Peter-Christian
- Subjects
- *
STELLAR luminosity function , *TELESCOPES , *OPTICAL spectroscopy , *STAR formation - Abstract
ABSTRACT The Australia Telescope Large Area Survey (ATLAS) has surveyed 7 square degrees of sky around the Chandra Deep Field South and the European Large Area ISO Survey-South 1 fields at 1.4 GHz. ATLAS aims to reach a uniform sensitivity of 10 ˘Jy beam−1 rms over the entire region with first data release currently reaching ∼ 30 ˘Jy beam−1 rms. Here we present 466 new spectroscopic redshifts for radio sources in ATLAS as part of our optical follow-up programme. Of the 466 radio sources with new spectroscopic redshifts, 142 have star-forming optical spectra, 282 show evidence for active galactic nuclei (AGN) in their optical spectra, 10 have stellar spectra and 32 have spectra revealing redshifts, but with insufficient features to classify. We compare our spectroscopic classifications with two mid-infrared diagnostics and find them to be in broad agreement. We also construct the radio luminosity function for star-forming galaxies to z = 0.5 and for AGN to z = 0.8. The radio luminosity function for star-forming galaxies appears to be in good agreement with previous studies. The radio luminosity function for AGN appears higher than previous studies of the local AGN radio luminosity function. We explore the possibility of evolution, cosmic variance and classification techniques affecting the AGN radio luminosity function. ATLAS is a pathfinder for the forthcoming Evolution Map of the Universe (EMU) survey and the data presented in this paper will be used to guide EMU's survey design and early science papers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The WiggleZ Dark Energy Survey: high-resolution kinematics of luminous star-forming galaxies.
- Author
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Wisnioski, Emily, Glazebrook, Karl, Blake, Chris, Wyder, Ted, Martin, Chris, Poole, Gregory B., Sharp, Rob, Couch, Warrick, Kacprzak, Glenn G., Brough, Sarah, Colless, Matthew, Contreras, Carlos, Croom, Scott, Croton, Darren, Davis, Tamara, Drinkwater, Michael J., Forster, Karl, Gilbank, David G., Gladders, Michael, and Jelliffe, Ben
- Subjects
STELLAR luminosity function ,DARK energy ,SURVEYS ,KINEMATICS ,GALAXIES ,INTEGRAL field spectroscopy ,ASTRONOMICAL observations - Abstract
ABSTRACT We report evidence of ordered orbital motion in luminous star-forming galaxies at z∼ 1.3. We present integral field spectroscopy (IFS) observations, performed with the OH Suppressing InfraRed Imaging Spectrograph (OSIRIS) system, assisted by laser guide star adaptive optics on the Keck telescope, of 13 star-forming galaxies selected from the WiggleZ Dark Energy Survey. Selected via ultraviolet and [O ii] emission, the large volume of the WiggleZ survey allows the selection of sources which have comparable intrinsic luminosity and stellar mass to IFS samples at z > 2. Multiple 1-2 kpc size subcomponents of emission, or 'clumps', are detected within the Hα spatial emission which extends over 6-10 kpc in four galaxies, resolved compact emission ( r < 3 kpc) is detected in five galaxies and extended regions of Hα emission are observed in the remaining four galaxies. We discuss these data in the context of different snapshots in a merger sequence and/or the evolutionary stages of coalescence of star-forming regions in an unstable disc. We find evidence of ordered orbital motion in galaxies as expected from disc models and the highest values of velocity dispersion (σ > 100 km s
−1 ) in the most compact sources. This unique data set reveals that the most luminous star-forming galaxies at z > 1 are gaseous unstable discs indicating that a different mode of star formation could be feeding gas to galaxies at z > 1, and lending support to theories of cold dense gas flows from the intergalactic medium. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Planetary Nebulae towards the Galactic bulge - I. [O.
- Author
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Kovacevic, Anna V., Parker, Quentin A., Jacoby, George H., Sharp, Rob, Miszalski, Brent, and Frew, David J.
- Subjects
PLANETARY nebulae ,GALACTIC bulges ,ASTRONOMICAL observations ,STELLAR luminosity function ,ASTROPHYSICS ,INTERSTELLAR medium ,TELESCOPES ,COMPACT objects (Astronomy) - Abstract
We present fluxes and angular diametres for 435 Planetary Nebulae (PNe) in the central region towards the Galactic bulge. Our sample is taken from the new discoveries of the MASH PN surveys as well as previously known PN. This sample accounts for 80 per cent of known PN in this region. Fluxes and diametres are measured from narrow-band imaging with the MOSAIC-II camera on the 4-m Blanco Telescope at the Cerro-Tololo Inter-American Observatory. This is the largest (60 deg), uniform survey of the inner Galactic bulge ever undertaken. 104 of the objects have measured , , or fluxes from the literature, which we use to undertake a detailed comparison to demonstrate the integrity of our new fluxes. Our independent measurements are in excellent agreement with the very best literature sources over two orders of magnitude, while maintaining good consistency over five orders of magnitude. The excellent resolution and sensitivity of our data allows not only for a robust set of homogenous PN fluxes, but provides greater detail into their intricate, otherwise undetermined morphologies. These new, extensive measurements significantly increase the sample of reliable fluxes for Galactic bulge PN making it a valuable resource and a prelude to the construction of our new Galactic bulge PN luminosity function (Paper II). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Wide-angle tail galaxies in ATLAS.
- Author
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Mao, Minnie Y., Sharp, Rob, Saikia, D. J., Norris, Ray P., Johnston-Hollitt, Melanie, Middelberg, Enno, and Lovell, Jim E. J.
- Subjects
- *
RADIO sources (Astronomy) , *SPECTROGRAPHS , *REDSHIFT , *ASTRONOMICAL photometry , *SPACE telescopes , *GALAXIES - Abstract
We present radio images of a sample of six wide-angle tail (WAT) radio sources, identified in the Australia Telescope Large Area Survey 1.4-GHz radio survey, and new spectroscopic redshifts for four of these sources. These WATs are in the redshift range of 0.3762, and we find evidence of galaxy overdensities in the vicinity of four of the WATs from either spectroscopic or photometric redshifts. We also present follow-up spectroscopic observations of the area surrounding the largest WAT, S1189, which is at a redshift of ∼0.22. The spectroscopic observations, taken using the AAOmega spectrograph on the Anglo-Australian Telescope, show an overdensity of galaxies at this redshift. The galaxies are spread over an unusually large area of ∼12 Mpc with a velocity spread of ∼4500 km s−1. This large-scale structure includes a highly asymmetric Fanaroff–Riley type I radio galaxy and also appears to host a radio relic. It may represent an unrelaxed system with different sub-structures interacting or merging with one another. We discuss the implications of these observations for future large-scale radio surveys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The WiggleZ Dark Energy Survey: the selection function and z= 0.6 galaxy power spectrum.
- Author
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Blake, Chris, Brough, Sarah, Colless, Matthew, Couch, Warrick, Croom, Scott, Davis, Tamara, Drinkwater, Michael J., Forster, Karl, Glazebrook, Karl, Jelliffe, Ben, Jurek, Russell J., I-hui Li, Madore, Barry, Martin, Chris, Pimbblet, Kevin, Poole, Gregory B., Pracy, Michael, Sharp, Rob, Wisnioski, Emily, and Woods, David
- Subjects
GALAXIES ,REDSHIFT ,COSMIC background radiation ,ASTROPHYSICAL radiation ,BARYONS - Abstract
We report one of the most accurate measurements of the three-dimensional large-scale galaxy power spectrum achieved to date, using 56 159 redshifts of bright emission-line galaxies at effective redshift from the WiggleZ Dark Energy Survey at the Anglo-Australian Telescope. We describe in detail how we construct the survey selection function allowing for the varying target completeness and redshift completeness. We measure the total power with an accuracy of approximately 5 per cent in wavenumber bands of . A model power spectrum including non-linear corrections, combined with a linear galaxy bias factor and a simple model for redshift-space distortions, provides a good fit to our data for scales . The large-scale shape of the power spectrum is consistent with the best-fitting matter and baryon densities determined by observations of the cosmic microwave background radiation. By splitting the power spectrum measurement as a function of tangential and radial wavenumbers, we delineate the characteristic imprint of peculiar velocities. We use these to determine the growth rate of structure as a function of redshift in the range , including a data point at with an accuracy of 20 per cent. Our growth rate measurements are a close match to the self-consistent prediction of the Λ cold dark matter model. The WiggleZ survey data will allow a wide range of investigations into the cosmological model, cosmic expansion and growth history, topology of cosmic structure and Gaussianity of the initial conditions. Our calculation of the survey selection function will be released at a future date via our website wigglez.swin.edu.au. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The WiggleZ Dark Energy Survey: survey design and first data release.
- Author
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Drinkwater, Michael J., Jurek, Russell J., Blake, Chris, Woods, David, Pimbblet, Kevin A., Glazebrook, Karl, Sharp, Rob, Pracy, Michael B., Brough, Sarah, Colless, Matthew, Couch, Warrick J., Croom, Scott M., Davis, Tamara M., Forbes, Duncan, Forster, Karl, Gilbank, David G., Gladders, Michael, Jelliffe, Ben, Jones, Nick, and Li, I-hui
- Subjects
ASTRONOMY ,GALAXIES ,REDSHIFT ,COSMIC background radiation ,ARTIFICIAL satellites - Abstract
The WiggleZ Dark Energy Survey is a survey of 240 000 emission-line galaxies in the distant Universe, measured with the AAOmega spectrograph on the 3.9-m Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT). The primary aim of the survey is to precisely measure the scale of baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) imprinted on the spatial distribution of these galaxies at look-back times of 4–8 Gyr. The target galaxies are selected using ultraviolet (UV) photometry from the Galaxy Evolution Explorer satellite, with a flux limit of . We also require that the targets are detected at optical wavelengths, specifically in the range . We use the Lyman break method applied to the UV colours, with additional optical colour limits, to select high-redshift galaxies. The galaxies generally have strong emission lines, permitting reliable redshift measurements in relatively short exposure times on the AAT. The median redshift of the galaxies is . The redshift range containing 90 per cent of the galaxies is . The survey will sample a volume of ∼1 Gpc
3 over a projected area on the sky of 1000 deg2 , with an average target density of 350 deg−2 . Detailed forecasts indicate that the survey will measure the BAO scale to better than 2 per cent and the tangential and radial acoustic wave scales to approximately 3 and 5 per cent, respectively. Combining the WiggleZ constraints with existing cosmic microwave background measurements and the latest supernova data, the marginalized uncertainties in the cosmological model are expected to be and (for a constant w model). The WiggleZ measurement of w will constitute a robust, precise and independent test of dark energy models. This paper provides a detailed description of the survey and its design, as well as the spectroscopic observations, data reduction and redshift measurement techniques employed. It also presents an analysis of the properties of the target galaxies, including emission-line diagnostics which show that they are mostly extreme starburst galaxies, and Hubble Space Telescope images, which show that they contain a high fraction of interacting or distorted systems. In conjunction with this paper, we make a public data release of data for the first 100 000 galaxies measured for the project. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The WiggleZ Dark Energy Survey: small-scale clustering of Lyman-break galaxies at z < 1.
- Author
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Blake, Chris, Jurek, Russell J., Brough, Sarah, Colless, Matthew, Couch, Warrick, Croom, Scott, Davis, Tamara, Drinkwater, Michael J., Forbes, Duncan, Glazebrook, Karl, Madore, Barry, Martin, Chris, Pimbblet, Kevin, Poole, Gregory B., Pracy, Michael, Sharp, Rob, Small, Todd, and Woods, David
- Subjects
DARK energy ,REDSHIFT ,ULTRAVIOLET astronomy ,BARYONS ,COSMIC background radiation ,GALAXIES - Abstract
The WiggleZ Dark Energy Survey is a large-scale structure survey of intermediate-redshift ultraviolet-selected (UV-selected) emission-line galaxies scheduled to cover 1000 deg
2 , spanning a broad redshift range . The main scientific goal of the survey is the measurement of baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) in the galaxy clustering pattern at a significantly higher redshift than previous studies. The BAO may be applied as a standard cosmological ruler to constrain dark energy models. Based on the first 20 per cent of the data set, we present initial results concerning the small-scale clustering of the WiggleZ targets, together with survey forecasts. The WiggleZ galaxy population possesses a clustering length Mpc, which is significantly larger than UV-selected samples, with a slope . This clustering length is comparable to Lyman-break galaxies with similar UV luminosities. The clustering strength of the sample increases with optical luminosity, UV luminosity and reddening rest-frame colour. The full survey, scheduled for completion in 2010, will map an effective volume Gpc3 (evaluated at a scale ) and will measure the angular diameter distance and Hubble expansion rates in three redshift bins with accuracies of ≈5 per cent. We will determine the value of a constant dark energy equation-of-state parameter, wcons , with a higher precision than existing supernovae observations using an entirely independent technique. The WiggleZ and supernova measurements lie in highly complementary directions in the plane of wcons and the matter density Ωm . The forecast using the full combination of WiggleZ, supernova and cosmic microwave background (CMB) data sets is a marginalized error , providing a robust and precise measurement of the properties of dark energy including cross-checking of systematic errors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. A pilot survey for KX QSOs in the UKIDSS Ultra Deep Survey Field.
- Author
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Smail, Ian, Sharp, Rob, Swinbank, A. M., Akiyama, M., Ueda, Y., Foucaud, S., Almaini, O., and Croom, S.
- Subjects
- *
QUASARS , *SURVEYS , *INFRARED radiation , *ASTRONOMY , *METAPHYSICAL cosmology - Abstract
We have undertaken a pilot survey for faint quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) in the UKIRT Infrared Deep Survey (UKIDSS) Ultra Deep Survey (UDS) Field using the KX selection technique. These observations exploit the very deep near-infrared and optical imaging of this field from United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) and Subaru to select candidate QSOs based on their VJK colours and morphologies. We determined redshifts for 426 candidates using the AAOmega spectrograph on the Anglo-Australian Telescope in service time. We identify 17 QSOs in this pilot survey at z= 1.57–3.29. We combine our sample with an X-ray-selected sample of QSOs in the same field (a large fraction of which also comply with our KX selection) to constrain the surface density of QSOs with K≤ 20, deriving limits on the likely surface density of 85–150 deg−2. We use the good image quality available from our near-infrared imaging to detect a spatially extended component of the QSO light which probably represents the host galaxies. We also use our sample to investigate routes to improve the selection of KX QSOs at faint limits in the face of the significant contamination by compact, foreground galaxies. The brightest examples from our combined QSO sample will be used in conjunction with a large Very Large Telescope VIMOS spectroscopic survey of high-redshift galaxies in this region to study the structures inhabited by gas, galaxies and growing supermassive black holes at high redshifts in the UKIDSS UDS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Spectacular Trailing Streamers near LMC X-1: The First Evidence of a Jet?
- Author
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Cooke, Ryan, Kuncic, Zdenka, Sharp, Rob, and Bland-Hawthorn, Joss
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Integral-field spectroscopy of Centaurus A nucleus.
- Author
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Krajnovič, Davor, Sharp, Rob, and Thatte, Niranjan
- Subjects
- *
CENTAURUS (Constellation) , *GALAXIES , *ASTRONOMICAL observations , *SPECTRUM analysis , *INFRARED imaging , *KINEMATICS , *DYNAMICS - Abstract
We report integral-field spectroscopic observations with the Cambridge Infrared Panoramic Survey Spectrograph (CIRPASS) mounted on the Gemini South telescope of the nucleus of the nearby galaxy NGC 5128 (Centaurus A). We detect two-dimensional distributions of the following emission lines: [P ii], [Fe ii] and Paschen β. We compare our observations with previously published radio observations using the Very Large Array (VLA) and archival space-based near-infrared imaging using the Hubble Space Telescope ( HST/NICMOS) and find similar features, as well as a region of high continuum coinciding with the jet (and its N1 knot) at about 2 arcsec north-east of the nucleus, possibly related to jet-induced star formation. We use the [Fe ii]/[P ii] ratio to probe the ionization mechanism, which suggests that with increasing radius shocks play an increasingly important role. We extract spatially resolved 2D kinematics of Paβ and [Fe ii] emission lines. All emission-line regions are part of the same kinematic structure which shows a twist in the zero-velocity curve beyond ∼1 arcsec (for both Paβ and [Fe ii]). The kinematics of the two emission lines are similar, but the Paβ velocity gradient is steeper in the centre while the velocity dispersion is low everywhere. The velocity dispersion of the [Fe ii] emission is relatively high featuring a plateau, approximately oriented in the same way as the central part of the warped disc. We use 2D kinematic information to test the hypothesis that the ionized gas is distributed in a circularly rotating disc. Assuming simple disc geometry we estimate the mass of the central black hole using Paβ kinematics, which is consistent with being distributed in a circularly rotating disc. We obtain , for and , excluding the M•–σ relation prediction at a 3σ confidence level, which is in good agreement with previous studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Prospects for a New US Strategic Orientation in the Middle East
- Author
-
Bahgat, Gawdat and Sharp, Robert
- Published
- 2014
35. Roots and Branches: Contemporary Essays by West Coast Writers ed. by Howard Junker (review)
- Author
-
Sharp, Roberta
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. PRONGS: Powerful Radio Objects Nested in Galaxies with Star Formation.
- Author
-
Mao, Minnie Y., Norris, Ray P., Sharp, Rob, and Lovell, Jim E. J.
- Abstract
We have identified a new class of object that we term PRONGS (powerful radio objects nested in galaxies with star formation). These are powerful radio sources whose optical properties are that of spiral/star-forming galaxies, unlike classic powerful radio sources which are typically hosted by elliptical galaxies in the local Universe. Here we present a first look at these enigmatic sources. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Measuring the Star Formation Rate of the Universe at z ~ 1 from Hα with Multi-Object Near-Infrared Spectroscopy.
- Author
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Bunker, Andrew, Doherty, Michelle, Sharp, Rob, Parry, Ian, Dalton, Gavin, and Lewis, Ian
- Abstract
We have demonstrated the first near-infrared multi-object spectrograph, CIRPASS, on the 4.2-m William Herschel Telescope (WHT) and the 3.9-m Anglo-Australian Telescope. We have conducted an Hα survey of 38 0.77 < z < 1 galaxies over ~100 arcmin2 of the Hubble Deep Field North and Flanking Fields, to determine star formation rates (SFRs) using CIRPASS on the WHT. This represents the first successful application of this technique to observing high redshift galaxies (Doherty et al. 2004). Stacking the spectra in the rest-frame, we find a lower limit (uncorrected for dust reddening) on the star formation rate density at redshift z = 1 of 0.04 M yr−1 Mpc−3 (Doherty et al. 2006). This implies rapid evolution in the star formation rate density from z = 0 to z = 1 which is proportional to (1 + z)3.1. We intend to extend our work with FMOS on Subaru as the evolSMURF project (the Evolution of Star-formation and Metallicity in the Universe at high Redshift with FMOS). This will represent nearly two orders-of-magnitude improvement on previous work, and for the first time will provide a sample of sufficient size to measure accurately the Hα luminosity function, and so determine the global star formation rate using the same indicator as used in local surveys. Using [O II]3727 Å, Hβ, [O III] 5007 Å and Hα redshifted into the z, J & H bands, we can chart the star formation history over 70% of the age of the Universe, affording complete coverage up to z = 1.6 with the same well-understood diagnostics. The line ratios will also allow the extinction and metallicity to be measured at z>1. This will resolve one of the long-standing puzzles in extragalactic astrophysics – the true evolution of the Madau-Lilly diagram of star formation density. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Angular momenta, dynamical masses, and mergers of brightest cluster galaxies
- Author
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Sharp, Rob [Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Australian National University, Cotter Road, Weston Creek, ACT 2611 (Australia)]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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