214 results on '"Russell E"'
Search Results
2. JWST view of four infant galaxies at z=8.31-8.49 in the MACS0416 field and implications for reionization
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Ma, Zhiyuan, Sun, Bangzheng, Cheng, Cheng, Yan, Haojing, Sun, Fengwu, Foo, Nicholas, Egami, Eiichi, Diego, Jose M., Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf A., Summers, Jake, Windhorst, Rogier A., D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Koekemoer, Anton M., Coe, Dan, Conselice, Christopher J., Driver, Simon P., Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman A., Marshall, Madeline A., Nonino, Mario, Ortiz III, Rafael, Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Adams, Nathan J., Hathi, Nimish P., Dole, Herve, Willner, S. P., Espada, Daniel, Furtak, Lukas J., Hsiao, Tiger Yu-Yang, Li, Qiong, Chen, Wenlei, Jolly, Jean-Baptiste, and Chen, Chian-Chou
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
New JWST/NIRCam wide-field slitless spectroscopy provides redshifts for four z>8 galaxies located behind the lensing cluster MACS J0416.1-2403. Two of them, "Y1" and "JD", have previously reported spectroscopic redshifts based on ALMA measurements of [OIII] 88 $\mu$m and/or [CII] 157.7 $\mu$m lines. Y1 is a merging system of three components, and the existing redshift z=8.31 is confirmed. However, JD is at z=8.34 instead of the previously claimed z=9.28. JD's close companion, "JD-N", which was a previously discovered z>8 candidate, is now identified at the same redshift as JD. JD and JD-N form an interacting pair. A new candidate at z>8, "f090d_018", is also confirmed and is at z=8.49. These four objects are likely part of an overdensity that signposts a large structure extending ~165 kpc in projected distance and ~48.7 Mpc in radial distance. They are magnified by less than one magnitude and have intrinsic $M_{UV}$ ranging from -19.57 to -20.83 mag. Their spectral energy distributions show that the galaxies are all very young with ages ~ 4-18 Myr and stellar masses about $10^{7-8}$ ${\rm M_\odot}$. These infant galaxies have very different star formation rates ranging from a few to over a hundred $\rm{M_\odot}$ yr$^{-1}$, but only two of them (JD and f090d_018) have blue rest-frame UV slopes $\beta<-2.0$ indicative of a high Lyman-continuum photon escape fraction that could contribute significantly to the cosmic hydrogen-reionizing background. Interestingly, these two galaxies are the least massive and least active ones among the four. The other two systems have much flatter UV slopes largely because of their high dust extinction ($A_{\rm V}$=0.9-1.0 mag). Their much lower indicated escape fractions show that even very young, actively star-forming galaxies can have negligible contribution to reionization when they quickly form dust throughout their bodies., Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, after addressing the referee report
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- 2024
3. EPOCHS III: Unbiased UV continuum slopes at 6.5<z<13 from combined PEARLS GTO and public JWST NIRCam imaging
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Austin, Duncan, Conselice, Christopher J., Adams, Nathan J., Harvey, Thomas, Duan, Qiao, Trussler, James, Li, Qiong, Juodzbalis, Ignas, Ormerod, Katherine, Ferreira, Leonardo, Westcott, Lewi, Harris, Honor, Wilkins, Stephen M., Bhatawdekar, Rachana, Caruana, Joseph, Coe, Dan, Cohen, Seth H., Driver, Simon P., D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Frye, Brenda, Furtak, Lukas J., Grogin, Norman A., Hathi, Nimish P., Holwerda, Benne W., Jansen, Rolf A., Koekemoer, Anton M., Marshall, Madeline A., Nonino, Mario, Ortiz III, Rafael, Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan Jr., Russell E., Summers, Jake, Willmer, Christopher N. A., Windhorst, Rogier A., Yan, Haojing, and Zackrisson, Erik
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an analysis of rest-frame UV continuum slopes, $\beta$, using a sample of 1011 galaxies at $6.5
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- 2024
4. PEARLS: Discovery of Point-Source Features Within Galaxies in the North Ecliptic Pole Time Domain Field
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Ortiz III, Rafael, Windhorst, Rogier A., Cohen, Seth H., Willner, S. P., Jansen, Rolf A., Carleton, Timothy, Kamieneski, Patrick S., Rutkowski, Michael J., Smith, Brent, Summers, Jake, McCabe, Tyler J., O'Brien, Rosalia, Diego, Jose M., Yun, Min S., D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Li, Juno, Gim, Hansung B., Hathi, Nimish P., Holwerda, Benne W., Zitrin, Adi, Cheng, Cheng, McLeod, Noah J., Conselice, Christopher J., Driver, Simon P., Yan, Haojing, Coe, Dan, Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman, Koekemoer, Anton, Marshall, Madeline A., Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Keel, William, Hammel, H. B., Hyun, M., Im, M., and Milam, S. N.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The first public 0.9-4.4{\mu}m NIRCam images of the North Ecliptic Pole (NEP) Time Domain Field (TDF) uncovered galaxies displaying point-source features in their cores as seen in the longer wavelength filters. We visually identified a sample of 66 galaxies (~1 galaxy per arcmin2) with point-like cores and have modeled their two-dimensional light profiles with GalFit, identifying 16 galactic nuclei with measurable point-source components. GalFit suggests the visual sample is a mix of both compact stellar bulge and point-source galaxy cores. This core classification is complemented by spectral energy distribution (SED) modeling to infer the sample's active galactic nucleus (AGN) and host-galaxy parameters. For galaxies with measurable point-source components, the median fractional AGN contribution to their 0.1-30.0{\mu}m flux is 0.44, and 14/16 are color-classified AGN. We conclude that near-infrared point-source galaxy cores are signatures of AGN. In addition, we define an automated sample-selection criterion to identify these point-source features. These criteria can be used in other extant and future NIRCam images to streamline the search for galaxies with unresolved IR-luminous AGN. The James Webb Space Telescope's superb angular resolution and sensitivity at infrared wavelengths is resurrecting the morphological identification of AGN., Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables
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- 2024
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5. Birds of a Feather: Resolving Stellar Mass Assembly With JWST/NIRCam in a Pair of Kindred $z \sim 2$ Dusty Star-forming Galaxies Lensed by the PLCK G165.7+67.0 Cluster
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Kamieneski, Patrick S., Frye, Brenda L., Windhorst, Rogier A., Harrington, Kevin C., Yun, Min S., Noble, Allison, Pascale, Massimo, Foo, Nicholas, Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf A., Carleton, Timothy, Koekemoer, Anton M., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Summers, Jake S., Garuda, Nikhil, Leimbach, Reagen, Holwerda, Benne W., Pierel, Justin D. R., Jimenez-Andrade, Eric F., Willner, S. P., Pampliega, Belen Alcalde, Vishwas, Amit, Keel, William C., Wang, Q. Daniel, Cheng, Cheng, Coe, Dan, Conselice, Christopher J., D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Driver, Simon P., Grogin, Norman A., Hinrichs, Tyler, Lowenthal, James D., Marshall, Madeline A., Nonino, Mario, Ortiz III, Rafael, Pigarelli, Alex, Pirzkal, Nor, Polletta, Maria del Carmen, Robotham, Aaron S. G., Ryan Jr., Russell E., and Yan, Haojing
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a new parametric lens model for the G165.7+67.0 galaxy cluster, which was discovered with $Planck$ through its bright submillimeter flux, originating from a pair of extraordinary dusty star-forming galaxies (DSFGs) at $z\approx 2.2$. Using JWST and interferometric mm/radio observations, we characterize the intrinsic physical properties of the DSFGs, which are separated by only $\sim 1^{\prime\prime}$ (8 kpc) and a velocity difference $\Delta V \lesssim 600~{\rm km}~{\rm s}^{-1}$ in the source plane, and thus likely undergoing a major merger. Boasting intrinsic star formation rates ${\rm SFR}_{\rm IR} = 320 \pm 70$ and $400 \pm 80~ M_\odot~{\rm yr}^{-1}$, stellar masses ${\rm log}[M_\star/M_\odot] = 10.2 \pm 0.1$ and $10.3 \pm 0.1$, and dust attenuations $A_V = 1.5 \pm 0.3$ and $1.2 \pm 0.3$, they are remarkably similar objects. We perform spatially-resolved pixel-by-pixel SED fitting using rest-frame near-UV to near-IR imaging from JWST/NIRCam for both galaxies, resolving some stellar structures down to 100 pc scales. Based on their resolved specific SFRs and $UVJ$ colors, both DSFGs are experiencing significant galaxy-scale star formation events. If they are indeed interacting gravitationally, this strong starburst could be the hallmark of gas that has been disrupted by an initial close passage. In contrast, the host galaxy of the recently discovered triply-imaged SN H0pe has a much lower SFR than the DSFGs, and we present evidence for the onset of inside-out quenching and large column densities of dust even in regions of low specific SFR. Based on the intrinsic SFRs of the DSFGs inferred from UV through FIR SED modeling, this pair of objects alone is predicted to yield an observable $1.1 \pm 0.2~{\rm CCSNe~yr}^{-1}$, making this cluster field ripe for continued monitoring., Comment: 47 pages, 21 figures, 5 tables. Submitted to ApJ, comments welcome!
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- 2024
6. JWST's PEARLS: 119 multiply imaged galaxies behind MACS0416, lensing properties of caustic crossing galaxies, and the relation between halo mass and number of globular clusters at $z=0.4$
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Diego, Jose M., Adams, Nathan J., Willner, Steven, Harvey, Tom, Broadhurst, Tom, Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf A., Summers, Jake, Windhorst, Rogier A., D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Koekemoer, Anton M., Coe, Dan, Conselice, Christopher J., Driver, Simon P., Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman A., Marshall, Madeline A., Nonino, Mario, Ortiz III, Rafael, Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Yan, Haojing, Sun, Fengwu, Hainline, Kevin, Berkheimer, Jessica, Polletta, Maria del Carmen, and Zitrin, Adi
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a new lens model for the $z=0.396$ galaxy cluster MACS J0416.1$-$2403 based on a previously known set of 77 spectroscopically confirmed, multiply imaged galaxies plus an additional set of 42 candidate multiply imaged galaxies from past HST and new JWST data. The new galaxies lack spectroscopic redshifts but have geometric and/or photometric redshift estimates that are presented here. The new model predicts magnifications and time delays for all multiple images. The full set of constraints totals 343, constituting the largest sample of multiple images lensed by a single cluster to date. Caustic-crossing galaxies lensed by this cluster are especially interesting. Some of these galaxies show transient events, most of which are interpreted as micro-lensing of stars at cosmological distances. These caustic-crossing arcs are expected to show similar events in future, deeper JWST observations. We provide time delay and magnification models for all these arcs. The time delays and the magnifications for different arcs are generally anti-correlated, as expected from $N$-body simulations. In the major sub-halos of the cluster, the dark-matter mass from our lens model correlates well with the observed number of globular clusters. This confirms earlier results, derived at lower redshifts, which suggest that globular clusters can be used as powerful mass proxies for the halo masses when lensing constraints are scarce or not available., Comment: 21 pages and 11 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2023
7. JWST's PEARLS: Improved Flux Calibration for NIRCam
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Ma, Zhiyuan, Yan, Haojing, Sun, Bangzheng, Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf A., Summers, Jake, Windhorst, Rogier A., D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Koekemoer, Anton M., Coe, Dan, Conselice, Christopher J., Driver, Simon P., Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman A., Marshall, Madeline A., Nonino, Mario, Ortiz III, Rafael, Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Hammel, Heidi B., Milam, Stefanie N., Adams, Nathan J., Cheng, Cheng, and Hathi, Nimish P.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization and Lensing Science (PEARLS), a JWST GTO program, obtained a set of unique NIRCam observations that have enabled us to significantly improve the default photometric calibration across both NIRCam modules. The observations consisted of three epochs of 4-band (F150W, F200W, F356W, and F444W) NIRCam imaging in the Spitzer IRAC Dark Field (IDF). The three epochs were six months apart and spanned the full duration of Cycle 1. As the IDF is in the JWST continuous viewing zone, we were able to design the observations such that the two modules of NIRCam, modules A and B, were flipped by 180 degrees and completely overlapped each other's footprints in alternate epochs. We were therefore able to directly compare the photometry of the same objects observed with different modules and detectors, and we found significant photometric residuals up to ~ 0.05 mag in some detectors and filters, for the default version of the calibration files that we used (jwst_1039.pmap). Moreover, there are multiplicative gradients present in the data obtained in the two long-wavelength bands. The problem is less severe in the data reduced using the latest pmap (jwst_1130.pmap as of September 2023), but it is still present, and is non-negligible. We provide a recipe to correct for this systematic effect to bring the two modules onto a more consistent calibration, to a photometric precision better than ~ 0.02 mag., Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables. Accepted to PASP
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- 2023
8. JWST NIRCam Photometry: A Study of Globular Clusters Surrounding Bright Elliptical Galaxy VV 191a at z=0.0513
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Berkheimer, Jessica M., Carleton, Timothy, Windhorst, Rogier A., Keel, William C., Holwerda, Benne W., Nonino, Mario, Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf A., Coe, Dan, Conselice, Christopher J., Driver, Simon P., Frye, Brenda L., Grogin, Norman A., Koekemoer, Anton M., Lucas, Ray, Marshall, Madeline A., Pirzkal, Nor, Robertson, Clayton, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan Jr., Russell E., Smith, Brent M., Summers, Jake, Tompkins, Scott, Willmer, Christopher N. A., and Yan, Haojing
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
James Webb Space Telescope NIRCam images have revealed 154 reliable globular cluster (GC) candidates around the $z = 0.0513$ elliptical galaxy VV~191a after subtracting 34 likely interlopers from background galaxies inside our search area. NIRCam broadband observations are made at 0.9-4.5 $\mu$m using the F090W, F150W, F356W, and F444W filters. Using PSF-matched photometry, the data are analyzed to present color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) and color distributions that suggest a relatively uniform population of GCs, except for small fractions of reddest (5-8%) and bluest (2-4%) outliers. GC models in the F090W vs. (F090-F150W) diagram fit the NIRCam data well and show that the majority of GCs detected have a mass of approximately $\sim$$10^{6.5}$$M_{\odot}$, with metallicities [Fe/H] spanning the typical range expected for GCs (-2.5$\le$ [Fe/H]$\le$ 0.5). However, the models predict $\sim$0.3-0.4 mag bluer (F356W-F444W) colors than the NIRCam data for a reasonable range of GC ages, metallicities, and reddening. Although our data does not quite reach the luminosity function turnover, the measured luminosity function is consistent with previous measurements, suggesting an estimated peak at $m_{\rm AB}$$\sim$-9.4 mag, $\pm$0.2 mag in the F090W filter., Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures
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- 2023
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9. PEARLS: A Potentially Isolated Quiescent Dwarf Galaxy with a TRGB Distance of 30 Mpc
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Carleton, Timothy, Ellsworth-Bowers, Timothy, Windhorst, Rogier A., Cohen, Seth H., Conselice, Christopher J., Diego, Jose M., Zitrin, Adi, Archer, Haylee N., McIntyre, Isabel, Kamieneski, Patrick, Jansen, Rolf A., Summers, Jake, D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Koekemoer, Anton M., Coe, Dan, Driver, Simon P., Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman A., Marshall, Madeline A., Nonino, Mario, Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Ortiz III, Rafael, Tompkins, Scott, Willmer, Christopher N. A., Yan, Haojing, and Holwerda, Benne W.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
A wealth of observations have long suggested that the vast majority of isolated classical dwarf galaxies ($M_*=10^7$-$10^9$ M$_\odot$) are currently star-forming. However, recent observations of the large abundance of "Ultra-Diffuse Galaxies" beyond the reach of previous large spectroscopic surveys suggest that our understanding of the dwarf galaxy population may be incomplete. Here we report the serendipitous discovery of an isolated quiescent dwarf galaxy in the nearby Universe, which was imaged as part of the PEARLS GTO program. Remarkably, individual red-giant branch stars are visible in this near-IR imaging, suggesting a distance of $30\pm4$ Mpc, and a wealth of archival photometry point to an sSFR of $2\times10^{-11}$ yr$^{-1}$ and SFR of $4\times10^{-4}$ M$_\odot$ yr$^{-1}$. Spectra obtained with the Lowell Discovery Telescope find a recessional velocity consistent with the Hubble Flow and ${>}1500$ km/s separated from the nearest massive galaxy in SDSS, suggesting that this galaxy was either quenched from internal mechanisms or had a very high-velocity ($>1000$ km/s) interaction with a nearby massive galaxy in the past. This analysis highlights the possibility that many nearby quiescent dwarf galaxies are waiting to be discovered and that JWST has the potential to resolve them., Comment: Accepted to ApJ Letters
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- 2023
10. The JWST Discovery of the Triply-imaged Type Ia 'Supernova H0pe' and Observations of the Galaxy Cluster PLCK G165.7+67.0
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Frye, Brenda L., Pascale, Massimo, Pierel, Justin, Chen, Wenlei, Foo, Nicholas, Leimbach, Reagen, Garuda, Nikhil, Cohen, Seth, Kamieneski, Patrick, Windhorst, Rogier, Koekemoer, Anton M., Kelly, Pat, Summers, Jake, Engesser, Michael, Liu, Daizhong, Furtak, Lukas, Polletta, Maria, Harrington, Kevin, Willner, Steve, Diego, Jose M., Jansen, Rolf, Coe, Dan, Conselice, Christopher J., Dai, Liang, Dole, Herve, D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Driver, Simon, Grogin, Norman, Marshall, Madeline A., Meena, Ashish, Nonino, Mario, Ortiz III, Rafael, Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan, Russell E., Strolger, Lou, Tompkins, Scott, Trussler, James, Willmer, Christopher, Yan, Haojing, Yun, Min S., and Zitrin, Adi
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
A Type Ia supernova (SN) at $z=1.78$ was discovered in James Webb Space Telescope Near Infrared Camera imaging of the galaxy cluster PLCK G165.7+67.0 (G165; $z = 0.35$). The SN is situated 1.5-2 kpc from the host-galaxy nucleus and appears in three different locations as a result of gravitational lensing by G165. These data can yield a value for Hubble's constant using time delays from this multiply-imaged SN Ia that we call "SN H0pe." Over the cluster, we identified 21 image multiplicities, confirmed five of them using the Near-Infrared Spectrograph, and constructed a new lens model that gives a total mass within 600 kpc of ($2.6 \pm 0.3) \times 10^{14}$ $M_{\odot}$. The photometry uncovered a galaxy overdensity coincident with the SN host galaxy. NIRSpec confirmed six member galaxies, four of which surround the SN host galaxy with relative velocity $\lesssim$900 km s$^{-1}$ and projected physical extent $\lesssim$33 kpc. This compact galaxy group is dominated by the SN host galaxy, which has a stellar mass of $(5.0 \pm 0.1) \times 10^{11}$ $M_{\odot}$. The group members have specific star-formation rates of 2-260 Gyr$^{-1}$ derived from the H$\alpha$-line fluxes corrected for stellar absorption, dust extinction, and slit losses. Another group centered on a strongly-lensed dusty star forming galaxy is at $z=2.24$. The total (unobscured and obscured) SFR of this second galaxy group is estimated to be ($\gtrsim$100 $M_{\odot}$ yr$^{-1}$), which translates to a supernova rate of $\sim$1 SNe yr$^{-1}$, suggesting that regular monitoring of this cluster may yield additional SNe., Comment: 29 pages, Accepted to ApJ on November 24, 2023
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- 2023
11. EPOCHS IX. When cosmic dawn breaks: Evidence for evolved stellar populations in $7 < z < 12$ galaxies from PEARLS GTO and public NIRCam imaging
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Trussler, James A. A., Conselice, Christopher J., Adams, Nathan, Austin, Duncan, Ferreira, Leonardo, Harvey, Tom, Li, Qiong, Vijayan, Aswin P., Wilkins, Stephen M., Windhorst, Rogier A., Bhatawdekar, Rachana, Cheng, Cheng, Coe, Dan, Cohen, Seth H., Driver, Simon P., Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman A., Hathi, Nimish, Jansen, Rolf A., Koekemoer, Anton, Marshall, Madeline A., Nonino, Mario, Ortiz, Rafael, Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan Jr., Russell E., D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Summers, Jake, Tompkins, Scott, Willmer, Christopher N. A., and Yan, Haojing
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The presence of evolved stars in high-redshift galaxies can place valuable indirect constraints on the onset of star formation in the Universe. Thus we use PEARLS GTO and public NIRCam photometric data to search for Balmer-break candidate galaxies at $7 < z < 12$. We find that our Balmer-break candidates at $z \sim 10.5$ tend to be older (115 Myr), have lower inferred [O III] + H$\beta$ emission line equivalent widths (120 \r{A}), have lower specific star formation rates (6 Gyr$^{-1}$) and redder UV slopes ($\beta = -1.8$) than our control sample of galaxies. However, these trends all become less strong at $z \sim 8$, where the F444W filter now probes the strong rest-frame optical emission lines, thus providing additional constraints on the current star formation activity of these galaxies. Indeed, the bursty nature of Epoch of Reionisation galaxies can lead to a disconnect between their current SED profiles and their more extended star-formation histories. We discuss how strong emission lines, the cumulative effect of weak emission lines, dusty continua and AGN can all contribute to the photometric excess seen in the rest-frame optical, thus mimicking the signature of a Balmer break. Additional medium-band imaging will thus be essential to more robustly identify Balmer-break galaxies. However, the Balmer break alone cannot serve as a definitive proxy for the stellar age of galaxies, being complexly dependent on the star-formation history. Ultimately, deep NIRSpec continuum spectroscopy and MIRI imaging will provide the strongest indirect constraints on the formation era of the first galaxies in the Universe, thereby revealing when cosmic dawn breaks., Comment: 25 pages, 16 figures, 2 tables. Updated to published version in MNRAS
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- 2023
12. A search for high-redshift direct-collapse black hole candidates in the PEARLS north ecliptic pole field
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Nabizadeh, Armin, Zackrisson, Erik, Pacucci, Fabio, Maksym, Peter W., Li, Weihui, Civano, Francesca, Cohen, Seth H., D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Koekemoer, Anton M., Summers, Jake, Windhorst, Rogier A., Adams, Nathan, Conselice, Christopher J., Coe, Dan, Driver, Simon P., Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman A., Jansen, Rolf A., Marshall, Madeline A., Nonino, Mario, Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Rutkowski, Michael J., Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Tompkins, Scott, Willmer, Christopher N. A., Yan, Haojing, Diego, Jose M., Cheng, Cheng, Finkelstein, Steven L., Willner, S. P., Zitrin, Adi, Bhatawdekar, Rachana, and Gim, Hansung B.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Direct-collapse black holes (DCBHs) of mass $\sim 10^4$-$10^5 {M}_\odot$ that form in HI-cooling halos in the early Universe are promising progenitors of the $\gtrsim 10^9 {M}_\odot$ supermassive black holes that fuel observed $z \gtrsim 7$ quasars. Efficient accretion of the surrounding gas onto such DCBH seeds may render them sufficiently bright for detection with the JWST up to $z\approx 20$. Additionally, the very steep and red spectral slope predicted across the $\approx 1$-5 $\mu$m wavelength range of the JWST/NIRSpec instrument during their initial growth phase should make them photometrically identifiable up to very high redshifts. In this work, we present a search for such DCBH candidates across the 34 arcmin$^{2}$ in the first two spokes of the JWST cycle-1 PEARLS survey of the north ecliptic pole time-domain field covering eight NIRCam filters down to a maximum depth of $\sim$ 29 AB mag. We identify two objects with spectral energy distributions consistent with the Pacucci et al. (2016) DCBH models. However, we also note that even with data in eight NIRCam filters, objects of this type remain degenerate with dusty galaxies and obscured active galactic nuclei over a wide range of redshifts. Follow-up spectroscopy would be required to pin down the nature of these objects. Based on our sample of DCBH candidates and assumptions on the typical duration of the DCBH steep-slope state, we set a conservative upper limit of $\lesssim 5\times 10^{-4}$ comoving Mpc$^{-3}$ (cMpc$^{-3}$) on the comoving density of host halos capable of hosting DCBHs with spectral energy distributions similar to the Pacucci et al. (2016) models at $z\approx 6$-14., Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2023
13. JWST's PEARLS: Mothra, a new kaiju star at z=2.091 extremely magnified by MACS0416, and implications for dark matter models
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Diego, J. M., Sun, Bangzheng, Yan, Haojing, Furtak, Lukas J., Zackrisson, Erik, Dai, Liang, Kelly, Patrick, Nonino, Mario, Adams, Nathan, Meena, Ashish K., Willner, S. P., Zitrin, Adi, Cohen, Seth H., Silva, Jordan C. J. D, Jansen, Rolf A., Summers, Jake, Windhorst, Rogier A., Coe, Dan, Conselice, Christopher J., Driver, Simon P., Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman A., Koekemoer, Anton M., Marshall, Madeline A., Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Rutkowski, Michael J., Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Tompkins, Scott, Willmer, Christopher N. A., and Bhatawdekar, Rachana
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of Mothra, an extremely magnified monster star, likely a binary system of two supergiant stars, in one of the strongly lensed galaxies behind the galaxy cluster MACS0416. The star is in a galaxy with spectroscopic redshift $z=2.091$ in a portion of the galaxy that is parsecs away from the cluster caustic. The binary star is observed only on the side of the critical curve with negative parity but has been detectable for at least eight years, implying the presence of a small lensing perturber. Microlenses alone cannot explain the earlier observations of this object made with the Hubble Space Telescope. A larger perturber with a mass of at least $10^4$\,\Msun\ offers a more satisfactory explanation. Based on the lack of perturbation on other nearby sources in the same arc, the maximum mass of the perturber is $M< 2.5\times10^6$\,\Msun, making it the smallest substructure constrained by lensing above redshift 0.3. The existence of this millilens is fully consistent with the expectations from the standard cold dark matter model. On the other hand, the existence of such small substructure in a cluster environment has implications for other dark matter models. In particular, warm dark matter models with particle masses below 8.7\,keV are excluded by our observations. Similarly, axion dark matter models are consistent with the observations only if the axion mass is in the range $0.5\times10^{-22}\, {\rm eV} < m_a < 5\times10^{-22}\, {\rm eV}$., Comment: 26 pages and 27 figures
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- 2023
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14. JWST's PEARLS: Transients in the MACS J0416.1-2403 Field
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Yan, Haojing, Ma, Zhiyuan, Sun, Bangzheng, Wang, Lifan, Kelly, Patrick, Diego, Jose M., Cohen, Seth H., Windhorst, Rogier A., Jansen, Rolf A., Grogin, Norman A., Beacom, John F., Conselice, Christopher J., Driver, Simon P., Frye, Brenda, Coe, Dan, Marshall, Madeline A., Koekemoer, Anton, Willmer, Christopher N. A., Robotham, Aaron, D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Summers, Jake, Nonino, Mario, Pirzkal, Nor, Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Ortiz III, Rafael, Tompkins, Scott, Bhatawdekar, Rachana A., Cheng, Cheng, Zitrin, Adi, and Willner, S. P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
With its unprecedented sensitivity and spatial resolution, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has opened a new window for time-domain discoveries in the infrared. Here we report observations in the only field that has received four epochs (spanning 126 days) of JWST NIRCam observations in Cycle 1. This field is towards MACS J0416.1-2403, which is a rich galaxy cluster at redshift z=0.4 and is one of the Hubble Frontier Fields. We have discovered 14 transients from these data. Twelve of these transients happened in three galaxies (with z=0.94, 1.01, and 2.091) crossing a lensing caustic of the cluster,and these transients are highly magnified by gravitational lensing. These 12 transients are likely of similar nature to those previously reported based on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) data in this field, i.e., individual stars in the highly magnified arcs. However, these twelve could not have been found by HST because they are too red and too faint. The other two transients are associated with background galaxies (z=2.205 and 0.7093) that are only moderately magnified, and they are likely supernovae. They indicate a de-magnified supernova surface density, when monitored at a time cadence of a few months to a ~3--4 micron survey limit of AB ~ 28.5 mag, of ~0.5 per sq. arcmin integrated to z ~ 2. This survey depth is beyond the capability of HST but can be easily reached by JWST., Comment: ApJS accepted
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- 2023
15. EPOCHS VII: Discovery of high redshift ($6.5 < z < 12$) AGN candidates in JWST ERO and PEARLS data
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Juodžbalis, Ignas, Conselice, Christopher J., Singh, Maitrayee, Adams, Nathan, Ormerod, Katherine, Harvey, Thomas, Austin, Duncan, Volonteri, Marta, Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf A., Summers, Jake, Windhorst, Rogier A., D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Koekemoer, Anton M., Coe, Dan, Driver, Simon P., Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman A., Marshall, Madeline A., Nonino, Mario, Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Ortiz III, Rafael, Tompkins, Scott, Willmer, Christopher N. A., and Yan, Haojing
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an analysis of a sample of robust high redshift galaxies selected photometrically from the `blank' fields of the Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization Science (PEARLS) survey and Early Release Observations (ERO) data of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) with the aim of selecting candidate high redshift active galactic nuclei (AGN). Sources were identified from the parent sample using a threefold selection procedure, which includes spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting to identify sources that are best fitted by AGN SED templates, a further selection based on the relative performance of AGN and non-AGN models, and finally morphological fitting to identify compact sources of emission, resulting in a purity-oriented procedure. Using this procedure, we identify a sample of nine AGN candidates at $6.5 < z < 12$, from which we constrain their physical properties as well as measure a lower bound on the AGN fraction in this redshift range of $5 \pm 1$\%. As this is an extreme lower limit due to our focus on purity and our SEDs being calibrated for unobscured Type 1 AGN, this demonstrates that AGN are perhaps quite common at this early epoch. The rest-frame UV colors of our candidate objects suggest that these systems are potentially candidate obese black hole galaxies (OBG), or AGN with very little galaxy component. We also investigate emission from our sample sources from fields overlapping with Chandra and VLA surveys, allowing us to place X-ray and 3 GHz radio detection limits on our candidates. Of note is a $z = 11.9$ candidate source exhibiting an abrupt morphological shift in the reddest band as compared to the bluer bands, indicating a potential merger or an unusually strong outflow., Comment: Accepted by MNRAS, 12 pages, 11 figures, updated to the final accepted version
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- 2023
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16. Hidden giants in JWST's PEARLS: An ultra-massive z=4.26 sub-millimeter galaxy that is invisible to HST
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Smail, Ian, Dudzeviciute, Ugne, Gurwell, Mark, Fazio, Giovanni G., Willner, S. P., Swinbank, A. M., Arumugam, Vinodiran, Summers, Jake, Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf A., Windhorst, Rogier A., Meena, Ashish, Zitrin, Adi, Keel, William C., Coe, Dan, Conselice, Christopher J., D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Driver, Simon P., Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman A., Koekemoer, Anton M., Marshall, Madeline A., Nonino, Mario, Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Rutkowski, Michael J., Ryan Jr., Russell E., Tompkins, Scott, Willmer, Christopher N. A., Yan, Haojing, Broadhurst, Thomas J., Cheng, Cheng, Diego, Jose M., Kamieneski, Patrick, and Yun, Min
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a multi-wavelength analysis using SMA, JCMT, NOEMA, JWST, HST, and SST of two dusty strongly star-forming galaxies, 850.1 and 850.2, seen through the massive cluster lens A1489. These SMA-located sources both lie at z=4.26 and have bright dust continuum emission, but 850.2 is a UV-detected Lyman-break galaxy, while 850.1 is undetected at <2um, even with deep JWST/NIRCam observations. We investigate their stellar, ISM, and dynamical properties, including a pixel-level SED analysis to derive sub-kpc-resolution stellar-mass and Av maps. We find that 850.1 is one of the most massive and highly obscured, Av~5, galaxies known at z>4 with M*~10^11.8 Mo (likely forming at z>6), and 850.2 is one of the least massive and least obscured, Av~1, members of the z>4 dusty star-forming population. The diversity of these two dust-mass-selected galaxies illustrates the incompleteness of galaxy surveys at z>3-4 based on imaging at <2um, the longest wavelengths feasible from HST or the ground. The resolved mass map of 850.1 shows a compact stellar mass distribution, Re(mass)~1kpc, but its expected evolution to z~1.5 and then z~0 matches both the properties of massive, quiescent galaxies at z~1.5 and ultra-massive early-type galaxies at z~0. We suggest that 850.1 is the central galaxy of a group in which 850.2 is a satellite that will likely merge in the near future. The stellar morphology of 850.1 shows arms and a linear bar feature which we link to the active dynamical environment it resides within., Comment: Submitted to ApJ, comments welcome!
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- 2023
17. Magellanic System Stars Identified in SMACS J0723.3-7327 James Webb Space Telescope Early Release Observations Images
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Summers, Jake, Windhorst, Rogier A., Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf A., Carleton, Timothy, Kamieneski, Patrick S., Holwerda, Benne W., Conselice, Christopher J., Adams, Nathan J., Frye, Brenda, Diego, Jose M., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Ortiz III, Rafael, Cheng, Cheng, Pigarelli, Alex, Robotham, Aaron, D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Tompkins, Scott, Driver, Simon P., Yan, Haojing, Coe, Dan, Grogin, Norman, Koekemoer, Anton, Marshall, Madeline A., Pirzkal, Nor, and Ryan Jr, Russell E.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We identify 71 distant stars in JWST/NIRCam ERO images of the field of galaxy cluster SMACS J0723.3-7327 (SMACS 0723). Given the relatively small ($\sim$$10^{\circ}$) angular separation between SMACS 0723 and the Large Magellanic Cloud, it is likely that these stars are associated with the LMC outskirts or Leading Arm. This is further bolstered by a spectral energy distribution analysis, which suggests an excess of stars at a physical distance of $40-100$ kpc, consistent with being associated with or located behind the Magellanic system. In particular, we find that the overall surface density of stars brighter than 27.0 mag in the field of SMACS 0723 is $\sim$2.3 times that of stars in a blank field with similar galactic latitude (the North Ecliptic Pole Time Domain Field), and that the density of stars in the SMACS 0723 field with SED-derived distances consistent with the Magellanic system is $\sim$6.1 times larger than that of the blank field. The candidate stars at these distances are consistent with a stellar population at the same distance modulus with [Fe/H] $= -1.0$ and an age of $\sim$$5.0$ Gyr. On the assumption that all of the 71 stars are associated with the LMC, then the stellar density of the LMC at the location of the SMACS 0723 field is $\sim$$740$ stars kpc$^{-3}$, which helps trace the density of stars in the LMC outskirts., Comment: Published in ApJ
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- 2023
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18. Searching for Intragroup Light in Deep U-band Imaging of the COSMOS Field
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McCabe, Tyler, Redshaw, Caleb, Otteson, Lillian, Windhorst, Rogier A., Jansen, Rolf A., Cohen, Seth H., Carleton, Timothy, Borthakur, Sanchayeeta, Ashcraft, Teresa A., Koekemoer, Anton M., Ryan, Russell E., Nonino, Mario, Paris, Diego, Grazian, Andrea, Fontana, Andriano, Giallongo, Emanuele, Speziali, Roberto, Testa, Vincenzo, Boutsia, Konstantina, O'Connell, Robert W., Rutkowski, Michael J., Scarlata, Claudia, Teplitz, Harry I., Wang, Xin, Rafelski, Marc, Grogin, Norman A., and Lucas, Ray A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the results of deep, ground based U-band imaging with the Large Binocular Telescope of the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) field as part of the near-UV imaging program, UVCANDELS. We utilize a seeing sorted stacking method along with night-to-night relative transparency corrections to create optimal depth and optimal resolution mosaics in the U-band, which are capable of reaching point source magnitudes of AB 26.5 mag at 3 sigma. These ground based mosaics bridge the wavelength gap between the HST WFC3 F27W and ACS F435W images and are necessary to understand galaxy assembly in the last 9-10 Gyr. We use the depth of these mosaics to search for the presence of U-band intragroup light (IGrL) beyond the local Universe. Regardless of how groups are scaled and stacked, we do not detect any U-band IGrL to unprecedented U-band depths of 29.1-29.6 mag/arcsec2, which corresponds to an IGrL fraction of less than 1% of the total group light. This stringent upper limit suggests that IGrL does not contribute significantly to the Extragalactic Background Light at short wavelengths. Furthermore, the lack of UV IGrL observed in these stacks suggests that the atomic gas observed in the intragroup medium (IGrM) is likely not dense enough to trigger star formation on large scales. Future studies may detect IGrL by creating similar stacks at longer wavelengths or by pre-selecting groups which are older and/or more dynamically evolved similar to past IGrL observations of compact groups and loose groups with signs of gravitational interactions., Comment: Accepted to PASP
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- 2023
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19. EPOCHS Paper II: The Ultraviolet Luminosity Function from $7.5<z<13.5$ using 180 square arcminutes of deep, blank-fields from the PEARLS Survey and Public JWST data
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Adams, Nathan J., Conselice, Christopher J., Austin, Duncan, Harvey, Thomas, Ferreira, Leonardo, Trussler, James, Juodzbalis, Ignas, Li, Qiong, Windhorst, Rogier, Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf, Summers, Jake, Tompkins, Scott, Driver, Simon P., Robotham, Aaron, D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Yan, Haojing, Coe, Dan, Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman A., Koekemoer, Anton M., Marshall, Madeline A., Pirzkal, Nor, Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Maksym, W. Peter, Rutkowski, Michael J., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Hammel, Heidi B., Nonino, Mario, Bhatawdekar, Rachana, Wilkins, Stephen M., Bradley, Larry D., Broadhurst, Tom, Cheng, Cheng, Dole, Herve, Hathi, Nimish P., and Zitrin, Adi
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an analysis of the ultraviolet luminosity function (UV LF) and star formation rate density of distant galaxies ($7.5 < z < 13.5$) in the `blank' fields of the Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization Science (PEARLS) survey combined with Early Release Science (ERS) data from the CEERS, GLASS, NGDEEP surveys/fields and the first data release of JADES. We use strict quality cuts on EAZY photometric redshifts to obtain a reliable selection and characterisation of high-redshift ($z>6.5$) galaxies from a consistently processed set of deep, near-infrared imaging. Within an area of 180 arcmin$^{2}$, we identify 1046 candidate galaxies at redshifts $z>6.5$ and we use this sample to study the ultraviolet luminosity function (UV LF) in four redshift bins between $7.5
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- 2023
20. Are JWST/NIRCam color gradients in the lensed z=2.3 dusty star-forming galaxy El Anzuelo due to central dust attenuation or inside-out galaxy growth?
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Kamieneski, Patrick S., Frye, Brenda L., Pascale, Massimo, Cohen, Seth H., Windhorst, Rogier A., Jansen, Rolf A., Yun, Min S., Cheng, Cheng, Summers, Jake S., Carleton, Timothy, Harrington, Kevin C., Diego, Jose M., Yan, Haojing, Koekemoer, Anton M., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Petric, Andreea, Furtak, Lukas J., Foo, Nicholas, Conselice, Christopher J., Coe, Dan, Driver, Simon P., Grogin, Norman A., Marshall, Madeline A., Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron S. G., Ryan Jr., Russell E., and Tompkins, Scott
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Gradients in the mass-to-light ratio of distant galaxies impede our ability to characterize their size and compactness. The long-wavelength filters of $JWST$'s NIRCam offer a significant step forward. For galaxies at Cosmic Noon ($z\sim2$), this regime corresponds to the rest-frame near-infrared, which is less biased towards young stars and captures emission from the bulk of a galaxy's stellar population. We present an initial analysis of an extraordinary lensed dusty star-forming galaxy (DSFG) at $z=2.3$ behind the $El~Gordo$ cluster ($z=0.87$), named $El~Anzuelo$ ("The Fishhook") after its partial Einstein-ring morphology. The FUV-NIR SED suggests an intrinsic star formation rate of $81^{+7}_{-2}~M_\odot~{\rm yr}^{-1}$ and dust attenuation $A_V\approx 1.6$, in line with other DSFGs on the star-forming main sequence. We develop a parametric lens model to reconstruct the source-plane structure of dust imaged by the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, far-UV to optical light from $Hubble$, and near-IR imaging with 8 filters of $JWST$/NIRCam, as part of the Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization and Lensing Science (PEARLS) program. The source-plane half-light radius is remarkably consistent from $\sim 1-4.5~\mu$m, despite a clear color gradient where the inferred galaxy center is redder than the outskirts. We interpret this to be the result of both a radially-decreasing gradient in attenuation and substantial spatial offsets between UV- and IR-emitting components. A spatial decomposition of the SED reveals modestly suppressed star formation in the inner kiloparsec, which suggests that we are witnessing the early stages of inside-out quenching., Comment: 29 pages, 11 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2023
21. PEARLS: Low Stellar Density Galaxies in the El Gordo Cluster Observed with JWST
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Carleton, Timothy, Cohen, Seth H., Frye, Brenda, Pigarelli, Alex, Zhang, Jiashuo, Windhorst, Rogier A., Diego, Jose M., Conselice, Christopher J., Cheng, Cheng, Driver, Simon P., Foo, Nicholas, Bhatawdekar, Rachana A., Kamieneski, Patrick, Jansen, Rolf A., Yan, Haojing, Summers, Jake, Robotham, Aaron, Willmer, Christopher N. A., Koekemoer, Anton, Tompkins, Scott, Coe, Dan, Grogin, Norman, Marshall, Madeline A., Nonino, Mario, Pirzkal, Nor, and Ryan Jr, Russell E.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
A full understanding of how unusually large "Ultra Diffuse Galaxies" (UDGs) fit into our conventional understanding of dwarf galaxies remains elusive, despite the large number of objects identified locally. A natural extension of UDG research is the study of similar galaxies at higher redshift to establish how their properties may evolve over time. However, this has been a challenging task given how severely systematic effects and cosmological surface brightness dimming inhibit our ability to study low-surface brightness galaxies at high-$z$. Here, we present an identification of low stellar surface density galaxies (LDGs), likely the progenitors of local UDGs, at moderate redshift with deep near-IR observations of the El Gordo cluster at $z = 0.87$ with JWST. By stacking 8 NIRCAM filters, we are able to achieve an apparent surface brightness sensitivity of $24.59$ mag arcsec$^{-2}$, faint enough to be complete to the bright end of the LDG population. Our analysis identifies significant differences between this population and local UDGs, such as their color and size distributions, which suggest that UDG progenitors are bluer and more extended at high-$z$ than at $z = 0$. This suggests that multiple mechanisms are responsible for UDG formation and that prolonged transformation of cluster dwarfs is not a primary UDG formation mechanism at high-$z$. Furthermore, we find a slight overabundance of LDGs in El Gordo, and, in contrast to findings in local clusters, our analysis does not show a deficit of LDGs in the center of El Gordo, implying that tidal destruction of LDGs is significant between $z = 0.87$ and $z = 0$., Comment: Accepted to ApJ
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- 2023
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22. Paper 1: The JWST PEARLS View of the El Gordo Galaxy Cluster and of the Structure It Magnifies
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Frye, Brenda L., Pascale, Massimo, Foo, Nicholas, Leimbach, Reagen, Garuda, Nikhil, Robles, Paulina Soto, Summers, Jake, Diaz, Carlos, Kamieneski, Patrick, Furtak, Lukas, Cohen, Seth, Diego, Jose, Beauchesne, Benjamin, Windhorst, Rogier, Willner, Steve, Koekemoer, Anton M., Zitrin, Adi, Caminha, Gabriel, Caputi, Karina, Coe, Dan, Conselice, Christopher J., Dai, Liang, Dole, Herve, Driver, Simon, Grogin, Norman, Harrington, Kevin, Jansen, Rolf A., Kneib, Jean-Paul, Lehnert, Matt, Lowenthal, James, Marshall, Madeline A., Menanteau, Felipe, Pampleiga, Belen Alcalde, Pirzkal, Nor, Polletta, Mari, Richard, Johan, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan, Russell E., Rutkowski, Michael J., Sifon, Christobal, Tompkins, Scott, Wang, Daniel, Yan, Haojing, and Yun, Min S.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The massive galaxy cluster El Gordo (z=0.87) imprints multitudes of gravitationally lensed arcs onto James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) images. Eight bands of NIRCam imaging were obtained in the ``Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization and Lensing Science'' (``PEARLS'') program. PSF-matched photometry across Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and NIRCam filters supplies new photometric redshifts. A new light-traces-mass lens model based on 56 image multiplicities identifies the two mass peaks and yields a mass estimate within 500 kpc of ~(7.0 +/- 0.30) x 10^14 Msun. A search for substructure in the 140 cluster members with spectroscopic redshifts confirms the two main mass components. The southeastern mass peak that contains the BCG is more tightly bound than the northwestern one. The virial mass within 1.7 Mpc is (5.1 +/- 0.60) x 10^14 Msun, lower than the lensing mass. A significant transverse velocity component could mean the virial mass is underestimated. We contribute one new member to the previously known z=4.32 galaxy group. Intrinsic (delensed) positions of the five secure group members span a physical extent of ~60 kpc. Thirteen additional candidates selected by spectroscopic/photometric constraints are small and faint with a mean intrinsic luminosity ~2.2 mag fainter than L*. NIRCam imaging admits a fairly wide range of brightnesses and morphologies for the group members, suggesting a more diverse galaxy population in this galaxy overdensity., Comment: 24 pages, accepted by ApJ
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- 2023
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23. JWST's PEARLS: TN J1338-1942 -- I. Extreme jet triggered star-formation in a $z=4.11$ luminous radio galaxy
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Duncan, Kenneth J., Windhorst, Rogier A., Koekemoer, Anton M., Röttgering, Huub J. A., Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf A., Summers, Jake, Tompkins, Scott, Hutchison, Taylor A., Conselice, Christopher J., Driver, Simon P., Yan, Haojing, Adams, Nathan J., Cheng, Cheng, Coe, Dan, Diego, Jose M., Dole, Hervé, Frye, Brenda, Gim, Hansung B., Grogin, Norman A., Holwerda, Benne W., Lim, Jeremy, Marshall, Madeline A., Nonino, Mario, Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan, Jr., Russell E., and Willmer, Christopher N. A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the first JWST observations of the $z=4.11$ luminous radio galaxy TN J1338-1942, obtained as part of the ``Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization and Lensing Science'' (``PEARLS'') project. Our NIRCam observations, designed to probe the key rest-frame optical continuum and emission line features at this redshift, enable resolved spectral energy distribution modelling that incorporates both a range of stellar population assumptions and radiative shock models. With an estimated stellar mass of $\log_{10}(M/\text{M}_{\odot}) \sim 10.9$, TN J1338--1942 is confirmed to be one of the most massive galaxies known at this epoch. Our observations also reveal extremely high equivalent-width nebular emission coincident with the luminous AGN jets that is best fit by radiative shocks surrounded by extensive recent star-formation. We estimate the total star-formation rate (SFR) could be as high as $\sim1600\,\text{M}_{\odot}\,\text{yr}^{-1}$, with the SFR that we attribute to the jet induced burst conservatively $\gtrsim500\,\text{M}_{\odot}\,\text{yr}^{-1}$. The mass-weighted age of the star-formation, $t_{\text{mass}} <4$ Myr, is consistent with the likely age of the jets responsible for the triggered activity and significantly younger than that measured in the core of the host galaxy. The extreme scale of the potential jet-triggered star-formation activity indicates the potential importance of positive AGN feedback in the earliest stages of massive galaxy formation, with our observations also illustrating the extraordinary prospects for detailed studies of high-redshift galaxies with JWST., Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRAS after minor revisions
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- 2022
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24. CEERS Key Paper I: An Early Look into the First 500 Myr of Galaxy Formation with JWST
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Finkelstein, Steven L., Bagley, Micaela B., Ferguson, Henry C., Wilkins, Stephen M., Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Papovich, Casey, Yung, L. Y. Aaron, Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Behroozi, Peter, Dickinson, Mark, Kocevski, Dale D., Koekemoer, Anton M., Larson, Rebecca L., Bail, Aurelien Le, Morales, Alexa M., Perez-Gonzalez, Pablo G., Burgarella, Denis, Dave, Romeel, Hirschmann, Michaela, Somerville, Rachel S., Wuyts, Stijn, Bromm, Volker, Casey, Caitlin M., Fontana, Adriano, Fujimoto, Seiji, Gardner, Jonathan P., Giavalisco, Mauro, Grazian, Andrea, Grogin, Norman A., Hathi, Nimish P., Hutchison, Taylor A., Jha, Saurabh W., Jogee, Shardha, Kewley, Lisa J., Kirkpatrick, Allison, Long, Arianna S., Lotz, Jennifer M., Pentericci, Laura, Pierel, Justin D. R., Pirzkal, Nor, Ravindranath, Swara, Ryan Jr, Russell E., Trump, Jonathan R., Yang, Guang, Bhatawdekar, Rachana, Bisigello, Laura, Buat, Veronique, Calabro, Antonello, Castellano, Marco, Cleri, Nikko J., Cooper, M. C., Croton, Darren, Daddi, Emanuele, Dekel, Avishai, Elbaz, David, Franco, Maximilien, Gawiser, Eric, Holwerda, Benne W., Huertas-Company, Marc, Jaskot, Anne E., Leung, Gene C. K., Lucas, Ray A., Mobasher, Bahram, Pandya, Viraj, Tacchella, Sandro, Weiner, Benjamin J., and Zavala, Jorge A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an investigation into the first 500 Myr of galaxy evolution from the Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science (CEERS) survey. CEERS, one of 13 JWST ERS programs, targets galaxy formation from z~0.5 to z>10 using several imaging and spectroscopic modes. We make use of the first epoch of CEERS NIRCam imaging, spanning 35.5 sq. arcmin, to search for candidate galaxies at z>9. Following a detailed data reduction process implementing several custom steps to produce high-quality reduced images, we perform multi-band photometry across seven NIRCam broad and medium-band (and six Hubble broadband) filters focusing on robust colors and accurate total fluxes. We measure photometric redshifts and devise a robust set of selection criteria to identify a sample of 26 galaxy candidates at z~9-16. These objects are compact with a median half-light radius of ~0.5 kpc. We present an early estimate of the z~11 rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) luminosity function, finding that the number density of galaxies at M_UV ~ -20 appears to evolve very little from z~9 to z~11. We also find that the abundance (surface density [arcmin^-2]) of our candidates exceeds nearly all theoretical predictions. We explore potential implications, including that at z>10 star formation may be dominated by top-heavy initial mass functions, which would result in an increased ratio of UV light per unit halo mass, though a complete lack of dust attenuation and/or changing star-formation physics may also play a role. While spectroscopic confirmation of these sources is urgently required, our results suggest that the deeper views to come with JWST should yield prolific samples of ultra-high-redshift galaxies with which to further explore these conclusions., Comment: Replaced with published version
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- 2022
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25. JWST's PEARLS: A JWST/NIRCam view of ALMA sources
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Cheng, Cheng, Huang, Jia-Sheng, Smail, Ian, Yan, Haojing, Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf A., Windhorst, Rogier A., Ma, Zhiyuan, Koekemoer, Anton, Willmer, Christopher N. A., Willner, S. P., Diego, Jose M., Frye, Brenda, Conselice, Christopher J., Ferreira, Leonardo, Petric, Andreea, Yun, Min, Gim, Hansung B., Polletta, Maria del Carmen, Duncan, Kenneth J., Honor, Rachel, Holwerda, Benne W., Röttgering, Huub J. A., Hathi, Nimish P., Kamieneski, Patrick S., Adams, Nathan J., Coe, Dan, Broadhurst, Tom, Summers, Jake, Tompkins, Scott, Driver, Simon P., Grogin, Norman A., Marshall, Madeline A., Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, and Ryan Jr, Russell E.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report the results of James Webb Space Telescope/NIRCam observations of 19 (sub)millimeter (submm/mm) sources detected by the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA). The accurate ALMA positions allowed unambiguous identifications of their NIRCam counterparts. Taking gravitational lensing into account, these represent 16 distinct galaxies in three fields and constitute the largest sample of its kind to date. The counterparts' spectral energy distributions from rest-frame ultraviolet to near infrared provide photometric redshifts ($1
10^{10.5}$ Msol), which are similar to sub-millimeter galaxy (SMG) hosts studied previously. However, our sample is fainter in submm/mm than the classic SMG samples are, and our sources exhibit a wider range of properties. They have dust-embedded star-formation rates as low as 10 Msol yr$^{-1}$, and the sources populate both the star-forming main sequence and the quiescent categories. The deep NIRCam data allow us to study the rest-frame near-IR morphologies. Excluding two multiply imaged systems and one quasar, the majority of the remaining sources are disk-like and show either little or no disturbance. This suggests that secular growth is a potential route for the assembly of high-mass disk galaxies. While a few hosts have large disks, the majority have small disks (median half-mass radius of 1.6 kpc). At this time, it is unclear whether this is due to the prevalence of small disks at these redshifts or some unknown selection effects of deep ALMA observations. A larger sample of ALMA sources with NIRCam observations will be able to address this question., Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, accepted by ApJL - Published
- 2022
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26. JWST's PEARLS: a new lens model for ACT-CL J0102$-$4915, 'EL Gordo', and the first red supergiant star at cosmological distances discovered by JWST
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Diego, Jose M., Meena, Ashish K., Adams, Nathan J., Broadhurst, Tom, Dai, Liang, Coe, Dan, Frye, Brenda, Kelly, Patrick, Koekemoer, Anton M., Pascale, Massimo, Willner, S. P., Zackrisson, Erik, Zitrin, Adi, Windhorst, Rogier A., Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf A., Summers, Jake, Tompkins, Scott, Conselice, Christopher J., Driver, Simon P., Yan, Haojing, Grogin, Norman, Marshall, Madeline A., Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Bradley, Larry D., Caminha, Gabriel, and Caputi, Karina
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The first JWST data on the massive colliding cluster El Gordo confirm 23 known families of multiply lensed images and identify 8 new members of these families. Based on these families, which have been confirmed spectroscopically by MUSE, we derived an initial lens model. This model guided the identification of 37 additional families of multiply lensed galaxies, among which 28 are entirely new systems, and 9 were previously known. The initial lens model determined geometric redshifts for the 37 new systems. The geometric redshifts agree reasonably well with spectroscopic or photometric redshifts when those are available. The geometric redshifts enable two additional models that include all 60 families of multiply lensed galaxies spanning a redshift range $2
0.8$ and has an estimated virial mass close the maximum mass allowed by standard cosmological models. The JWST images also reveal the presence of small-mass perturbers that produce small lensing distortions. The smallest of these is consistent with being a dwarf galaxy at $z=0.87$ and has an estimated mass of $3.8\times10^9$~\Msol, making it the smallest substructure found at $z>0.5$. The JWST images also show several candidate caustic-crossing events. One of them is detected at high significance at the expected position of the critical curve and is likely a red supergiant star at $z=2.1878$. This would be the first red supergiant found at cosmological distances. The cluster lensing should magnify background objects at $z>6$, making more of them visible than in blank fields of similar size, but there appears to be a deficiency of such objects., Comment: 27 pages, 21 figures - Published
- 2022
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27. JWST's PEARLS: Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization and Lensing Science: Project Overview and First Results
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Windhorst, Rogier A., Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf A., Summers, Jake, Tompkins, Scott, Conselice, Christopher J., Driver, Simon P., Yan, Haojing, Coe, Dan, Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman, Koekemoer, Anton, Marshall, Madeline A., O'Brien, Rosalia, Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Carleton, Timothy, Diego, Jose M., Keel, William C., Porto, Paolo, Redshaw, Caleb, Scheller, Sydney, Wilkins, Stephen M., Willner, S. P., Zitrin, Adi, Adams, Nathan J., Austin, Duncan, Arendt, Richard G., Beacom, John F., Bhatawdekar, Rachana A., Bradley, Larry D., Broadhurst, Thomas J., Cheng, Cheng, Civano, Francesca, Dai, Liang, Dole, Herve, D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Duncan, Kenneth J., Fazio, Giovanni G., Ferrami, Giovanni, Ferreira, Leonardo, Finkelstein, Steven L., Furtak, Lukas J., Gim, Hansung B., Griffiths, Alex, Hammel, Heidi B., Harrington, Kevin C., Hathi, Nimish P., Holwerda, Benne W., Honor, Rachel, Huang, Jia-Sheng, Hyun, Minhee, Im, Myungshin, Joshi, Bhavin A., Kamieneski, Patrick S., Kelly, Patrick, Larson, Rebecca L., Li, Juno, Lim, Jeremy, Ma, Zhiyuan, Maksym, Peter, Manzoni, Giorgio, Meena, Ashish Kumar, Milam, Stefanie N., Nonino, Mario, Pascale, Massimo, Pierel, Justin D. R., Petric, Andreea, Polletta, Maria del Carmen, Rottgering, Huub J. A., Rutkowski, Michael J., Smail, Ian, Straughn, Amber N., Strolger, Louis-Gregory, Swirbul, Andi, Trussler, James A. A., Wang, Lifan, Welch, Brian, Wyithe, J. Stuart B., Yun, Min, Zackrisson, Erik, Zhang, Jiashuo, and Zhao, Xiurui
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We give an overview and describe the rationale, methods, and first results from NIRCam images of the JWST "Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization and Lensing Science" ("PEARLS") project. PEARLS uses up to eight NIRCam filters to survey several prime extragalactic survey areas: two fields at the North Ecliptic Pole (NEP); seven gravitationally lensing clusters; two high redshift proto-clusters; and the iconic backlit VV 191 galaxy system to map its dust attenuation. PEARLS also includes NIRISS spectra for one of the NEP fields and NIRSpec spectra of two high-redshift quasars. The main goal of PEARLS is to study the epoch of galaxy assembly, AGN growth, and First Light. Five fields, the JWST NEP Time-Domain Field (TDF), IRAC Dark Field (IDF), and three lensing clusters, will be observed in up to four epochs over a year. The cadence and sensitivity of the imaging data are ideally suited to find faint variable objects such as weak AGN, high-redshift supernovae, and cluster caustic transits. Both NEP fields have sightlines through our Galaxy, providing significant numbers of very faint brown dwarfs whose proper motions can be studied. Observations from the first spoke in the NEP TDF are public. This paper presents our first PEARLS observations, their NIRCam data reduction and analysis, our first object catalogs, the 0.9-4.5 $\mu$m galaxy counts and Integrated Galaxy Light. We assess the JWST sky brightness in 13 NIRCam filters, yielding our first constraints to diffuse light at 0.9-4.5 {\mu}m. PEARLS is designed to be of lasting benefit to the community., Comment: Accepted to AJ, comments welcome. We ask anyone who uses our public PEARLS (NEP TDF) data to refer to this overview paper
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- 2022
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28. Deep Large Binocular Camera r-band Observations of the GOODS-N Field
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Ashcraft, Teresa A., McCabe, Tyler, Redshaw, Caleb, Windhorst, Rogier A., Jansen, Rolf A., Cohen, Seth H., Carleton, Timothy, Ganzel, Kris, Koekemoer, Anton M., Ryan, Russell E., Nonino, Mario, Paris, Diego, Grazian, Andrea, Fontana, Adriano, Giallongo, Emanuele, Speziali, Roberto, Testa, Vincenzo, Boutsia, Konstantina, O'Connell, Robert W., Rutkowski, Michael J., Scarlata, Claudia, Teplitz, Harry I., Wang, Xin, Rafelski, Marc, and Grogin, Norman A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We obtained 838 Sloan r-band images (~28 hrs) of the GOODS-North field with the Large Binocular Camera (LBC) on the Large Binocular Telescope in order to study the presence of extended, low surface brightness features in galaxies and investigate the trade-off between image depth and resolution. The individual images were sorted by effective seeing, which allowed for optimal resolution and optimal depth mosaics to be created with all images with seeing FWHM < 0.9" and FWHM < 2.0", respectively. Examining bright galaxies and their substructure as well as accurately deblending overlapping objects requires the optimal resolution mosaic, while detecting the faintest objects possible (to a limiting magnitude of $m_{AB}$ ~ 29.2 mag) requires the optimal depth mosaic. The better surface brightness sensitivity resulting from the larger LBC pixels, compared to those of extant WFC3/UVIS and ACS/WFC cameras aboard the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) allows for unambiguous detection of both diffuse flux and very faint tidal tails. We created azimuthally-averaged radial surface brightness profiles for the 360 brightest galaxies in the mosaics. We find little difference in the majority of the light profiles from the optimal resolution and optimal depth mosaics. However, $\lesssim$ 15% of the profiles show excess flux in the galaxy outskirts down to surface brightness levels of $\mu^{AB}_{r} $ $\simeq$ 31 mag arcsec $^{-2}$. This is relevant to Extragalactic Background Light (EBL) studies as diffuse light in the outer regions of galaxies are thought to be a major contribution to the EBL. While some additional diffuse light exists in the optimal depth profiles compared to the shallower, optimal resolution profiles, we find that diffuse light in galaxy outskirts is a minor contribution to the EBL overall in the r-band., Comment: 30 pages, 25 figures, submitted to PASP
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- 2022
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29. JWST's PEARLS: dust attenuation and gravitational lensing in the backlit-galaxy system VV 191
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Keel, William C., Windhorst, Rogier A., Jansen, Rolf A., Cohen, Seth H., Summers, Jake, Holwerda, Benne, Bradford, Sarah T., Robertson, Clayton D., Ferrami, Giovanni, Wyithe, Stuart, Yan, Haojing, Conselice, Christopher J., Driver, Simon P., Robotham, Aaron, Grogin, Norman A., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Koekemoer, Anton M., Frye, Brenda L., Hathi, Nimish P., Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Pirzkal, Nor, Marshall, Madeline A., Coe, Dan, Diego, Jose M., Broadhurst, Thomas J., Rutkowski, Michael J., Wang, Lifan, Willner, S. P., Petric, Andreea, Cheng, Cheng, and Zitrin, Adi
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We derive the spatial and wavelength behavior of dust attenuation in the multiple-armed spiral galaxy VV191b using backlighting by the superimposed elliptical system VV191a in a pair with an exceptionally favorable geometry for this measurement. Imaging using JWST and HST spans the wavelength range 0.3-4.5 microns with high angular resolution, tracing the dust in detail from 0.6 to 1.5 microns. Distinct dust lanes continue well beyond the bright spiral arms, and trace a complex web, with a very sharp radial cutoff near 1.7 Petrosian radii. We present attenuation profiles and coverage statistics in each band at radii 14-21 kpc. We derive the attenuation law with wavelength; the data both within and between the dust lanes clearly favor a stronger reddening behavior (R ~ 2.0 between 0.6 and 0.9 microns, approaching unity by 1.5 microns) than found for starbursts and star-forming regions of galaxies. Power-law extinction behavior lambda^(-beta) gives beta=2.1 from 0.6-0.9 microns. R decreases at increasing wavelengths (R~1.1 between 0.9 and 1.5 microns), while beta steepens to 2.5. Mixing regions of different column density flattens the wavelength behavior, so these results suggest a different grain population than in our vicinity. The NIRCam images reveal a lens arc and counterimage from a background galaxy at z~1, spanning 90 degrees azimuthally at 2.8" from the foreground elliptical galaxy nucleus, and an additional weakly-lensed galaxy. The lens model and imaging data give a mass/light ratio 7.6 in solar units within the Einstein radius 2.0 kpc., Comment: Accepted by Astron. J. Analysis redone since submission, using updated JWST calibrations. Dust reddening behavior is steeper with wavelength and lensed galaxy redshift lower than we first derived
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- 2022
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30. JWST Imaging of Earendel, the Extremely Magnified Star at Redshift $z=6.2$
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Welch, Brian, Coe, Dan, Zackrisson, Erik, de Mink, S. E., Ravindranath, Swara, Anderson, Jay, Brammer, Gabriel, Bradley, Larry, Yoon, Jinmi, Kelly, Patrick, Diego, Jose M., Windhorst, Rogier, Zitrin, Adi, Dimauro, Paola, Jimenez-Teja, Yolanda, Abdurro'uf, Nonino, Mario, Acebron, Ana, Andrade-Santos, Felipe, Avila, Roberto J., Bayliss, Matthew B., Benitez, Alex, Broadhurst, Tom, Bhatawdekar, Rachana, Bradac, Marusa, Caminha, Gabriel, Chen, Wenlei, Eldridge, Jan, Farag, Ebraheem, Florian, Michael, Frye, Brenda, Fujimoto, Seiji, Gomez, Sebastian, Henry, Alaina, Hsiao, Tiger Y. -Y, Hutchison, Taylor A., James, Bethan L., Joyce, Meridith, Jung, Intae, Khullar, Gourav, Larson, Rebecca L., Mahler, Guillaume, Mandelker, Nir, McCandliss, Stephan, Morishita, Takahiro, Newshore, Rosa, Norman, Colin, O'Connor, Kyle, Oesch, Pascal A., Oguri, Masamune, Ouichi, Masami, Postman, Marc, Rigby, Jane R., Ryan Jr., Russell E., Sharma, Soniya, Sharon, Keren, Strait, Victoria, Strolger, Louis-Gregory, Timmes, F. X., Toft, Sune, Trenti, Michele, Vanzella, Eros, and Vikaeus, Anton
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The gravitationally lensed star WHL0137-LS, nicknamed Earendel, was identified with a photometric redshift $z_{phot} = 6.2 \pm 0.1$ based on images taken with the Hubble Space Telescope. Here we present James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Near Infrared Camera (NIRCam) images of Earendel in 8 filters spanning 0.8--5.0$\mu$m. In these higher resolution images, Earendel remains a single unresolved point source on the lensing critical curve, increasing the lower limit on the lensing magnification to $\mu > 4000$ and restricting the source plane radius further to $r < 0.02$ pc, or $\sim 4000$ AU. These new observations strengthen the conclusion that Earendel is best explained by an individual star or multiple star system, and support the previous photometric redshift estimate. Fitting grids of stellar spectra to our photometry yields a stellar temperature of $T_{\mathrm{eff}} \simeq 13000$--16000 K assuming the light is dominated by a single star. The delensed bolometric luminosity in this case ranges from $\log(L) = 5.8$--6.6 $L_{\odot}$, which is in the range where one expects luminous blue variable stars. Follow-up observations, including JWST NIRSpec scheduled for late 2022, are needed to further unravel the nature of this object, which presents a unique opportunity to study massive stars in the first billion years of the universe., Comment: Accepted to ApJL. Data products, lens models, and analysis code will be available online at https://cosmic-spring.github.io
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- 2022
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31. Dusty Starbursts Masquerading as Ultra-high Redshift Galaxies in JWST CEERS Observations
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Zavala, Jorge A., Buat, Veronique, Casey, Caitlin M., Burgarella, Denis, Finkelstein, Steven L., Bagley, Micaela B., Ciesla, Laure, Daddi, Emanuele, Dickinson, Mark, Ferguson, Henry C., Franco, Maximilien, Jim'enez-Andrade, E. F., Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Koekemoer, Anton M., Bail, Aurélien Le, Murphy, E. J., Papovich, Casey, Tacchella, Sandro, Wilkins, Stephen M., Aretxaga, Itziar, Behroozi, Peter, Champagne, Jaclyn B., Fontana, Adriano, Giavalisco, Mauro, Grazian, Andrea, Grogin, Norman A., Kewley, Lisa J., Kocevski, Dale D., Kirkpatrick, Allison, Lotz, Jennifer M., Pentericci, Laura, Perez-Gonzalez, Pablo G., Pirzkal, Nor, Ravindranath, Swara, Somerville, Rachel S., Trump, Jonathan R., Yang, Guang, Yung, L. Y. Aaron, Almaini, Omar, Amorin, Ricardo O., Annunziatella, Marianna, Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Backhaus, Bren E., Barro, Guillermo, Bell, Eric F., Bhatawdekar, Rachana, Bisigello, Laura, Buitrago, Fernando, Calabro, Antonello, Castellano, Marco, Ortiz, Oscar A. Chavez, Chworowsky, Katherine, Cleri, Nikko J., Cohen, Seth H., Cole, Justin W., Cooke, Kevin C., Cooper, M. C., Cooray, Asantha R., Costantin, Luca, Cox, Isabella G., Croton, Darren, Dave, Romeel, de la Vega, Alexander, Dekel, Avishai, Elbaz, David, Estrada-Carpenter, Vicente, Fernández, Vital, Finkelstein, Keely D., Freundlich, Jonathan, Fujimoto, Seiji, García-Argumánez, Ángela, Gardner, Jonathan P., Gawiser, Eric, Gómez-Guijarro, Carlos, Guo, Yuchen, Hamilton, Timothy S., Hathi, Nimish P., Holwerda, Benne W., Hirschmann, Michaela, Huertas-Company, Marc, Hutchison, Taylor A., Iyer, Kartheik G., Jaskot, Anne E., Jha, Saurabh W., Jogee, Shardha, Juneau, Stéphanie, Jung, Intae, Kassin, Susan A., Kurczynski, Peter, Larson, Rebecca L., Leung, Gene C. K., Long, Arianna, Lucas, Ray A., Magnelli, Benjamin, Mantha, Kameswara Bharadwaj, Matharu, Jasleen, McGrath, Elizabeth J., McIntosh, Daniel H., Medrano, Aubrey, Merlin, Emiliano, Mobasher, Bahram, Morales, Alexa M., Newman, Jeffrey A., Nicholls, David C., Pandya, Viraj, Rafelski, Marc, Ronayne, Kaila, Rose, Caitlin, Ryan Jr., Russell E., Santini, Paola, Seillé, Lise-Marie, Shah, Ekta A., Shen, Lu, Simons, Raymond C., Snyder, Gregory F., Stanway, Elizabeth R., Straughn, Amber N., Teplitz, Harry I., Vanderhoof, Brittany N., Vega-Ferrero, Jesús, Wang, Weichen, Weiner, Benjamin J., Willmer, Christopher N. A., and Wuyts, Stijn
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Lyman Break Galaxy (LBG) candidates at z>10 are rapidly being identified in JWST/NIRCam observations. Due to the (redshifted) break produced by neutral hydrogen absorption of rest-frame UV photons, these sources are expected to drop out in the bluer filters while being well detected in redder filters. However, here we show that dust-enshrouded star-forming galaxies at lower redshifts (z<7) may also mimic the near-infrared (near-IR) colors of z>10 LBGs, representing potential contaminants in LBG candidate samples. First, we analyze CEERS-DSFG-1, a NIRCam dropout undetected in the F115W and F150W filters but detected at longer wavelengths. Combining the JWST data with (sub)millimeter constraints, including deep NOEMA interferometric observations, we show that this source is a dusty star-forming galaxy (DSFG) at z~5.1. We also present a tentative 2.6sigma SCUBA-2 detection at 850um around a recently identified z~16 LBG candidate in the same field and show that, if the emission is real and associated with this candidate, the available photometry is consistent with a z~5 dusty galaxy with strong nebular emission lines despite its blue near-IR colors. Further observations on this candidate are imperative to mitigate the low confidence of this tentative submillimeter emission and its positional uncertainty. Our analysis shows that robust (sub)millimeter detections of NIRCam dropout galaxies likely imply z=4-6 redshift solutions, where the observed near-IR break would be the result of a strong rest-frame optical Balmer break combined with high dust attenuation and strong nebular line emission, rather than the rest-frame UV Lyman break. This provides evidence that DSFGs may contaminate searches for ultra high-redshift LBG candidates from JWST observations., Comment: Published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters (updated to match the published version)
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- 2022
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32. A Long Time Ago in a Galaxy Far, Far Away: A Candidate z ~ 12 Galaxy in Early JWST CEERS Imaging
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Finkelstein, Steven L., Bagley, Micaela B., Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Dickinson, Mark, Ferguson, Henry C., Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Papovich, Casey, Burgarella, Denis, Kocevski, Dale D., Huertas-Company, Marc, Iyer, Kartheik G., Larson, Rebecca L., Pérez-González, Pablo G., Rose, Caitlin, Tacchella, Sandro, Wilkins, Stephen M., Chworowsky, Katherine, Medrano, Aubrey, Morales, Alexa M., Somerville, Rachel S., Yung, L. Y. Aaron, Fontana, Adriano, Giavalisco, Mauro, Grazian, Andrea, Grogin, Norman A., Kewley, Lisa J., Koekemoer, Anton M., Kirkpatrick, Allison, Kurczynski, Peter, Lotz, Jennifer M., Pentericci, Laura, Pirzkal, Nor, Ravindranath, Swara, Ryan Jr., Russell E., Trump, Jonathan R., Yang, Guang, Almaini, Omar, Amorín, Ricardo O., Annunziatella, Marianna, Backhaus, Bren E., Barro, Guillermo, Behroozi, Peter, Bell, Eric F., Bhatawdekar, Rachana, Bisigello, Laura, Bromm, Volker, Buat, Véronique, Buitrago, Fernando, Calabró, Antonello, Casey, Caitlin M., Castellano, Marco, Ortiz, Óscar A. Chávez, Ciesla, Laure, Cleri, Nikko J., Cohen, Seth H., Cole, Justin W., Cooke, Kevin C., Cooper, M. C., Cooray, Asantha R., Costantin, Luca, Cox, Isabella G., Croton, Darren, Daddi, Emanuele, Davé, Romeel, de la Vega, Alexander, Dekel, Avishai, Elbaz, David, Estrada-Carpenter, Vicente, Faber, Sandra M., Fernández, Vital, Finkelstein, Keely D., Freundlich, Jonathan, Fujimoto, Seiji, García-Argumánez, Ángela, Gardner, Jonathan P., Gawiser, Eric, Gómez-Guijarro, Carlos, Guo, Yuchen, Hamilton, Timothy S., Hathi, Nimish P., Holwerda, Benne W., Hirschmann, Michaela, Hutchison, Taylor A., Jaskot, Anne, Jha, Saurabh W., Jogee, Shardha, Juneau, Stéphanie, Jung, Intae, Kassin, Susan A., Bail, Aurélien Le, Leung, Gene C. K., Lucas, Ray A., Magnelli, Benjamin, Mantha, Kameswara Bharadwaj, Matharu, Jasleen, McGrath, Elizabeth J., McIntosh, Daniel H., Merlin, Emiliano, Mobasher, Bahram, Newman, Jeffrey A., Nicholls, David C., Pandya, Viraj, Rafelski, Marc, Ronayne, Kaila, Santini, Paola, Seillé, Lise-Marie, Shah, Ekta A., Shen, Lu, Simons, Raymond C., Snyder, Gregory F., Stanway, Elizabeth R., Straughn, Amber N., Teplitz, Harry I., Vanderhoof, Brittany N., Vega-Ferrero, Jesús, Wang, Weichen, Weiner, Benjamin J., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Wuyts, Stijn, and Zavala, Jorge A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report the discovery of a candidate galaxy with a photo-z of z~12 in the first epoch of the JWST Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science (CEERS) Survey. Following conservative selection criteria we identify a source with a robust z_phot = 11.8^+0.3_-0.2 (1-sigma uncertainty) with m_F200W=27.3, and >7-sigma detections in five filters. The source is not detected at lambda < 1.4um in deep imaging from both HST and JWST, and has faint ~3-sigma detections in JWST F150W and HST F160W, which signal a Ly-alpha break near the red edge of both filters, implying z~12. This object (Maisie's Galaxy) exhibits F115W-F200W > 1.9 mag (2-sigma lower limit) with a blue continuum slope, resulting in 99.6% of the photo-z PDF favoring z > 11. All data quality images show no artifacts at the candidate's position, and independent analyses consistently find a strong preference for z > 11. Its colors are inconsistent with Galactic stars, and it is resolved (r_h = 340 +/- 14 pc). Maisie's Galaxy has log M*/Msol ~ 8.5 and is highly star-forming (log sSFR ~ -8.2 yr^-1), with a blue rest-UV color (beta ~ -2.5) indicating little dust though not extremely low metallicity. While the presence of this source is in tension with most predictions, it agrees with empirical extrapolations assuming UV luminosity functions which smoothly decline with increasing redshift. Should followup spectroscopy validate this redshift, our Universe was already aglow with galaxies less than 400 Myr after the Big Bang., Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables, ApJL in press. Summary of changes from original submission: Improvements in astrometry generated a weak detection in F150W that reduces the photo-z to 11.8 but does not increase the likelihood of lower-z solutions. A full discussion of changes from the original version is available at: https://web.corral.tacc.utexas.edu/ceersdata/papers/Maisie_update.pdf
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- 2022
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33. Dynamics of a dispersively coupled transmon qubit in the presence of a noise source embedded in the control line
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Vaaranta, Antti, Cattaneo, Marco, and Lake, Russell E.
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
We describe transmon qubit dynamics in the presence of noise introduced by an impedance-matched resistor ($50\,\mathrm{\Omega}$) that is embedded in the qubit control line. To obtain the time evolution, we rigorously derive the circuit Hamiltonian of the qubit, readout resonator and resistor by describing the latter as an infinite collection of bosonic modes through the Caldeira-Leggett model. Starting from this Jaynes-Cummings Hamiltonian with inductive coupling to the remote bath comprised of the resistor, we consistently obtain the Lindblad master equation for the qubit and resonator in the dispersive regime. We exploit the underlying symmetries of the master equation to transform the Liouvillian superoperator into a block diagonal matrix. The block diagonalization method reveals that the rate of exponential decoherence of the qubit is well-captured by the slowest decaying eigenmode of a single block of the Liouvillian superoperator, which can be easily computed. The model captures the often used dispersive strong limit approximation of the qubit decoherence rate being linearly proportional to the number of thermal photons in the readout resonator but predicts remarkably better decoherence rates when the dissipation rate of the resonator is increased beyond the dispersive strong regime. Our work provides a full quantitative description of the contribution to the qubit decoherence rate coming from the control line in chips that are currently employed in circuit QED laboratories, and suggests different possible ways to reduce this source of noise., Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures
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- 2022
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34. High-Precision Redshifts for Type Ia Supernovae with the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope P127 Prism
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Joshi, Bhavin A., Strolger, Louis-Gregory, Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Filippenko, Alexei V., Hounsell, Rebekah, Kelly, Patrick L., Kessler, Richard, Macias, Phillip, Rose, Benjamin, and Scolnic, Daniel
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present results from simulating slitless spectroscopic observations with the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope's (Roman) Wide-Field Instrument (WFI) P127 prism spanning 0.75 $\mu m$ to 1.8 $\mu m$. We quantify the efficiency of recovered Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) redshifts, as a function of P127 prism exposure time, to guide planning for future observing programs with the Roman prism. Generating the two-dimensional dispersed images and extracting one-dimensional spectra is done with the slitless spectroscopy package pyLINEAR along with custom-written software. From the analysis of 1698 simulated SN Ia P127 prism spectra, we show the efficiency of recovering SN redshifts to $z\lesssim3.0$, highlighting the exceptional sensitivity of the Roman P127 prism. Redshift recovery is assessed by setting a requirement of $\sigma_z = (\left|z - z_\mathrm{true} \right|)/(1+z) \leq 0.01$. We find that 3 hr exposures are sufficient for meeting this requirement, for $\gtrsim 50\%$ of the sample of mock SNe Ia at $z\approx2$ and within $\pm5$ days of rest-frame maximum light in the optical. We also show that a 1 hr integration of Roman can achieve the same precision in completeness to a depth of $24.4 \pm 0.06$ AB mag (or $z\lesssim 1$). Implications for cosmological studies with Roman P127 prism spectra of SNe Ia are also discussed., Comment: ApJ accepted. Updated to match accepted version
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- 2022
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35. Beyond the Local Volume. II. Population Scaleheights and Ages of Ultracool Dwarfs in Deep HST/WFC3 Parallel Fields
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Aganze, Christian, Burgasser, Adam J., Malkan, Matthew A., Theissen, Christopher A., Arevalo, Roberto A. Tejada, Hsu, Chih-Chun, Gagliuffi, Daniella C. Bardalez, Ryan, Russell E., and Holwerda, Benne W.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Ultracool dwarfs represent a significant proportion of stars in the Milky Way,and deep samples of these sources have the potential to constrain the formation history and evolution of low-mass objects in the Galaxy. Until recently, spectral samples have been limited to the local volume (d<100 pc). Here, we analyze a sample of 164 spectroscopically-characterized ultracool dwarfs identified by Aganze et al. (2022) in the Hubble Space Telescope WFC3 Infrared Spectroscopic Parallel (WISP) Survey and 3D-HST. We model the observed luminosity function using population simulations to place constraints on scaleheights, vertical velocity dispersions and population ages as a function of spectral type. Our star counts are consistent with a power-law mass function and constant star formation history for ultracool dwarfs, with vertical scaleheights 249$_{-61}^{+48}$ pc for late M dwarfs, 153$_{-30}^{+56}$ pc for L dwarfs, and 175$_{-56}^{+149}$ pc for T dwarfs. Using spatial and velocity dispersion relations, these scaleheights correspond to disk population ages of 3.6$_{-1.0}^{+0.8}$ for late M dwarfs, 2.1$_{-0.5}^{+0.9}$ Gyr for L dwarfs, and 2.4$_{-0.8}^{+2.4}$ Gyr for T dwarfs, which are consistent with prior simulations that predict that L-type dwarfs are on average a younger and less dispersed population. There is an additional 1-2 Gyr systematic uncertainty on these ages due to variances in age-velocity relations. We use our population simulations to predict the UCD yield in the JWST PASSAGES survey, a similar and deeper survey to WISPS and 3D-HST, and find that it will produce a comparably-sized UCD sample, albeit dominated by thick disk and halo sources., Comment: Published in ApJ
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- 2022
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36. Four Corners of the World: Project-Based Learning in a Multicultural Virtual Environment
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Stoica, Michael, Nizovtsev, Dmitri, and Smith, Russell E.
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The paper details a course offering that centers on student transformational experience and self-efficacy growth in an international environment by merging business, entrepreneurship and cultural experiences. Self-efficacy is achieved through both a mastery experience, mastering a task and controlling the environment, and vicarious experience through observation of people and activities. An inexpensive but very effective combination of multi-cultural virtual and in situ team work with a strong cultural component provides the transformational experience. Originally involving only two universities, one in China and one in the United Sates, the course has expanded over the years of its existence to four participating universities, each representing a different continent. The virtual pre-travel component, which was always an important part of the course design, became especially prominent during the COVID-19 pandemic. The advantages and challenges associated with the course design and implementation are discussed. [For the full proceedings, see ED622227.]
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- 2021
37. Microwave calibration of qubit drive line components at millikelvin temperatures
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Simbierowicz, Slawomir, Monarkha, Volodymyr Y., Singh, Suren, Messaoudi, Nizar, Krantz, Philip, and Lake, Russell E.
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Quantum Physics ,Physics - Applied Physics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
Systematic errors in qubit state preparation arise due to non-idealities in the qubit control lines such as impedance mismatch. Using a data-based methodology of short-open-load calibration at a temperature of 30 mK, we report calibrated 1-port scattering parameter data of individual qubit drive line components. At 5~GHz, cryogenic return losses of a 20-dB-attenuator, 10-dB-attenuator, a 230-mm-long 0.86-mm silver-plated cupronickel coaxial cable, and a 230-mm-long 0.86-mm NbTi coaxial cable were found to be 35$^{+3}_{-2}$ dB, 33$^{+3}_{-2}$ dB, 34$^{+3}_{-2}$ dB, and 29$^{+2}_{-1}$ dB respectively. For the same frequency, we also extract cryogenic insertion losses of 0.99$^{+0.04}_{-0.04}$ dB and 0.02$^{+0.04}_{-0.04}$ dB for the coaxial cables. We interpret the results using a master equation simulation of all XY gates performed on a single qubit. For example, we simulate a sequence of two 5 ns gate pulses (X & Y) through a 2-element Fabry-P\'erot cavity with 276-mm path length directly preceding the qubit, and establish that the return loss of its reflective elements must be >9.7 dB (> 14.7 dB) to obtain 99.9 % (99.99 %) gate fidelity., Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures plus supplementary material (3 figures). The following article has been accepted by Applied Physics Letters. After it is published, it will be found at https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0081861
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- 2021
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38. Beyond the Local Volume. I. Surface Densities of Ultracool Dwarfs in Deep HST/WFC3 Parallel Fields
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Aganze, Christian, Burgasser, Adam J, Malkan, Mathew, Theissen, Christopher A, Arevalo, Roberto A Tejada, Hsu, Chih-Chun, Gagliuffi, Daniella C Bardalez, Ryan Jr, Russell E, and Holwerda, Benne
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Ultracool dwarf stars and brown dwarfs provide a unique probe of large-scale Galactic structure and evolution; however, until recently spectroscopic samples of sufficient size, depth, and fidelity have been unavailable. Here, we present the identification of 164 M7--T9 ultracool dwarfs in 0.6~deg$^2$ of deep, low-resolution, near-infrared spectroscopic data obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera 3 instrument as part of the WFC3 Infrared Spectroscopic Parallel Survey and the 3D-HST survey. We describe the methodology by which we isolate ultracool dwarf candidates from over 200,000 spectra, and show that selection by machine learning classification is superior to spectral index-based methods in terms of completeness and contamination. We use the spectra to accurately determine classifications and spectrophotometric distances, the latter reaching to ~2 kpc for L dwarfs and ~400pc for T dwarfs., Comment: Latest version
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- 2021
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39. Direct formation of nitrogen-vacancy centers in nitrogen doped diamond along the trajectories of swift heavy ions
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Lake, Russell E., Persaud, Arun, Christian, Casey, Barnard, Edward S., Chan, Emory M., Bettiol, Andrew A., Tomut, Marilena, Trautmann, Christina, and Schenkel, Thomas
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Physics - Accelerator Physics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
We report depth-resolved photoluminescence measurements of nitrogen-vacancy (NV$^-$) centers formed along the tracks of swift heavy ions (SHIs) in type Ib synthetic single crystal diamonds that had been doped with 100 ppm nitrogen during crystal growth. Analysis of the spectra shows that NV$^-$ centers are formed preferentially within regions where electronic stopping processes dominate and not at the end of the ion range where elastic collisions lead to formation of vacancies and defects. Thermal annealing further increases NV yields after irradiation with SHIs preferentially in regions with high vacancy densities. NV centers formed along the tracks of single swift heavy ions can be isolated with lift-out techniques for explorations of color center qubits in quasi-1D registers with an average qubit spacing of a few nanometers and of order 100 color centers per micrometer along 10 to 30 micrometer long percolation chains.
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- 2020
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40. Characterizing cryogenic amplifiers with a matched temperature-variable noise source
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Simbierowicz, Slawomir, Vesterinen, Visa, Milem, Joshua, Lintunen, Aleksi, Oksanen, Mika, Roschier, Leif, Grönberg, Leif, Hassel, Juha, Gunnarsson, David, and Lake, Russell E.
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Quantum Physics ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Condensed Matter - Superconductivity ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
We present a cryogenic microwave noise source with a characteristic impedance of 50 $\Omega$, which can be installed in a coaxial line of a cryostat. The bath temperature of the noise source is continuously variable between 0.1 K and 5 K without causing significant back-action heating on the sample space. As a proof-of-concept experiment, we perform Y-factor measurements of an amplifier cascade that includes a traveling wave parametric amplifier and a commercial high electron mobility transistor amplifier. We observe system noise temperatures as low as $680^{+20}_{-200}$ mK at 5.7 GHz corresponding to $1.5^{+0.1}_{-0.7}$ excess photons. The system we present has immediate applications in the validation of solid-state qubit readout lines., Comment: The following article has been accepted by Review of Scientific Instruments. After it is published, it will be found at https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0028951
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- 2020
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41. Limits to Rest-Frame Ultraviolet Emission From Far-Infrared-Luminous z~6 Quasar Hosts
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Marshall, Madeline A., Mechtley, Mira, Windhorst, Rogier A., Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf A., Jiang, Linhua, Jones, Victoria R., Wyithe, J. Stuart B., Fan, Xiaohui, Hathi, Nimish P., Jahnke, Knud, Keel, William C., Koekemoer, Anton M., Marian, Victor, Ren, Keven, Robinson, Jenna, Röttgering, Huub J. A., Ryan Jr., Russell E., Scannapieco, Evan, Schneider, Donald P., Schneider, Glenn, Smith, Brent M., and Yan, Haojing
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report on a Hubble Space Telescope search for rest-frame ultraviolet emission from the host galaxies of five far-infrared-luminous $z\simeq{}6$ quasars and the $z=5.85$ hot-dust free quasar SDSS J0005-0006. We perform 2D surface brightness modeling for each quasar using a Markov-Chain Monte-Carlo estimator, to simultaneously fit and subtract the quasar point source in order to constrain the underlying host galaxy emission. We measure upper limits for the quasar host galaxies of $m_J>22.7$ mag and $m_H>22.4$ mag, corresponding to stellar masses of $M_\ast<2\times10^{11}M_\odot$. These stellar mass limits are consistent with the local $M_{\textrm{BH}}$-$M_\ast$ relation. Our flux limits are consistent with those predicted for the UV stellar populations of $z\simeq6$ host galaxies, but likely in the presence of significant dust ($\langle A_{\mathrm{UV}}\rangle\simeq 2.6$ mag). We also detect a total of up to 9 potential $z\simeq6$ quasar companion galaxies surrounding five of the six quasars, separated from the quasars by 1.4''-3.2'', or 8.4-19.4 kpc, which may be interacting with the quasar hosts. These nearby companion galaxies have UV absolute magnitudes of -22.1 to -19.9 mag, and UV spectral slopes $\beta$ of -2.0 to -0.2, consistent with luminous star-forming galaxies at $z\simeq6$. These results suggest that the quasars are in dense environments typical of luminous $z\simeq6$ galaxies. However, we cannot rule out the possibility that some of these companions are foreground interlopers. Infrared observations with the James Webb Space Telescope will be needed to detect the $z\simeq6$ quasar host galaxies and better constrain their stellar mass and dust content., Comment: 22 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2020
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42. Overlap junctions for superconducting quantum electronics and amplifiers
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Bal, Mustafa, Long, Junling, Zhao, Ruichen, Wang, Haozhi, Park, Sungoh, McRae, Corey Rae Harrington, Zhao, Tongyu, Lake, Russell E., Frolov, Daniil, Pilipenko, Roman, Zorzetti, Silvia, Romanenko, Alexander, and Pappas, David P.
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Physics - Applied Physics ,Condensed Matter - Superconductivity - Abstract
Due to their unique properties as lossless, nonlinear circuit elements, Josephson junctions lie at the heart of superconducting quantum information processing. Previously, we demonstrated a two-layer, submicrometer-scale overlap junction fabrication process suitable for qubits with long coherence times. Here, we extend the overlap junction fabrication process to micrometer-scale junctions. This allows us to fabricate other superconducting quantum devices. For example, we demonstrate an overlap-junction-based Josephson parametric amplifier that uses only 2 layers. This efficient fabrication process yields frequency-tunable devices with negligible insertion loss and a gain of ~ 30 dB. Compared to other processes, the overlap junction allows for fabrication with minimal infrastructure, high yield, and state-of-the-art device performance., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Submitted to Applied Physics Letters. After it is published, it will be found at https://publishing.aip.org/resources/librarians/products/journals/
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- 2020
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43. The Lyman Continuum Escape Fraction of Galaxies and AGN in the GOODS Fields
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Smith, Brent M., Windhorst, Rogier A., Cohen, Seth H., Koekemoer, Anton M., Jansen, Rolf A., White, Cameron, Borthakur, Sanchayeeta, Hathi, Nimish, Jiang, Linhua, Rutkowski, Michael, Ryan Jr., Russell E., Inoue, Akio K., O'Connell, Robert W., MacKenty, John W., Conselice, Christopher J., and Silk, Joseph I.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present our analysis of the LyC emission and escape fraction of 111 spectroscopically verified galaxies with and without AGN from $2.26
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- 2020
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44. RELICS: A Very Large ($\theta_{E}\sim40'$) Cluster Lens -- RXC J0032.1+1808
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Acebron, Ana, Zitrin, Adi, Coe, Dan, Mahler, Guillaume, Sharon, Keren, Oguri, Masamune, Bradač, Maruša, Bradley, Larry, Frye, Brenda, Forman, Christine J., Strait, Victoria, Su, Yuanyuan, Umetsu, Keiichi, Andrade-Santos, Felipe, Avila, Roberto J., Carrasco, Daniela, Cerny, Catherine, Czakon, Nicole G., Dawson, William A., Fox, Carter, Hoag, Austin T., Huang, Kuang-Han, Johnson, Traci L., Kikuchihara, Shotaro, Lam, Daniel, Lovisari, Lorenzo, Mainali, Ramesh, Nonino, Mario, Oesch, Pascal A., Ogaz, Sara, Ouchi, Masami, Past, Matthew, Paterno-Mahler, Rachel, Peterson, Avery, Ryan, Russell E., Salmon, Brett, Stark, Daniel P., Toft, Sune, Trenti, Michele, Vulcani, Benedetta, and Welch, Brian
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Extensive surveys with the \textit{Hubble Space Telescope} (HST) over the past decade, targeting some of the most massive clusters in the sky, have uncovered dozens of galaxy-cluster strong lenses. The massive cluster strong-lens scale is typically $\theta_{E}\sim10\arcsec$ to $\sim30-35\arcsec$, with only a handful of clusters known with Einstein radii $\theta_{E}\sim40\arcsec$ or above (for $z_{source}=2$, nominally). Here we report another very large cluster lens, RXC J0032.1+1808 ($z=0.3956$), the second richest cluster in the redMapper cluster catalog and the 85th most massive cluster in the Planck Sunyaev-Zel'dovich catalog. With our Light-Traces-Mass and fully parametric (dPIEeNFW) approaches, we construct strong lensing models based on 18 multiple images of 5 background galaxies newly identified in the \textit{Hubble} data mainly from the \textit{Reionization Lensing Cluster Survey} (RELICS), in addition to a known sextuply imaged system in this cluster. Furthermore, we compare these models to Lenstool and GLAFIC models that were produced independently as part of the RELICS program. All models reveal a large effective Einstein radius of $\theta_{E}\simeq40\arcsec$ ($z_{source}=2$), owing to the obvious concentration of substructures near the cluster center. Although RXC J0032.1+1808 has a very large critical area and high lensing strength, only three magnified high-redshift candidates are found within the field targeted by RELICS. Nevertheless, we expect many more high-redshift candidates will be seen in wider and deeper observations with \textit{Hubble} or \emph{JWST}. Finally, the comparison between several algorithms demonstrates that the total error budget is largely dominated by systematic uncertainties., Comment: 23 pages, accepted for publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2019
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45. JWST’s PEARLS: TN J1338–1942 – I. Extreme jet-triggered star formation in a z = 4.11 luminous radio galaxy
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Kenneth J Duncan, Rogier A Windhorst, Anton M Koekemoer, Huub J A Röttgering, Seth H Cohen, Rolf A Jansen, Jake Summers, Scott Tompkins, Taylor A Hutchison, Christopher J Conselice, Simon P Driver, Haojing Yan, Nathan J Adams, Cheng Cheng, Dan Coe, Jose M Diego, Hervé Dole, Brenda Frye, Hansung B Gim, Norman A Grogin, Benne W Holwerda, Jeremy Lim, Madeline A Marshall, Mario Nonino, Nor Pirzkal, Aaron Robotham, Russell E Ryan, and Christopher N A Willmer
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- 2023
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46. Amplitude and frequency sensing of microwave fields with a superconducting transmon qudit
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Kristen, Maximilian, Schneider, Andre, Stehli, Alexander, Wolz, Tim, Danilin, Sergey, Ku, Hsiang S., Long, Junling, Wu, Xian, Lake, Russell E., Pappas, David P., Ustinov, Alexey V., and Weides, Martin
- Subjects
Quantum Physics ,Condensed Matter - Superconductivity - Abstract
Experiments with superconducting circuits require careful calibration of the applied pulses and fields over a large frequency range. This remains an ongoing challenge as commercial semiconductor electronics are not able to probe signals arriving at the chip due to its cryogenic environment. Here, we demonstrate how the on-chip amplitude and frequency of a microwave signal can be inferred from the ac Stark shifts of higher transmon levels. In our time-resolved measurements we employ Ramsey fringes, allowing us to detect the amplitude of the systems transfer function over a range of several hundreds of MHz with an energy sensitivity on the order of $10^{-4}$. Combined with similar measurements for the phase of the transfer function, our sensing method can facilitate pulse correction for high fidelity quantum gates in superconducting circuits. Additionally, the potential to characterize arbitrary microwave fields promotes applications in related areas of research, such as quantum optics or hybrid microwave systems including photonic, mechanical or magnonic subsystems., Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures
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- 2019
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47. Efficient quantum state tomography with auxiliary Hilbert space
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Liu, Ruifeng, Long, Junling, Zhang, Pei, Lake, Russell E., Gao, Hong, Pappas, David P., and Li, Fuli
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Quantum Physics ,Physics - Optics - Abstract
Quantum state tomography is an important tool for quantum communication, computation, metrology, and simulation. Efficient quantum state tomography on a high dimensional quantum system is still a challenging problem. Here, we propose a novel quantum state tomography method, auxiliary Hilbert space tomography, to avoid pre-rotations before measurement in a quantum state tomography experiment. Our method requires projective measurements in a higher dimensional space that contains the subspace that includes the prepared states. We experimentally demonstrate this method with orbital angular momentum states of photons. In our experiment, the quantum state tomography measurements are as simple as taking a photograph with a camera. We experimentally verify our method with near-pure- and mixed-states of orbital angular momentum with dimension up to $d=13$, and achieve greater than 95 % state fidelities for all states tested. This method dramatically reduces the complexity of measurements for full quantum state tomography, and shows potential application in various high dimensional quantum information tasks., Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, and 1 table
- Published
- 2019
48. RELICS: Reionization Lensing Cluster Survey
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Coe, Dan, Salmon, Brett, Bradac, Marusa, Bradley, Larry D., Sharon, Keren, Zitrin, Adi, Acebron, Ana, Cerny, Catherine, Cibirka, Nathalia, Strait, Victoria, Paterno-Mahler, Rachel, Mahler, Guillaume, Avila, Roberto J., Ogaz, Sara, Huang, Kuang-Han, Pelliccia, Debora, Stark, Daniel P., Mainali, Ramesh, Oesch, Pascal A., Trenti, Michele, Carrasco, Daniela, Dawson, William A., Rodney, Steven A., Strolger, Louis-Gregory, Riess, Adam G., Jones, Christine, Frye, Brenda L., Czakon, Nicole G., Umetsu, Keiichi, Vulcani, Benedetta, Graur, Or, Jha, Saurabh W., Graham, Melissa L., Molino, Alberto, Nonino, Mario, Hjorth, Jens, Selsing, Jonatan, Christensen, Lise, Kikuchihara, Shotaro, Ouchi, Masami, Oguri, Masamune, Welch, Brian, Lemaux, Brian C., Andrade-Santos, Felipe, Hoag, Austin T., Johnson, Traci L., Peterson, Avery, Past, Matthew, Fox, Carter, Agulli, Irene, Livermore, Rachael, Ryan, Russell E., Lam, Daniel, Sendra-Server, Irene, Toft, Sune, Lovisari, Lorenzo, and Su, Yuanyuan
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Large surveys of galaxy clusters with the Hubble and Spitzer Space Telescopes, including CLASH and the Frontier Fields, have demonstrated the power of strong gravitational lensing to efficiently deliver large samples of high-redshift galaxies. We extend this strategy through a wider, shallower survey named RELICS, the Reionization Lensing Cluster Survey. This survey, described here, was designed primarily to deliver the best and brightest high-redshift candidates from the first billion years after the Big Bang. RELICS observed 41 massive galaxy clusters with Hubble and Spitzer at 0.4-1.7um and 3.0-5.0um, respectively. We selected 21 clusters based on Planck PSZ2 mass estimates and the other 20 based on observed or inferred lensing strength. Our 188-orbit Hubble Treasury Program obtained the first high-resolution near-infrared images of these clusters to efficiently search for lensed high-redshift galaxies. We observed 46 WFC3/IR pointings (~200 arcmin^2) with two orbits divided among four filters (F105W, F125W, F140W, and F160W) and ACS imaging as needed to achieve single-orbit depth in each of three filters (F435W, F606W, and F814W). As previously reported by Salmon et al., we discovered 322 z ~ 6 - 10 candidates, including the brightest known at z ~ 6, and the most distant spatially-resolved lensed arc known at z ~ 10. Spitzer IRAC imaging (945 hours awarded, plus 100 archival) has crucially enabled us to distinguish z ~ 10 candidates from z ~ 2 interlopers. For each cluster, two HST observing epochs were staggered by about a month, enabling us to discover 11 supernovae, including 3 lensed supernovae, which we followed up with 20 orbits from our program. We delivered reduced HST images and catalogs of all clusters to the public via MAST and reduced Spitzer images via IRSA. We have also begun delivering lens models of all clusters, to be completed before the JWST GO call for proposals., Comment: 29 pages, 6 figures, submitted to ApJ. For reduced images, catalogs, lens models, and more, see relics.stsci.edu
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- 2019
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49. Optimized heat transfer at exceptional points in quantum circuits
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Partanen, Matti, Goetz, Jan, Tan, Kuan Yen, Kohvakka, Kassius, Sevriuk, Vasilii, Lake, Russell E., Kokkoniemi, Roope, Ikonen, Joni, Hazra, Dibyendu, Mäkinen, Akseli, Hyyppä, Eric, Grönberg, Leif, Vesterinen, Visa, Silveri, Matti, and Möttönen, Mikko
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
Superconducting quantum circuits are potential candidates to realize a large-scale quantum computer. The envisioned large density of integrated components, however, requires a proper thermal management and control of dissipation. To this end, it is advantageous to utilize tunable dissipation channels and to exploit the optimized heat flow at exceptional points (EPs). Here, we experimentally realize an EP in a superconducting microwave circuit consisting of two resonators. The EP is a singularity point of the Hamiltonian, and corresponds to the most efficient heat transfer between the resonators without oscillation of energy. We observe a crossover from underdamped to overdamped coupling via the EP by utilizing photon-assisted tunneling as an \emph{in situ} tunable dissipative element in one of the resonators. The methods studied here can be applied to different circuits to obtain fast dissipation, for example, for initializing qubits to their ground states. In addition, these results pave the way towards thorough investigation of parity--time ($\mathcal{PT}$) symmetric systems and the spontaneous symmetry breaking in superconducting microwave circuits operating at the level of single energy quanta.
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- 2018
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50. RELICS: Strong Lensing Analysis of MACS J0417.5-1154 and Predictions for Observing the Magnified High-Redshift Universe with JWST
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Mahler, Guillaume, Sharon, Keren, Fox, Carter, Coe, Dan, Jauzac, Mathilde, Strait, Victoria, Edge, Alastair, Acebron, Ana, Andrade-Santos, Felipe, Avila, Roberto J., Bradač, Maruša, Bradley, Larry D., Carrasco, Daniela, Cerny, Catherine, Cibirka, Nathália, Czakon, Nicole G., Dawson, William A., Frye, Brenda L., Hoag, Austin T., Huang, Kuang-Han, Johnson, Traci L., Jones, Christine, Kikuchihara, Shotaro, Lam, 15 Daniel, Livermore, Rachael, Lovisari, Lorenzo, Mainali, Ramesh, Ogaz, Sara, Ouchi, Masami, Paterno-Mahler, Rachel, Roederer, Ian U., Ryan, Russell E., Salmon, Brett, Sendra-Server, Irene, Stark, Daniel P., Toft, Sune, Trenti, Michele, Umetsu, Keiichi, Vulcani, Benedetta, and Zitrin, Adi
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Strong gravitational lensing by clusters of galaxies probes the mass distribution at the core of each cluster and magnifies the universe behind it. MACS J0417.5-1154 at z=0.443 is one of the most massive clusters known based on weak lensing, X-ray, and Sunyaev-Zel'dovich analyses. Here we compute a strong lens model of MACS J0417 based on Hubble Space Telescope imaging observations collected, in part, by the Reionization Lensing Cluster Survey (RELICS), and recently reported spectroscopic redshifts from the MUSE instrument on the Very Large Telescope (VLT). We measure an Einstein radius of ThetaE=36'' at z = 9 and a mass projected within 200 kpc of M(200 kpc) = 1.78+0.01-0.03x10**14Msol. Using this model, we measure a ratio between the mass attributed to cluster-member galaxy halos and the main cluster halo of order 1:100. We assess the probability to detect magnified high-redshift galaxies in the field of this cluster, both for comparison with RELICS HST results and as a prediction for the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Guaranteed Time Observations upcoming for this cluster. Our lensing analysis indicates that this cluster has similar lensing strength to other clusters in the RELICS program. Our lensing analysis predicts a detection of at least a few z~6-8 galaxies behind this cluster, at odds with a recent analysis that yielded no such candidates in this field. Reliable strong lensing models are crucial for accurately predicting the intrinsic properties of lensed galaxies. As part of the RELICS program, our strong lensing model produced with the Lenstool parametric method is publicly available through the Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes (MAST)., Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures. Accepted to ApJ
- Published
- 2018
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