50 results on '"Dye, S."'
Search Results
2. [N ii] Fine-structure Emission at 122 and 205 μm in a Galaxy at z = 2.6: A Globally Dense Star-forming Interstellar Medium
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Doherty, M. J., primary, Geach, J. E., additional, Ivison, R. J., additional, and Dye, S., additional
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- 2020
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3. The Herschel–ATLAS data release 2, paper I. Submillimeter and far-infrared images of the south and north Galactic poles: the largest Herschel survey of the extragalactic sky
- Author
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Smith, Matthew W.L., Ibar, E., Maddox, S.J., Valiante, Elisabetta, Dunne, Loretta, Eales, S., Dye, S., Furlanetto, C., Bourne, N., Cigan, P.J., Ivison, R.J., Gomez, Haley, Smith, D.J.B., and Viaene, Sebastien
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Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,Statistics ,Data analysis ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Submillimeter ,Surveys ,Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) ,Cosmology ,QB - Abstract
We present the largest submillimeter images that have been made of the extragalactic sky. The Herschel Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey (H-ATLAS) is a survey of 660 deg$^2$ with the PACS and SPIRE cameras in five photometric bands: 100, 160, 250, 350, and 500{\mu}m. In this paper we present the images from our two largest fields which account for ~75% of the survey. The first field is 180.1 deg$^2$ in size centered on the North Galactic Pole (NGP) and the second field is 317.6 deg$^2$ in size centered on the South Galactic Pole. The NGP field serendipitously contains the Coma cluster. Over most (~80%) of the images, the pixel noise, including both instrumental noise and confusion noise, is approximately 3.6, and 3.5 mJy/pix at 100 and 160{\mu}m, and 11.0, 11.1 and 12.3 mJy/beam at 250, 350 and 500{\mu}m, respectively, but reaches lower values in some parts of the images. If a matched filter is applied to optimize point-source detection, our total 1{\sigma} map sensitivity is 5.7, 6.0, and 7.3 mJy at 250, 350, and 500{\mu}m, respectively. We describe the results of an investigation of the noise properties of the images. We make the most precise estimate of confusion in SPIRE maps to date finding values of 3.12+/-0.07, 4.13+/-0.02 and 4.45+/-0.04 mJy/beam at 250, 350, and 500{\mu}m in our un-convolved maps. For PACS we find an estimate of the confusion noise in our fast-parallel observations of 4.23 and 4.62 mJy/beam at 100 and 160{\mu}m. Finally, we give recipes for using these images to carry out photometry, both for unresolved and extended sources., Comment: 26 Pages, 14 Figures. Submitted to ApJS July 2017, accepted November 2017
- Published
- 2017
4. A Magnified View of Circumnuclear Star Formation and Feedback around an Active Galactic Nucleus at z = 2.6
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Geach, J. E., primary, Ivison, R. J., additional, Dye, S., additional, and Oteo, I., additional
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- 2018
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5. The Herschel -ATLAS Data Release 2. Paper II. Catalogs of Far-infrared and Submillimeter Sources in the Fields at the South and North Galactic Poles
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Maddox, S. J., primary, Valiante, E., additional, Cigan, P., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Eales, S., additional, Smith, M. W. L., additional, Dye, S., additional, Furlanetto, C., additional, Ibar, E., additional, Zotti, G. de, additional, Millard, J. S., additional, Bourne, N., additional, Gomez, H. L., additional, Ivison, R. J., additional, Scott, D., additional, and Valtchanov, I., additional
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- 2018
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6. Multi-wavelength lens construction of a Planck and Herschel-detected star-bursting galaxy
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Timmons, Nicholas, Cooray, A., Riechers, D.A., Nayyeri, H., Fu, Hai, Jullo, Eric, Gladders, Michael D., Baes, Maarten, Bussmann, R.S., Calanog, Jae, Clements, D.L., da Cunha, E., Dye, S., Eales, S.A., Furlanetto, C., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Greenslade, J., Gurwell, M., Messias, Hugo, Michalowski, M.J., Oteo, I., Scott, Douglas, and Valiante, E.
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Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,cosmology: observations – galaxies: evolution – infrared: galaxies – submillimeter: galaxies ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a source-plane reconstruction of a Herschel and Planck-detected gravitationally lensed dusty star-forming galaxy (DSFG) at z = 1.68 using Hubble, Submillimeter Array (SMA), and Keck observations. The background submillimeter galaxy (SMG) is strongly lensed by a foreground galaxy cluster at z = 0.997 and appears as an arc with a length of ∼15″ in the optical images. The continuum dust emission, as seen by SMA, is limited to a single knot within this arc. We present a lens model with source-plane reconstructions at several wavelengths to show the difference in magnification between the stars and dust, and highlight the importance of multi-wavelength lens models for studies involving lensed DSFGs. We estimate the physical properties of the galaxy by fitting the flux densities to model spectral energy distributions leading to a magnification-corrected starformation rate (SFR) of 390 ± 60 M yr−1 and a stellar mass of 1.1 ± 0.4 10 x 11 M. These values are consistent with high-redshift massive galaxies that have formed most of their stars already. The estimated gas-to-baryon fraction, molecular gas surface density, and SFR surface density have values of 0.43 ± 0.13, 350 ± 200 M pc−2, and ~ 12 7 M yr−1 kpc−2, respectively. The ratio of SFR surface density to molecular gas surface density puts this among the most star-forming systems, similar to other measured SMGs and local ULIRGs.
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- 2016
7. Cross-correlation between the CMB lensing potential measured by Planck and high-z submillimeter galaxies detected by the Herschel-atlas survey
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Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España), European Research Council, Bianchini, Federico, Lapi, Andrea, González-Nuevo, J., Baccigalupi, C., Zotti, G. de, Danese, L., Dye, S., Eales, S., Ivison, R. J., Maddox, S. J., Negrello, Mattia, Scott, Douglas, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España), European Research Council, Bianchini, Federico, Lapi, Andrea, González-Nuevo, J., Baccigalupi, C., Zotti, G. de, Danese, L., Dye, S., Eales, S., Ivison, R. J., Maddox, S. J., Negrello, Mattia, and Scott, Douglas
- Abstract
We present the first measurement of the correlation between the map of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) lensing potential derived from the Planck nominal mission data and galaxies detected by the Herschel-ATLAS (H-ATLAS) survey covering about , i.e., about 1.4% of the sky. We reject the hypothesis that there is no correlation between CMB lensing and galaxy detection at asignificance, checking the result by performing a number of null tests. The significance of the detection of the theoretically expected cross-correlation signal is found to be. The galaxy bias parameter, b, derived from a joint analysis of the cross-power spectrum and of the autopower spectrum of the galaxy density contrast is found to be , consistent with earlier estimates for H-ATLAS galaxies at similar redshifts. On the other hand, the amplitude of the cross-correlation is found to be a factor 1.62 ± 0.16 higher than expected from the standard model and also found by cross-correlation analyses with other tracers of the large-scale structure. The enhancement due to lensing magnification can account for only a fraction of the excess cross-correlation signal. We suggest that part of it may be due to an incomplete removal of the contamination of the cosmic infrared background, which includes the H-ATLAS sources we are cross-correlating with. In any case, the highly significant detection reported here using a catalog covering only 1.4% of the sky demonstrates the potential of CMB lensing correlations with submillimeter surveys.
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- 2015
8. ALMA RESOLVES THE PROPERTIES OF STAR-FORMING REGIONS IN A DENSE GAS DISK AT z ∼ 3
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Swinbank, A. M., primary, Dye, S., additional, Nightingale, J. W., additional, Furlanetto, C., additional, Smail, Ian, additional, Cooray, A., additional, Dannerbauer, H., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Eales, S., additional, Gavazzi, R., additional, Hunter, T., additional, Ivison, R. J., additional, Negrello, M., additional, Oteo-Gomez, I., additional, Smit, R., additional, Werf, P. van der, additional, and Vlahakis, C., additional
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- 2015
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9. CROSS-CORRELATION BETWEEN THE CMB LENSING POTENTIAL MEASURED BYPLANCKAND HIGH-zSUBMILLIMETER GALAXIES DETECTED BY THEHERSCHEL-ATLAS SURVEY
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Bianchini, F., primary, Bielewicz, P., additional, Lapi, A., additional, Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., additional, Baccigalupi, C., additional, de Zotti, G., additional, Danese, L., additional, Bourne, N., additional, Cooray, A., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Dye, S., additional, Eales, S., additional, Ivison, R., additional, Maddox, S., additional, Negrello, M., additional, Scott, D., additional, Smith, M. W. L., additional, and Valiante, E., additional
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- 2015
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10. LENS MODELS OFHERSCHEL-SELECTED GALAXIES FROM HIGH-RESOLUTION NEAR-IR OBSERVATIONS
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Calanog, J. A., primary, Fu, Hai, additional, Cooray, A., additional, Wardlow, J., additional, Ma, B., additional, Amber, S., additional, Baker, A. J., additional, Baes, M., additional, Bock, J., additional, Bourne, N., additional, Bussmann, R. S., additional, Casey, C. M., additional, Chapman, S. C., additional, Clements, D. L., additional, Conley, A., additional, Dannerbauer, H., additional, De Zotti, G., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Dye, S., additional, Eales, S., additional, Farrah, D., additional, Furlanetto, C., additional, Harris, A. I., additional, Ivison, R. J., additional, Kim, S., additional, Maddox, S. J., additional, Magdis, G., additional, Messias, H., additional, Michałowski, M. J., additional, Negrello, M., additional, Nightingale, J., additional, O'Bryan, J. M., additional, Oliver, S. J., additional, Riechers, D., additional, Scott, D., additional, Serjeant, S., additional, Simpson, J., additional, Smith, M., additional, Timmons, N., additional, Thacker, C., additional, Valiante, E., additional, and Vieira, J. D., additional
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- 2014
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11. GRAVITATIONAL LENS MODELS BASED ON SUBMILLIMETER ARRAY IMAGING OFHERSCHEL-SELECTED STRONGLY LENSED SUB-MILLIMETER GALAXIES ATz> 1.5
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Bussmann, R. S., primary, Pérez-Fournon, I., additional, Amber, S., additional, Calanog, J., additional, Gurwell, M. A., additional, Dannerbauer, H., additional, De Bernardis, F., additional, Fu, Hai, additional, Harris, A. I., additional, Krips, M., additional, Lapi, A., additional, Maiolino, R., additional, Omont, A., additional, Riechers, D., additional, Wardlow, J., additional, Baker, A. J., additional, Birkinshaw, M., additional, Bock, J., additional, Bourne, N., additional, Clements, D. L., additional, Cooray, A., additional, De Zotti, G., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Dye, S., additional, Eales, S., additional, Farrah, D., additional, Gavazzi, R., additional, González Nuevo, J., additional, Hopwood, R., additional, Ibar, E., additional, Ivison, R. J., additional, Laporte, N., additional, Maddox, S., additional, Martínez-Navajas, P., additional, Michalowski, M., additional, Negrello, M., additional, Oliver, S. J., additional, Roseboom, I. G., additional, Scott, Douglas, additional, Serjeant, S., additional, Smith, A. J., additional, Smith, Matthew, additional, Streblyanska, A., additional, Valiante, E., additional, van der Werf, P., additional, Verma, A., additional, Vieira, J. D., additional, Wang, L., additional, and Wilner, D., additional
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- 2013
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12. HerMES: CANDIDATE GRAVITATIONALLY LENSED GALAXIES AND LENSING STATISTICS AT SUBMILLIMETER WAVELENGTHS
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Wardlow, Julie L., primary, Cooray, Asantha, additional, De Bernardis, Francesco, additional, Amblard, A., additional, Arumugam, V., additional, Aussel, H., additional, Baker, A. J., additional, Béthermin, M., additional, Blundell, R., additional, Bock, J., additional, Boselli, A., additional, Bridge, C., additional, Buat, V., additional, Burgarella, D., additional, Bussmann, R. S., additional, Cabrera-Lavers, A., additional, Calanog, J., additional, Carpenter, J. M., additional, Casey, C. M., additional, Castro-Rodríguez, N., additional, Cava, A., additional, Chanial, P., additional, Chapin, E., additional, Chapman, S. C., additional, Clements, D. L., additional, Conley, A., additional, Cox, P., additional, Dowell, C. D., additional, Dye, S., additional, Eales, S., additional, Farrah, D., additional, Ferrero, P., additional, Franceschini, A., additional, Frayer, D. T., additional, Frazer, C., additional, Fu, Hai, additional, Gavazzi, R., additional, Glenn, J., additional, González Solares, E. A., additional, Griffin, M., additional, Gurwell, M. A., additional, Harris, A. I., additional, Hatziminaoglou, E., additional, Hopwood, R., additional, Hyde, A., additional, Ibar, E., additional, Ivison, R. J., additional, Kim, S., additional, Lagache, G., additional, Levenson, L., additional, Marchetti, L., additional, Marsden, G., additional, Martinez-Navajas, P., additional, Negrello, M., additional, Neri, R., additional, Nguyen, H. T., additional, O’Halloran, B., additional, Oliver, S. J., additional, Omont, A., additional, Page, M. J., additional, Panuzzo, P., additional, Papageorgiou, A., additional, Pearson, C. P., additional, Pérez-Fournon, I., additional, Pohlen, M., additional, Riechers, D., additional, Rigopoulou, D., additional, Roseboom, I. G., additional, Rowan-Robinson, M., additional, Schulz, B., additional, Scott, D., additional, Scoville, N., additional, Seymour, N., additional, Shupe, D. L., additional, Smith, A. J., additional, Streblyanska, A., additional, Strom, A., additional, Symeonidis, M., additional, Trichas, M., additional, Vaccari, M., additional, Vieira, J. D., additional, Viero, M., additional, Wang, L., additional, Xu, C. K., additional, Yan, L., additional, and Zemcov, M., additional
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- 2012
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13. MEASUREMENTS OF CO REDSHIFTS WITH Z-SPEC FOR LENSED SUBMILLIMETER GALAXIES DISCOVERED IN THE H-ATLAS SURVEY
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Lupu, R. E., primary, Scott, K. S., additional, Aguirre, J. E., additional, Aretxaga, I., additional, Auld, R., additional, Barton, E., additional, Beelen, A., additional, Bertoldi, F., additional, Bock, J. J., additional, Bonfield, D., additional, Bradford, C. M., additional, Buttiglione, S., additional, Cava, A., additional, Clements, D. L., additional, Cooke, J., additional, Cooray, A., additional, Dannerbauer, H., additional, Dariush, A., additional, De Zotti, G., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Dye, S., additional, Eales, S., additional, Frayer, D., additional, Fritz, J., additional, Glenn, J., additional, Hughes, D. H., additional, Ibar, E., additional, Ivison, R. J., additional, Jarvis, M. J., additional, Kamenetzky, J., additional, Kim, S., additional, Lagache, G., additional, Leeuw, L., additional, Maddox, S., additional, Maloney, P. R., additional, Matsuhara, H., additional, Murphy, E. J., additional, Naylor, B. J., additional, Negrello, M., additional, Nguyen, H., additional, Omont, A., additional, Pascale, E., additional, Pohlen, M., additional, Rigby, E., additional, Rodighiero, G., additional, Serjeant, S., additional, Smith, D., additional, Temi, P., additional, Thompson, M., additional, Valtchanov, I., additional, Verma, A., additional, Vieira, J. D., additional, and Zmuidzinas, J., additional
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- 2012
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14. A DETAILED GRAVITATIONAL LENS MODEL BASED ON SUBMILLIMETER ARRAY AND KECK ADAPTIVE OPTICS IMAGING OF AHERSCHEL-ATLAS SUBMILLIMETER GALAXY ATz= 4.243,,
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Bussmann, R. S., primary, Gurwell, M. A., additional, Fu, Hai, additional, Smith, D. J. B., additional, Dye, S., additional, Auld, R., additional, Baes, M., additional, Baker, A. J., additional, Bonfield, D., additional, Cava, A., additional, Clements, D. L., additional, Cooray, A., additional, Coppin, K., additional, Dannerbauer, H., additional, Dariush, A., additional, De Zotti, G., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Eales, S., additional, Fritz, J., additional, Hopwood, R., additional, Ibar, E., additional, Ivison, R. J., additional, Jarvis, M. J., additional, Kim, S., additional, Leeuw, L. L., additional, Maddox, S., additional, Michałowski, M. J., additional, Negrello, M., additional, Pascale, E., additional, Pohlen, M., additional, Riechers, D. A., additional, Rigby, E., additional, Scott, Douglas, additional, Temi, P., additional, Van der Werf, P. P., additional, Wardlow, J., additional, Wilner, D., additional, and Verma, A., additional
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- 2012
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15. SPITZER-IRAC IDENTIFICATION OFHERSCHEL-ATLAS SPIRE SOURCES
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Kim, Sam, primary, Wardlow, Julie L., additional, Cooray, Asantha, additional, Fleuren, S., additional, Sutherland, W., additional, Khostovan, A. A., additional, Auld, R., additional, Baes, M., additional, Bussmann, R. S., additional, Buttiglione, S., additional, Cava, A., additional, Clements, D., additional, Dariush, A., additional, De Zotti, G., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Dye, S., additional, Eales, S., additional, Fritz, J., additional, Hopwood, R., additional, Ibar, E., additional, Ivison, R., additional, Jarvis, M., additional, Maddox, S., additional, Michałowski, M. J., additional, Pascale, E., additional, Pohlen, M., additional, Rigby, E., additional, Scott, D., additional, Smith, D. J. B., additional, Temi, P., additional, and van der Werf, P., additional
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- 2012
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16. A COMPREHENSIVE VIEW OF A STRONGLY LENSEDPLANCK-ASSOCIATED SUBMILLIMETER GALAXY
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Fu, Hai, primary, Jullo, E., additional, Cooray, A., additional, Bussmann, R. S., additional, Ivison, R. J., additional, Pérez-Fournon, I., additional, Djorgovski, S. G., additional, Scoville, N., additional, Yan, L., additional, Riechers, D. A., additional, Aguirre, J., additional, Auld, R., additional, Baes, M., additional, Baker, A. J., additional, Bradford, M., additional, Cava, A., additional, Clements, D. L., additional, Dannerbauer, H., additional, Dariush, A., additional, De Zotti, G., additional, Dole, H., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Dye, S., additional, Eales, S., additional, Frayer, D., additional, Gavazzi, R., additional, Gurwell, M., additional, Harris, A. I., additional, Herranz, D., additional, Hopwood, R., additional, Hoyos, C., additional, Ibar, E., additional, Jarvis, M. J., additional, Kim, S., additional, Leeuw, L., additional, Lupu, R., additional, Maddox, S., additional, Martínez-Navajas, P., additional, Michałowski, M. J., additional, Negrello, M., additional, Omont, A., additional, Rosenman, M., additional, Scott, D., additional, Serjeant, S., additional, Smail, I., additional, Swinbank, A. M., additional, Valiante, E., additional, Verma, A., additional, Vieira, J., additional, Wardlow, J. L., additional, and van der Werf, P., additional
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- 2012
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17. BLIND DETECTIONS OF COJ= 1–0 IN 11 H-ATLAS GALAXIES ATz= 2.1–3.5 WITH THE GBT/ZPECTROMETER
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Harris, A. I., primary, Baker, A. J., additional, Frayer, D. T., additional, Smail, Ian, additional, Swinbank, A. M., additional, Riechers, D. A., additional, van der Werf, P. P., additional, Auld, R., additional, Baes, M., additional, Bussmann, R. S., additional, Buttiglione, S., additional, Cava, A., additional, Clements, D. L., additional, Cooray, A., additional, Dannerbauer, H., additional, Dariush, A., additional, De Zotti, G., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Dye, S., additional, Eales, S., additional, Fritz, J., additional, González-Nuevo, J., additional, Hopwood, R., additional, Ibar, E., additional, Ivison, R. J., additional, Jarvis, M. J., additional, Maddox, S., additional, Negrello, M., additional, Rigby, E., additional, Smith, D. J. B., additional, Temi, P., additional, and Wardlow, J., additional
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- 2012
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18. HERSCHEL-ATLAS: TOWARD A SAMPLE OF ∼1000 STRONGLY LENSED GALAXIES
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González-Nuevo, J., primary, Lapi, A., additional, Fleuren, S., additional, Bressan, S., additional, Danese, L., additional, De Zotti, G., additional, Negrello, M., additional, Cai, Z.-Y., additional, Fan, L., additional, Sutherland, W., additional, Baes, M., additional, Baker, A. J., additional, Clements, D. L., additional, Cooray, A., additional, Dannerbauer, H., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Dye, S., additional, Eales, S., additional, Frayer, D. T., additional, Harris, A. I., additional, Ivison, R., additional, Jarvis, M. J., additional, Michałowski, M. J., additional, López-Caniego, M., additional, Rodighiero, G., additional, Rowlands, K., additional, Serjeant, S., additional, Scott, D., additional, van der Werf, P., additional, Auld, R., additional, Buttiglione, S., additional, Cava, A., additional, Dariush, A., additional, Fritz, J., additional, Hopwood, R., additional, Ibar, E., additional, Maddox, S., additional, Pascale, E., additional, Pohlen, M., additional, Rigby, E., additional, Smith, D., additional, and Temi, P., additional
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- 2012
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19. HERSCHEL-ATLAS GALAXY COUNTS AND HIGH-REDSHIFT LUMINOSITY FUNCTIONS: THE FORMATION OF MASSIVE EARLY-TYPE GALAXIES
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Lapi, A., primary, González-Nuevo, J., additional, Fan, L., additional, Bressan, A., additional, De Zotti, G., additional, Danese, L., additional, Negrello, M., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Eales, S., additional, Maddox, S., additional, Auld, R., additional, Baes, M., additional, Bonfield, D. G., additional, Buttiglione, S., additional, Cava, A., additional, Clements, D. L., additional, Cooray, A., additional, Dariush, A., additional, Dye, S., additional, Fritz, J., additional, Herranz, D., additional, Hopwood, R., additional, Ibar, E., additional, Ivison, R., additional, Jarvis, M. J., additional, Kaviraj, S., additional, López-Caniego, M., additional, Massardi, M., additional, Michałowski, M. J., additional, Pascale, E., additional, Pohlen, M., additional, Rigby, E., additional, Rodighiero, G., additional, Serjeant, S., additional, Smith, D. J. B., additional, Temi, P., additional, Wardlow, J., additional, and van der Werf, P., additional
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- 2011
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20. GAS AND DUST IN A SUBMILLIMETER GALAXY ATz= 4.24 FROM THEHERSCHELATLAS
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Cox, P., primary, Krips, M., additional, Neri, R., additional, Omont, A., additional, Güsten, R., additional, Menten, K. M., additional, Wyrowski, F., additional, Weiß, A., additional, Beelen, A., additional, Gurwell, M. A., additional, Dannerbauer, H., additional, Ivison, R. J., additional, Negrello, M., additional, Aretxaga, I., additional, Hughes, D. H., additional, Auld, R., additional, Baes, M., additional, Blundell, R., additional, Buttiglione, S., additional, Cava, A., additional, Cooray, A., additional, Dariush, A., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Dye, S., additional, Eales, S. A., additional, Frayer, D., additional, Fritz, J., additional, Gavazzi, R., additional, Hopwood, R., additional, Ibar, E., additional, Jarvis, M., additional, Maddox, S., additional, Michałowski, M., additional, Pascale, E., additional, Pohlen, M., additional, Rigby, E., additional, Smith, D. J. B., additional, Swinbank, A. M., additional, Temi, P., additional, Valtchanov, I., additional, van der Werf, P., additional, and de Zotti, G., additional
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- 2011
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21. SPITZER IMAGING OF HERSCHEL -ATLAS GRAVITATIONALLY LENSED SUBMILLIMETER SOURCES
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Hopwood, R., primary, Wardlow, J., additional, Cooray, A., additional, Khostovan, A. A., additional, Kim, S., additional, Negrello, M., additional, da Cunha, E., additional, Burgarella, D., additional, Aretxaga, I., additional, Auld, R., additional, Baes, M., additional, Barton, E., additional, Bertoldi, F., additional, Bonfield, D. G., additional, Blundell, R., additional, Buttiglione, S., additional, Cava, A., additional, Clements, D. L., additional, Cooke, J., additional, Dannerbauer, H., additional, Dariush, A., additional, de Zotti, G., additional, Dunlop, J., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Dye, S., additional, Eales, S., additional, Fritz, J., additional, Frayer, D., additional, Gurwell, M. A., additional, Hughes, D. H., additional, Ibar, E., additional, Ivison, R. J., additional, Jarvis, M. J., additional, Lagache, G., additional, Leeuw, L., additional, Maddox, S., additional, Michałowski, M. J., additional, Omont, A., additional, Pascale, E., additional, Pohlen, M., additional, Rigby, E., additional, Rodighiero, G., additional, Scott, D., additional, Serjeant, S., additional, Smail, I., additional, Smith, D. J. B., additional, Temi, P., additional, Thompson, M. A., additional, Valtchanov, I., additional, van der Werf, P., additional, Verma, A., additional, and Vieira, J. D., additional
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- 2011
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22. GREEN BANK TELESCOPE ZPECTROMETER CO(1-0) OBSERVATIONS OF THE STRONGLY LENSED SUBMILLIMETER GALAXIES FROM THE HERSCHEL ATLAS
- Author
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Frayer, D. T., primary, Harris, A. I., additional, Baker, A. J., additional, Ivison, R. J., additional, Smail, Ian, additional, Negrello, M., additional, Maddalena, R., additional, Aretxaga, I., additional, Baes, M., additional, Birkinshaw, M., additional, Bonfield, D. G., additional, Burgarella, D., additional, Buttiglione, S., additional, Cava, A., additional, Clements, D. L., additional, Cooray, A., additional, Dannerbauer, H., additional, Dariush, A., additional, De Zotti, G., additional, Dunlop, J. S., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Dye, S., additional, Eales, S., additional, Fritz, J., additional, Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., additional, Herranz, D., additional, Hopwood, R., additional, Hughes, D. H., additional, Ibar, E., additional, Jarvis, M. J., additional, Lagache, G., additional, Leeuw, L. L., additional, Lopez-Caniego, M., additional, Maddox, S., additional, Michałowski, M. J., additional, Omont, A., additional, Pohlen, M., additional, Rigby, E., additional, Rodighiero, G., additional, Scott, D., additional, Serjeant, S., additional, Smith, D. J. B., additional, Swinbank, A. M., additional, Temi, P., additional, Thompson, M. A., additional, Valtchanov, I., additional, van der Werf, P. P., additional, and Verma, A., additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. MID-INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY OF CANDIDATE ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI-DOMINATED SUBMILLIMETER GALAXIES
- Author
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Coppin, K., primary, Pope, A., additional, Menéndez-Delmestre, K., additional, Alexander, D. M., additional, Dunlop, J. S., additional, Egami, E., additional, Gabor, J., additional, Ibar, Edo, additional, Ivison, R. J., additional, Austermann, J. E., additional, Blain, A. W., additional, Chapman, S. C., additional, Clements, D. L., additional, Dunne, L., additional, Dye, S., additional, Farrah, D., additional, Hughes, D. H., additional, Mortier, A. M. J., additional, Page, M. J., additional, Rowan-Robinson, M., additional, Scott, D., additional, Simpson, C., additional, Smail, Ian, additional, Swinbank, A. M., additional, Vaccari, M., additional, and Yun, M. S., additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A Detailed Study of Gas and Star Formation in a Highly Magnified Lyman Break Galaxy atz= 3.07
- Author
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Coppin, K. E. K., primary, Swinbank, A. M., additional, Neri, R., additional, Cox, P., additional, Smail, Ian, additional, Ellis, R. S., additional, Geach, J. E., additional, Siana, B., additional, Teplitz, H., additional, Dye, S., additional, Kneib, J.‐P., additional, Edge, A. C., additional, and Richard, J., additional
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. A Very Bright, Highly Magnified Lyman Break Galaxy at z = 3.07
- Author
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Smail, Ian, primary, Swinbank, A. M., additional, Richard, J., additional, Ebeling, H., additional, Kneib, J.-P., additional, Edge, A. C., additional, Stark, D., additional, Ellis, R. S., additional, Dye, S., additional, Smith, G. P., additional, and Mullis, C., additional
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. An Investigation of the Submillimeter Background Radiation Using SCUBA andSpitzer
- Author
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Dye, S., primary, Eales, S. A., additional, Ashby, M. L. N., additional, Huang, J.‐S., additional, Webb, T. M. A., additional, Barmby, P., additional, Lilly, S., additional, Brodwin, M., additional, McCracken, H., additional, Egami, E., additional, and Fazio, G. G., additional
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Mid‐Infrared Identifications of SCUBA Galaxies in the CUDSS 14 Hour Field with theSpitzer Space Telescope
- Author
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Ashby, M. L. N., primary, Dye, S., additional, Huang, J.‐S., additional, Eales, S., additional, Willner, S. P., additional, Webb, T. M. A., additional, Barmby, P., additional, Rigopoulou, D., additional, Egami, E., additional, McCracken, H., additional, Lilly, S., additional, Miyazaki, S., additional, Brodwin, M., additional, Blaylock, M., additional, Cadien, J., additional, and Fazio, G. G., additional
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Decomposition of the Visible and Dark Matter in the Einstein Ring 0047−2808 by Semilinear Inversion
- Author
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Dye, S., primary and Warren, S. J., additional
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Semilinear Gravitational Lens Inversion
- Author
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Warren, S. J., primary and Dye, S., additional
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Probing the Distribution of Dark Matter in the A901/902 Supercluster with Weak Lensing
- Author
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Gray, M. E., primary, Taylor, A. N., additional, Meisenheimer, K., additional, Dye, S., additional, Wolf, C., additional, and Thommes, E., additional
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Gravitational Lens Magnification and the Mass of Abell 1689
- Author
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Taylor, A. N., primary, Dye, S., additional, Broadhurst, T. J., additional, Benitez, N., additional, and van Kampen, E., additional
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. A serach for moderate- and high-energy neturino emission correlated with gamma-ray bursts
- Author
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Becker-Szendy, R., primary, Bratton, C. B., additional, Breault, J., additional, Casper, D., additional, Dye, S. T., additional, Gajewski, W., additional, Goldhaber, M., additional, Haines, T. J., additional, Halverson, P. G., additional, Kielczewska, D., additional, Kropp, W. R., additional, Learned, J. G., additional, Matsuno, S., additional, Matthews, J., additional, McGrath, G., additional, McGrew, C., additional, Miller, R. S., additional, Price, L., additional, Reines, F., additional, Schultz, J., additional, Sinclair, D., additional, Sobel, H. W., additional, Stone, J. L., additional, Sulak, L. R., additional, Svoboda, R., additional, and van der Velde, J. C., additional
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. A search for astrophysical sources of low-energy neutrinos using the IMB detector
- Author
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Miller, R. S., primary, Becker-Szendy, R., additional, Bratton, C. B., additional, Breault, J., additional, Casper, D., additional, Dye, S. T., additional, Gajewski, W., additional, Goldhaber, M., additional, Haines, T. J., additional, Halverson, P. G., additional, Kielczewska, D., additional, Kropp, W. R., additional, Learned, J. G., additional, Losecco, J., additional, Matsuno, S., additional, Matthews, J., additional, McGrath, G., additional, McGrew, C., additional, Price, L., additional, Reines, F., additional, Schultz, J., additional, Sinclair, D., additional, Sobel, H. W., additional, Stone, J. L., additional, Sulak, L. R., additional, Svoboda, R., additional, and van der Velde, J. C., additional
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. ALMA resolves the properties of star-forming regions in a dense gas disk at z ∼ 3
- Author
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Swinbank, A.M., Dye, S., Nightingale, J.W., Furlanetto, C., Smail, Ian, Cooray, A., Dannerbauer, H., Dunne, L., Eales, S., Gavazzi, R., Hunter, T., Ivison, R.J., Negrello, M., Oteo-Gomez, I., Smit, R., Werf, P. van der, Vlahakis, C., Swinbank, A.M., Dye, S., Nightingale, J.W., Furlanetto, C., Smail, Ian, Cooray, A., Dannerbauer, H., Dunne, L., Eales, S., Gavazzi, R., Hunter, T., Ivison, R.J., Negrello, M., Oteo-Gomez, I., Smit, R., Werf, P. van der, and Vlahakis, C.
- Abstract
We exploit long baseline ALMA submillimeter observations of the lensed star-forming galaxy SDP 81 at z = 3.042 to investigate the properties of the interstellar medium (ISM) on scales of 50–100 pc. The kinematics of the 12CO gas within this system are well described by a rotationally supported disk with an inclination-corrected rotation speed, = 320 ± 20 km s−1, and a dynamical mass of = (3.5 ± 1.0)× 1010 within a radius of 1.5 kpc. The disk is gas-rich and unstable, with a Toomre parameter, Q = 0.30 ± 0.10, and so into star-forming regions with Jeans length 130 pc. We identify five star-forming regions within the ISM on these scales and show that their scaling relations between luminosity, line widths, and sizes are significantly offset from those typical of molecular clouds in local galaxies (Larson's relations). These offsets are likely to be caused by the high external hydrostatic pressure for the ISM, / × 107 K cm−3, which is ~104× higher than the typical ISM pressure in the Milky Way. The physical conditions of the star-forming ISM and giant molecular clouds appear to be similar to those found in the densest environments in the local universe, such as those in the Galactic center.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Cross-correlation between the CMB lensing potential measured by Planck and high-z submillimeter galaxies detected by the Herschel-ATLAS survey
- Author
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Bianchini, F., Bielewicz, P., Lapi, A., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Baccigalupi, C., de Zotti, G., Danese, L., Bourne, N., Cooray, A., Dunne, L., Dye, S., Eales, S., Ivison, R., Maddox, S., Negrello, M., Scott, D., Smith, M.W.L., Valiante, E., Bianchini, F., Bielewicz, P., Lapi, A., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Baccigalupi, C., de Zotti, G., Danese, L., Bourne, N., Cooray, A., Dunne, L., Dye, S., Eales, S., Ivison, R., Maddox, S., Negrello, M., Scott, D., Smith, M.W.L., and Valiante, E.
- Abstract
We present the first measurement of the correlation between the map of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) lensing potential derived from the Planck nominal mission data and z≥1.5 galaxies detected by the Herschel-ATLAS (H-ATLAS) survey covering about 600 deg2, i.e., about 1.4% of the sky. We reject the hypothesis that there is no correlation between CMB lensing and galaxy detection at a significance, checking the result by performing a number of null tests. The significance of the detection of the theoretically expected cross-correlation signal is found to be . The galaxy bias parameter, b, derived from a joint analysis of the cross-power spectrum and of the autopower spectrum of the galaxy density contrast is found to be , consistent with earlier estimates for H-ATLAS galaxies at similar redshifts. On the other hand, the amplitude of the cross-correlation is found to be a factor 1.62 ± 0.16 higher than expected from the standard model and also found by cross-correlation analyses with other tracers of the large-scale structure. The enhancement due to lensing magnification can account for only a fraction of the excess cross-correlation signal. We suggest that part of it may be due to an incomplete removal of the contamination of the cosmic infrared background, which includes the H-ATLAS sources we are cross-correlating with. In any case, the highly significant detection reported here using a catalog covering only 1.4% of the sky demonstrates the potential of CMB lensing correlations with submillimeter surveys.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Multi-wavelength lens construction of a Planck and Herschel-detected star-bursting galaxy
- Author
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Timmons, Nicholas, Cooray, A., Riechers, D.A., Nayyeri, H., Fu, Hai, Jullo, Eric, Gladders, Michael D., Baes, Maarten, Bussmann, R.S., Calanog, Jae, Clements, D.L., da Cunha, E., Dye, S., Eales, S.A., Furlanetto, C., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Greenslade, J., Gurwell, M., Messias, Hugo, Michalowski, M.J., Oteo, I., Pérez-Fournón, I., Scott, Douglas, Valiante, E., Timmons, Nicholas, Cooray, A., Riechers, D.A., Nayyeri, H., Fu, Hai, Jullo, Eric, Gladders, Michael D., Baes, Maarten, Bussmann, R.S., Calanog, Jae, Clements, D.L., da Cunha, E., Dye, S., Eales, S.A., Furlanetto, C., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Greenslade, J., Gurwell, M., Messias, Hugo, Michalowski, M.J., Oteo, I., Pérez-Fournón, I., Scott, Douglas, and Valiante, E.
- Abstract
We present a source-plane reconstruction of a Herschel and Planck-detected gravitationally lensed dusty star-forming galaxy (DSFG) at z = 1.68 using Hubble, Submillimeter Array (SMA), and Keck observations. The background submillimeter galaxy (SMG) is strongly lensed by a foreground galaxy cluster at z = 0.997 and appears as an arc with a length of ∼15″ in the optical images. The continuum dust emission, as seen by SMA, is limited to a single knot within this arc. We present a lens model with source-plane reconstructions at several wavelengths to show the difference in magnification between the stars and dust, and highlight the importance of multi-wavelength lens models for studies involving lensed DSFGs. We estimate the physical properties of the galaxy by fitting the flux densities to model spectral energy distributions leading to a magnification-corrected starformation rate (SFR) of 390 ± 60 M yr−1 and a stellar mass of 1.1 ± 0.4 10 x 11 M. These values are consistent with high-redshift massive galaxies that have formed most of their stars already. The estimated gas-to-baryon fraction, molecular gas surface density, and SFR surface density have values of 0.43 ± 0.13, 350 ± 200 M pc−2, and ~ 12 7 M yr−1 kpc−2, respectively. The ratio of SFR surface density to molecular gas surface density puts this among the most star-forming systems, similar to other measured SMGs and local ULIRGs.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Discovery of 16 new z ∼ 5.5 quasars: filling in the redshift gap of quasar color selection
- Author
-
Yang, Jinyi, Fan, Xiaohui, Wu, Xue-Bing, Wang, Feige, Bian, Fuyan, Yang, Qian, McGreer, Ian D., Yi, Weimin, Jiang, Linhua, Green, Richard, Yue, Minghao, Wang, Shu, Li, Zefeng, Ding, Jiani, Dye, S., Lawrence, Andy, Yang, Jinyi, Fan, Xiaohui, Wu, Xue-Bing, Wang, Feige, Bian, Fuyan, Yang, Qian, McGreer, Ian D., Yi, Weimin, Jiang, Linhua, Green, Richard, Yue, Minghao, Wang, Shu, Li, Zefeng, Ding, Jiani, Dye, S., and Lawrence, Andy
- Abstract
We present initial results from the first systematic survey of luminous z ∼ 5.5 quasars. Quasars at z ∼ 5.5, the post-reionization epoch, are crucial tools to explore the evolution of intergalactic medium, quasar evolution, and the early super-massive black hole growth. However, it has been very challenging to select quasars at redshifts 5.3 ≤ z ≤ 5.7 using conventional color selections, due to their similar optical colors to late-type stars, especially M dwarfs, resulting in a glaring redshift gap in quasar redshift distributions. We develop a new selection technique for z ∼ 5.5 quasars based on optical, near-IR, and mid-IR photometric data from Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), UKIRT InfraRed Deep Sky Surveys—Large Area Survey (ULAS), VISTA Hemisphere Survey (VHS), and Wide Field Infrared Survey Explorer. From our pilot observations in the SDSS-ULAS/VHS area, we have discovered 15 new quasars at 5.3 ≤ z ≤ 5.7 and 6 new lower redshift quasars, with SDSS z band magnitude brighter than 20.5. Including other two z ∼ 5.5 quasars already published in our previous work, we now construct a uniform quasar sample at 5.3 ≤ z ≤ 5.7, with 17 quasars in a ∼4800 square degree survey area. For further application in a larger survey area, we apply our selection pipeline to do a test selection by using the new wide field J-band photometric data from a preliminary version of the UKIRT Hemisphere Survey (UHS). We successfully discover the first UHS selected z ∼ 5.5 quasar.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. ALMA resolves the properties of star-forming regions in a dense gas disk at z ∼ 3
- Author
-
Swinbank, A.M., Dye, S., Nightingale, J.W., Furlanetto, C., Smail, Ian, Cooray, A., Dannerbauer, H., Dunne, L., Eales, S., Gavazzi, R., Hunter, T., Ivison, R.J., Negrello, M., Oteo-Gomez, I., Smit, R., Werf, P. van der, Vlahakis, C., Swinbank, A.M., Dye, S., Nightingale, J.W., Furlanetto, C., Smail, Ian, Cooray, A., Dannerbauer, H., Dunne, L., Eales, S., Gavazzi, R., Hunter, T., Ivison, R.J., Negrello, M., Oteo-Gomez, I., Smit, R., Werf, P. van der, and Vlahakis, C.
- Abstract
We exploit long baseline ALMA submillimeter observations of the lensed star-forming galaxy SDP 81 at z = 3.042 to investigate the properties of the interstellar medium (ISM) on scales of 50–100 pc. The kinematics of the 12CO gas within this system are well described by a rotationally supported disk with an inclination-corrected rotation speed, = 320 ± 20 km s−1, and a dynamical mass of = (3.5 ± 1.0)× 1010 within a radius of 1.5 kpc. The disk is gas-rich and unstable, with a Toomre parameter, Q = 0.30 ± 0.10, and so into star-forming regions with Jeans length 130 pc. We identify five star-forming regions within the ISM on these scales and show that their scaling relations between luminosity, line widths, and sizes are significantly offset from those typical of molecular clouds in local galaxies (Larson's relations). These offsets are likely to be caused by the high external hydrostatic pressure for the ISM, / × 107 K cm−3, which is ~104× higher than the typical ISM pressure in the Milky Way. The physical conditions of the star-forming ISM and giant molecular clouds appear to be similar to those found in the densest environments in the local universe, such as those in the Galactic center.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Discovery of 16 new z ∼ 5.5 quasars: filling in the redshift gap of quasar color selection
- Author
-
Yang, Jinyi, Fan, Xiaohui, Wu, Xue-Bing, Wang, Feige, Bian, Fuyan, Yang, Qian, McGreer, Ian D., Yi, Weimin, Jiang, Linhua, Green, Richard, Yue, Minghao, Wang, Shu, Li, Zefeng, Ding, Jiani, Dye, S., Lawrence, Andy, Yang, Jinyi, Fan, Xiaohui, Wu, Xue-Bing, Wang, Feige, Bian, Fuyan, Yang, Qian, McGreer, Ian D., Yi, Weimin, Jiang, Linhua, Green, Richard, Yue, Minghao, Wang, Shu, Li, Zefeng, Ding, Jiani, Dye, S., and Lawrence, Andy
- Abstract
We present initial results from the first systematic survey of luminous z ∼ 5.5 quasars. Quasars at z ∼ 5.5, the post-reionization epoch, are crucial tools to explore the evolution of intergalactic medium, quasar evolution, and the early super-massive black hole growth. However, it has been very challenging to select quasars at redshifts 5.3 ≤ z ≤ 5.7 using conventional color selections, due to their similar optical colors to late-type stars, especially M dwarfs, resulting in a glaring redshift gap in quasar redshift distributions. We develop a new selection technique for z ∼ 5.5 quasars based on optical, near-IR, and mid-IR photometric data from Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), UKIRT InfraRed Deep Sky Surveys—Large Area Survey (ULAS), VISTA Hemisphere Survey (VHS), and Wide Field Infrared Survey Explorer. From our pilot observations in the SDSS-ULAS/VHS area, we have discovered 15 new quasars at 5.3 ≤ z ≤ 5.7 and 6 new lower redshift quasars, with SDSS z band magnitude brighter than 20.5. Including other two z ∼ 5.5 quasars already published in our previous work, we now construct a uniform quasar sample at 5.3 ≤ z ≤ 5.7, with 17 quasars in a ∼4800 square degree survey area. For further application in a larger survey area, we apply our selection pipeline to do a test selection by using the new wide field J-band photometric data from a preliminary version of the UKIRT Hemisphere Survey (UHS). We successfully discover the first UHS selected z ∼ 5.5 quasar.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Multi-wavelength lens construction of a Planck and Herschel-detected star-bursting galaxy
- Author
-
Timmons, Nicholas, Cooray, A., Riechers, D.A., Nayyeri, H., Fu, Hai, Jullo, Eric, Gladders, Michael D., Baes, Maarten, Bussmann, R.S., Calanog, Jae, Clements, D.L., da Cunha, E., Dye, S., Eales, S.A., Furlanetto, C., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Greenslade, J., Gurwell, M., Messias, Hugo, Michalowski, M.J., Oteo, I., Pérez-Fournón, I., Scott, Douglas, Valiante, E., Timmons, Nicholas, Cooray, A., Riechers, D.A., Nayyeri, H., Fu, Hai, Jullo, Eric, Gladders, Michael D., Baes, Maarten, Bussmann, R.S., Calanog, Jae, Clements, D.L., da Cunha, E., Dye, S., Eales, S.A., Furlanetto, C., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Greenslade, J., Gurwell, M., Messias, Hugo, Michalowski, M.J., Oteo, I., Pérez-Fournón, I., Scott, Douglas, and Valiante, E.
- Abstract
We present a source-plane reconstruction of a Herschel and Planck-detected gravitationally lensed dusty star-forming galaxy (DSFG) at z = 1.68 using Hubble, Submillimeter Array (SMA), and Keck observations. The background submillimeter galaxy (SMG) is strongly lensed by a foreground galaxy cluster at z = 0.997 and appears as an arc with a length of ∼15″ in the optical images. The continuum dust emission, as seen by SMA, is limited to a single knot within this arc. We present a lens model with source-plane reconstructions at several wavelengths to show the difference in magnification between the stars and dust, and highlight the importance of multi-wavelength lens models for studies involving lensed DSFGs. We estimate the physical properties of the galaxy by fitting the flux densities to model spectral energy distributions leading to a magnification-corrected starformation rate (SFR) of 390 ± 60 M yr−1 and a stellar mass of 1.1 ± 0.4 10 x 11 M. These values are consistent with high-redshift massive galaxies that have formed most of their stars already. The estimated gas-to-baryon fraction, molecular gas surface density, and SFR surface density have values of 0.43 ± 0.13, 350 ± 200 M pc−2, and ~ 12 7 M yr−1 kpc−2, respectively. The ratio of SFR surface density to molecular gas surface density puts this among the most star-forming systems, similar to other measured SMGs and local ULIRGs.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Cross-correlation between the CMB lensing potential measured by Planck and high-z submillimeter galaxies detected by the Herschel-ATLAS survey
- Author
-
Bianchini, F., Bielewicz, P., Lapi, A., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Baccigalupi, C., de Zotti, G., Danese, L., Bourne, N., Cooray, A., Dunne, L., Dye, S., Eales, S., Ivison, R., Maddox, S., Negrello, M., Scott, D., Smith, M.W.L., Valiante, E., Bianchini, F., Bielewicz, P., Lapi, A., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Baccigalupi, C., de Zotti, G., Danese, L., Bourne, N., Cooray, A., Dunne, L., Dye, S., Eales, S., Ivison, R., Maddox, S., Negrello, M., Scott, D., Smith, M.W.L., and Valiante, E.
- Abstract
We present the first measurement of the correlation between the map of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) lensing potential derived from the Planck nominal mission data and z≥1.5 galaxies detected by the Herschel-ATLAS (H-ATLAS) survey covering about 600 deg2, i.e., about 1.4% of the sky. We reject the hypothesis that there is no correlation between CMB lensing and galaxy detection at a significance, checking the result by performing a number of null tests. The significance of the detection of the theoretically expected cross-correlation signal is found to be . The galaxy bias parameter, b, derived from a joint analysis of the cross-power spectrum and of the autopower spectrum of the galaxy density contrast is found to be , consistent with earlier estimates for H-ATLAS galaxies at similar redshifts. On the other hand, the amplitude of the cross-correlation is found to be a factor 1.62 ± 0.16 higher than expected from the standard model and also found by cross-correlation analyses with other tracers of the large-scale structure. The enhancement due to lensing magnification can account for only a fraction of the excess cross-correlation signal. We suggest that part of it may be due to an incomplete removal of the contamination of the cosmic infrared background, which includes the H-ATLAS sources we are cross-correlating with. In any case, the highly significant detection reported here using a catalog covering only 1.4% of the sky demonstrates the potential of CMB lensing correlations with submillimeter surveys.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Discovery of 16 new z ∼ 5.5 quasars: filling in the redshift gap of quasar color selection
- Author
-
Yang, Jinyi, Fan, Xiaohui, Wu, Xue-Bing, Wang, Feige, Bian, Fuyan, Yang, Qian, McGreer, Ian D., Yi, Weimin, Jiang, Linhua, Green, Richard, Yue, Minghao, Wang, Shu, Li, Zefeng, Ding, Jiani, Dye, S., Lawrence, Andy, Yang, Jinyi, Fan, Xiaohui, Wu, Xue-Bing, Wang, Feige, Bian, Fuyan, Yang, Qian, McGreer, Ian D., Yi, Weimin, Jiang, Linhua, Green, Richard, Yue, Minghao, Wang, Shu, Li, Zefeng, Ding, Jiani, Dye, S., and Lawrence, Andy
- Abstract
We present initial results from the first systematic survey of luminous z ∼ 5.5 quasars. Quasars at z ∼ 5.5, the post-reionization epoch, are crucial tools to explore the evolution of intergalactic medium, quasar evolution, and the early super-massive black hole growth. However, it has been very challenging to select quasars at redshifts 5.3 ≤ z ≤ 5.7 using conventional color selections, due to their similar optical colors to late-type stars, especially M dwarfs, resulting in a glaring redshift gap in quasar redshift distributions. We develop a new selection technique for z ∼ 5.5 quasars based on optical, near-IR, and mid-IR photometric data from Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), UKIRT InfraRed Deep Sky Surveys—Large Area Survey (ULAS), VISTA Hemisphere Survey (VHS), and Wide Field Infrared Survey Explorer. From our pilot observations in the SDSS-ULAS/VHS area, we have discovered 15 new quasars at 5.3 ≤ z ≤ 5.7 and 6 new lower redshift quasars, with SDSS z band magnitude brighter than 20.5. Including other two z ∼ 5.5 quasars already published in our previous work, we now construct a uniform quasar sample at 5.3 ≤ z ≤ 5.7, with 17 quasars in a ∼4800 square degree survey area. For further application in a larger survey area, we apply our selection pipeline to do a test selection by using the new wide field J-band photometric data from a preliminary version of the UKIRT Hemisphere Survey (UHS). We successfully discover the first UHS selected z ∼ 5.5 quasar.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Multi-wavelength lens construction of a Planck and Herschel-detected star-bursting galaxy
- Author
-
Timmons, Nicholas, Cooray, A., Riechers, D.A., Nayyeri, H., Fu, Hai, Jullo, Eric, Gladders, Michael D., Baes, Maarten, Bussmann, R.S., Calanog, Jae, Clements, D.L., da Cunha, E., Dye, S., Eales, S.A., Furlanetto, C., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Greenslade, J., Gurwell, M., Messias, Hugo, Michalowski, M.J., Oteo, I., Pérez-Fournón, I., Scott, Douglas, Valiante, E., Timmons, Nicholas, Cooray, A., Riechers, D.A., Nayyeri, H., Fu, Hai, Jullo, Eric, Gladders, Michael D., Baes, Maarten, Bussmann, R.S., Calanog, Jae, Clements, D.L., da Cunha, E., Dye, S., Eales, S.A., Furlanetto, C., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Greenslade, J., Gurwell, M., Messias, Hugo, Michalowski, M.J., Oteo, I., Pérez-Fournón, I., Scott, Douglas, and Valiante, E.
- Abstract
We present a source-plane reconstruction of a Herschel and Planck-detected gravitationally lensed dusty star-forming galaxy (DSFG) at z = 1.68 using Hubble, Submillimeter Array (SMA), and Keck observations. The background submillimeter galaxy (SMG) is strongly lensed by a foreground galaxy cluster at z = 0.997 and appears as an arc with a length of ∼15″ in the optical images. The continuum dust emission, as seen by SMA, is limited to a single knot within this arc. We present a lens model with source-plane reconstructions at several wavelengths to show the difference in magnification between the stars and dust, and highlight the importance of multi-wavelength lens models for studies involving lensed DSFGs. We estimate the physical properties of the galaxy by fitting the flux densities to model spectral energy distributions leading to a magnification-corrected starformation rate (SFR) of 390 ± 60 M yr−1 and a stellar mass of 1.1 ± 0.4 10 x 11 M. These values are consistent with high-redshift massive galaxies that have formed most of their stars already. The estimated gas-to-baryon fraction, molecular gas surface density, and SFR surface density have values of 0.43 ± 0.13, 350 ± 200 M pc−2, and ~ 12 7 M yr−1 kpc−2, respectively. The ratio of SFR surface density to molecular gas surface density puts this among the most star-forming systems, similar to other measured SMGs and local ULIRGs.
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44. ALMA resolves the properties of star-forming regions in a dense gas disk at z ∼ 3
- Author
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Swinbank, A.M., Dye, S., Nightingale, J.W., Furlanetto, C., Smail, Ian, Cooray, A., Dannerbauer, H., Dunne, L., Eales, S., Gavazzi, R., Hunter, T., Ivison, R.J., Negrello, M., Oteo-Gomez, I., Smit, R., Werf, P. van der, Vlahakis, C., Swinbank, A.M., Dye, S., Nightingale, J.W., Furlanetto, C., Smail, Ian, Cooray, A., Dannerbauer, H., Dunne, L., Eales, S., Gavazzi, R., Hunter, T., Ivison, R.J., Negrello, M., Oteo-Gomez, I., Smit, R., Werf, P. van der, and Vlahakis, C.
- Abstract
We exploit long baseline ALMA submillimeter observations of the lensed star-forming galaxy SDP 81 at z = 3.042 to investigate the properties of the interstellar medium (ISM) on scales of 50–100 pc. The kinematics of the 12CO gas within this system are well described by a rotationally supported disk with an inclination-corrected rotation speed, = 320 ± 20 km s−1, and a dynamical mass of = (3.5 ± 1.0)× 1010 within a radius of 1.5 kpc. The disk is gas-rich and unstable, with a Toomre parameter, Q = 0.30 ± 0.10, and so into star-forming regions with Jeans length 130 pc. We identify five star-forming regions within the ISM on these scales and show that their scaling relations between luminosity, line widths, and sizes are significantly offset from those typical of molecular clouds in local galaxies (Larson's relations). These offsets are likely to be caused by the high external hydrostatic pressure for the ISM, / × 107 K cm−3, which is ~104× higher than the typical ISM pressure in the Milky Way. The physical conditions of the star-forming ISM and giant molecular clouds appear to be similar to those found in the densest environments in the local universe, such as those in the Galactic center.
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- View/download PDF
45. Cross-correlation between the CMB lensing potential measured by Planck and high-z submillimeter galaxies detected by the Herschel-ATLAS survey
- Author
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Bianchini, F., Bielewicz, P., Lapi, A., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Baccigalupi, C., de Zotti, G., Danese, L., Bourne, N., Cooray, A., Dunne, L., Dye, S., Eales, S., Ivison, R., Maddox, S., Negrello, M., Scott, D., Smith, M.W.L., Valiante, E., Bianchini, F., Bielewicz, P., Lapi, A., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Baccigalupi, C., de Zotti, G., Danese, L., Bourne, N., Cooray, A., Dunne, L., Dye, S., Eales, S., Ivison, R., Maddox, S., Negrello, M., Scott, D., Smith, M.W.L., and Valiante, E.
- Abstract
We present the first measurement of the correlation between the map of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) lensing potential derived from the Planck nominal mission data and z≥1.5 galaxies detected by the Herschel-ATLAS (H-ATLAS) survey covering about 600 deg2, i.e., about 1.4% of the sky. We reject the hypothesis that there is no correlation between CMB lensing and galaxy detection at a significance, checking the result by performing a number of null tests. The significance of the detection of the theoretically expected cross-correlation signal is found to be . The galaxy bias parameter, b, derived from a joint analysis of the cross-power spectrum and of the autopower spectrum of the galaxy density contrast is found to be , consistent with earlier estimates for H-ATLAS galaxies at similar redshifts. On the other hand, the amplitude of the cross-correlation is found to be a factor 1.62 ± 0.16 higher than expected from the standard model and also found by cross-correlation analyses with other tracers of the large-scale structure. The enhancement due to lensing magnification can account for only a fraction of the excess cross-correlation signal. We suggest that part of it may be due to an incomplete removal of the contamination of the cosmic infrared background, which includes the H-ATLAS sources we are cross-correlating with. In any case, the highly significant detection reported here using a catalog covering only 1.4% of the sky demonstrates the potential of CMB lensing correlations with submillimeter surveys.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. ALMA resolves the properties of star-forming regions in a dense gas disk at z ∼ 3
- Author
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Swinbank, A.M., Dye, S., Nightingale, J.W., Furlanetto, C., Smail, Ian, Cooray, A., Dannerbauer, H., Dunne, L., Eales, S., Gavazzi, R., Hunter, T., Ivison, R.J., Negrello, M., Oteo-Gomez, I., Smit, R., Werf, P. van der, Vlahakis, C., Swinbank, A.M., Dye, S., Nightingale, J.W., Furlanetto, C., Smail, Ian, Cooray, A., Dannerbauer, H., Dunne, L., Eales, S., Gavazzi, R., Hunter, T., Ivison, R.J., Negrello, M., Oteo-Gomez, I., Smit, R., Werf, P. van der, and Vlahakis, C.
- Abstract
We exploit long baseline ALMA submillimeter observations of the lensed star-forming galaxy SDP 81 at z = 3.042 to investigate the properties of the interstellar medium (ISM) on scales of 50–100 pc. The kinematics of the 12CO gas within this system are well described by a rotationally supported disk with an inclination-corrected rotation speed, = 320 ± 20 km s−1, and a dynamical mass of = (3.5 ± 1.0)× 1010 within a radius of 1.5 kpc. The disk is gas-rich and unstable, with a Toomre parameter, Q = 0.30 ± 0.10, and so into star-forming regions with Jeans length 130 pc. We identify five star-forming regions within the ISM on these scales and show that their scaling relations between luminosity, line widths, and sizes are significantly offset from those typical of molecular clouds in local galaxies (Larson's relations). These offsets are likely to be caused by the high external hydrostatic pressure for the ISM, / × 107 K cm−3, which is ~104× higher than the typical ISM pressure in the Milky Way. The physical conditions of the star-forming ISM and giant molecular clouds appear to be similar to those found in the densest environments in the local universe, such as those in the Galactic center.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Multi-wavelength lens construction of a Planck and Herschel-detected star-bursting galaxy
- Author
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Timmons, Nicholas, Cooray, A., Riechers, D.A., Nayyeri, H., Fu, Hai, Jullo, Eric, Gladders, Michael D., Baes, Maarten, Bussmann, R.S., Calanog, Jae, Clements, D.L., da Cunha, E., Dye, S., Eales, S.A., Furlanetto, C., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Greenslade, J., Gurwell, M., Messias, Hugo, Michalowski, M.J., Oteo, I., Pérez-Fournón, I., Scott, Douglas, Valiante, E., Timmons, Nicholas, Cooray, A., Riechers, D.A., Nayyeri, H., Fu, Hai, Jullo, Eric, Gladders, Michael D., Baes, Maarten, Bussmann, R.S., Calanog, Jae, Clements, D.L., da Cunha, E., Dye, S., Eales, S.A., Furlanetto, C., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Greenslade, J., Gurwell, M., Messias, Hugo, Michalowski, M.J., Oteo, I., Pérez-Fournón, I., Scott, Douglas, and Valiante, E.
- Abstract
We present a source-plane reconstruction of a Herschel and Planck-detected gravitationally lensed dusty star-forming galaxy (DSFG) at z = 1.68 using Hubble, Submillimeter Array (SMA), and Keck observations. The background submillimeter galaxy (SMG) is strongly lensed by a foreground galaxy cluster at z = 0.997 and appears as an arc with a length of ∼15″ in the optical images. The continuum dust emission, as seen by SMA, is limited to a single knot within this arc. We present a lens model with source-plane reconstructions at several wavelengths to show the difference in magnification between the stars and dust, and highlight the importance of multi-wavelength lens models for studies involving lensed DSFGs. We estimate the physical properties of the galaxy by fitting the flux densities to model spectral energy distributions leading to a magnification-corrected starformation rate (SFR) of 390 ± 60 M yr−1 and a stellar mass of 1.1 ± 0.4 10 x 11 M. These values are consistent with high-redshift massive galaxies that have formed most of their stars already. The estimated gas-to-baryon fraction, molecular gas surface density, and SFR surface density have values of 0.43 ± 0.13, 350 ± 200 M pc−2, and ~ 12 7 M yr−1 kpc−2, respectively. The ratio of SFR surface density to molecular gas surface density puts this among the most star-forming systems, similar to other measured SMGs and local ULIRGs.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Cross-correlation between the CMB lensing potential measured by Planck and high-z submillimeter galaxies detected by the Herschel-ATLAS survey
- Author
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Bianchini, F., Bielewicz, P., Lapi, A., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Baccigalupi, C., de Zotti, G., Danese, L., Bourne, N., Cooray, A., Dunne, L., Dye, S., Eales, S., Ivison, R., Maddox, S., Negrello, M., Scott, D., Smith, M.W.L., Valiante, E., Bianchini, F., Bielewicz, P., Lapi, A., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., Baccigalupi, C., de Zotti, G., Danese, L., Bourne, N., Cooray, A., Dunne, L., Dye, S., Eales, S., Ivison, R., Maddox, S., Negrello, M., Scott, D., Smith, M.W.L., and Valiante, E.
- Abstract
We present the first measurement of the correlation between the map of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) lensing potential derived from the Planck nominal mission data and z≥1.5 galaxies detected by the Herschel-ATLAS (H-ATLAS) survey covering about 600 deg2, i.e., about 1.4% of the sky. We reject the hypothesis that there is no correlation between CMB lensing and galaxy detection at a significance, checking the result by performing a number of null tests. The significance of the detection of the theoretically expected cross-correlation signal is found to be . The galaxy bias parameter, b, derived from a joint analysis of the cross-power spectrum and of the autopower spectrum of the galaxy density contrast is found to be , consistent with earlier estimates for H-ATLAS galaxies at similar redshifts. On the other hand, the amplitude of the cross-correlation is found to be a factor 1.62 ± 0.16 higher than expected from the standard model and also found by cross-correlation analyses with other tracers of the large-scale structure. The enhancement due to lensing magnification can account for only a fraction of the excess cross-correlation signal. We suggest that part of it may be due to an incomplete removal of the contamination of the cosmic infrared background, which includes the H-ATLAS sources we are cross-correlating with. In any case, the highly significant detection reported here using a catalog covering only 1.4% of the sky demonstrates the potential of CMB lensing correlations with submillimeter surveys.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Discovery of 16 new z ∼ 5.5 quasars: filling in the redshift gap of quasar color selection
- Author
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Yang, Jinyi, Fan, Xiaohui, Wu, Xue-Bing, Wang, Feige, Bian, Fuyan, Yang, Qian, McGreer, Ian D., Yi, Weimin, Jiang, Linhua, Green, Richard, Yue, Minghao, Wang, Shu, Li, Zefeng, Ding, Jiani, Dye, S., Lawrence, Andy, Yang, Jinyi, Fan, Xiaohui, Wu, Xue-Bing, Wang, Feige, Bian, Fuyan, Yang, Qian, McGreer, Ian D., Yi, Weimin, Jiang, Linhua, Green, Richard, Yue, Minghao, Wang, Shu, Li, Zefeng, Ding, Jiani, Dye, S., and Lawrence, Andy
- Abstract
We present initial results from the first systematic survey of luminous z ∼ 5.5 quasars. Quasars at z ∼ 5.5, the post-reionization epoch, are crucial tools to explore the evolution of intergalactic medium, quasar evolution, and the early super-massive black hole growth. However, it has been very challenging to select quasars at redshifts 5.3 ≤ z ≤ 5.7 using conventional color selections, due to their similar optical colors to late-type stars, especially M dwarfs, resulting in a glaring redshift gap in quasar redshift distributions. We develop a new selection technique for z ∼ 5.5 quasars based on optical, near-IR, and mid-IR photometric data from Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), UKIRT InfraRed Deep Sky Surveys—Large Area Survey (ULAS), VISTA Hemisphere Survey (VHS), and Wide Field Infrared Survey Explorer. From our pilot observations in the SDSS-ULAS/VHS area, we have discovered 15 new quasars at 5.3 ≤ z ≤ 5.7 and 6 new lower redshift quasars, with SDSS z band magnitude brighter than 20.5. Including other two z ∼ 5.5 quasars already published in our previous work, we now construct a uniform quasar sample at 5.3 ≤ z ≤ 5.7, with 17 quasars in a ∼4800 square degree survey area. For further application in a larger survey area, we apply our selection pipeline to do a test selection by using the new wide field J-band photometric data from a preliminary version of the UKIRT Hemisphere Survey (UHS). We successfully discover the first UHS selected z ∼ 5.5 quasar.
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50. An upper limit on the flux of extraterrestrial neutrinos
- Author
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Svoboda, R., primary, Bionta, R. M., additional, Blewitt, G., additional, Bratton, C. B., additional, Casper, D., additional, Chrysicopoulou, P., additional, Ciocio, A., additional, Claus, R., additional, Cortez, B., additional, Dye, S. T., additional, Errede, S., additional, Foster, G. W., additional, Gajewski, W., additional, Ganezer, K. S., additional, Goldhaber, M., additional, Haines, T. J., additional, Jones, T. W., additional, Kielczewska, D., additional, Kropp, W. R., additional, Learned, J. G., additional, Losecco, J. M., additional, Matthews, J., additional, Park, H. S., additional, Reines, F., additional, Schultz, J., additional, Seidel, S., additional, Shumard, E., additional, Sinclair, D., additional, Sobel, H. W., additional, Stone, J. L., additional, Sulak, L., additional, Thornton, G., additional, van der Velde, J. C., additional, and Wuest, C., additional
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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