352 results on '"Sutherland, Will"'
Search Results
52. The 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey: Near Infrared Galaxy Luminosity Functions
- Author
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Cole, Shaun, Norberg, Peder, Baugh, Carlton, Frenk, Carlos, Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Bridges, Terry, Cannon, Russell, Colless, Matthew, Collins, Chris, Couch, Warrick, Cross, Nicholas, Dalton, Gavin, De Propris, Roberto, Driver, Simon, Efstathiou, George, Ellis, Richard, Glazebrook, Karl, Jackson, Carole, Lahav, Ofer, Lewis, Ian, Lumsden, Stuart, Maddox, Steve, Madgwick, Darren, Peacock, John, Peterson, Bruce, Sutherland, Will, and Taylor, Keith
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We combine the 2MASS extended source catalogue and the 2dFGRS to produce an IR selected galaxy catalogue with 17,173 measured redshifts. We use this extensive dataset to estimate the J and K-band galaxy luminosity functions. The LFs are fairly well fit by Schechter functions with J: M*-5log h= -22.36+/-0.02, alpha= -0.93+/-0.04, Phi=0.0104+/-0.0016 h^3/Mpc^3 and K: M*-5log h= -23.44+/-0.03, alpha=-0.96+/-0.05, Phi=0.0108+/-0.0016 h^3/Mpc^3 (2MASS Kron magnitudes). These parameters assume a cosmological model with Omega=0.3 and Lambda=0.7. With datasets of this size, systematic rather than random errors are the dominant source of uncertainty in the determination of the LF. We carry out a careful investigation of possible systematic effects in our data. The surface brightness distribution of the sample shows no evidence that significant numbers of low surface brightness or compact galaxies are missed by the survey. We estimate the present-day distributions of B-K and J-K colours as a function of absolute magnitude and use models of the galaxy stellar populations, constrained by the observed optical and infrared colours, to infer the galaxy stellar mass function. Integrated over all galaxy masses, this yields a total mass fraction in stars (in units of the critical mass density) of Omega_*.h= (1.6+/-0.24)/10^3 for a Kennicutt IMF and Omega_*.h= (2.9+/-0.43)/10^3 for a Salpeter IMF. These values agree with those inferred from observational estimates of the star formation history of the universe provided that dust extinction corrections are modest., Comment: Typo in Table 3 Fixed (MNRAS 326 255). Catalogue with 17,173 2dFGRS z's at http://star-www.dur.ac.uk/~cole/2dFGRS-2MASS
- Published
- 2000
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53. The 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey: The Number and Luminosity Density of Galaxies
- Author
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Cross, Nicholas, Driver, Simon P., Couch, Warrick, Baugh, Carlton M., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Bridges, Terry, Cannon, Russell, Cole, Shaun, Colless, Matthew, Collins, Chris, Dalton, Gavin, Deeley, Kathryn, De Propris, Roberto, Efstathiou, George, Ellis, Richard S., Frenk, Carlos S., Glazebrook, Karl, Jackson, Carole, Lahav, Ofer, Lewis, Ian, Lumsden, Stuart, Maddox, Steve, Madgwick, Darren, Moody, Stephen, Norberg, Peder, Peacock, John A., Peterson, Bruce A., Price, Ian, Seaborne, Mark, Sutherland, Will, Tadros, Helen, and Taylor, Keith
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the bivariate brightness distribution (BBD) for the 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey (2dFGRS) based on a preliminary subsample of 45,000 galaxies. The BBD is an extension of the galaxy luminosity function incorporating surface brightness information. It allows the measurement of the local luminosity density, j_B, and the galaxy luminosity and surface brightness distributions while accounting for surface brightness selection biases. The recovered 2dFGRS BBD shows a strong surface brightness-luminosity relation (M_B~2.4\mu_e). The luminosity-density is dominated by normal galaxies and the luminosity-density peak lies away from the selection boundaries implying that the 2dFGRS is complete and that luminous low surface brightness galaxies are rare. The final value we derive for the local luminosity-density, inclusive of surface brightness corrections, is: j_B=2.49+/-0.20x10^8 h L_solar Mpc^-3. Representative Schechter function parameters are: M*=-19.75+/-0.05, phi*=2.02+/-0.02x10^-2 and alpha=-1.09+/-0.03. Extending the conventional methodology to incorporate surface brightness selection effects has resulted in an increase in the luminosity-density of 37%., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 20 pages and 15 figures
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- 2000
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54. The IRAS view of the Local Universe
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Saunders, Will, D'Mellow, Kenton, Valentine, Helen, Tully, Brent, Carrasco, Esperanza, Mobasher, Bahram, Maddox, Steve, Hau, George, Sutherland, Will, Clements, Dave, and Staveley-Smith, Lister
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We summarise results for the predicted density and peculiar velocity fields from the PSCz survey. We have used a generalisation of the Path Interchange Zeldovich Approximation to determine the velocity field; the most remarkable feature being a coherent large-scale flow along the baseline connecting the Local Supercluster, Centaurus and the Shapley Concentration. Comparison of the predicted and observed bulk flows gives a value of beta = 0.50+-0.1. We re-examine the PSCz dipole, with improved redshift completeness at low-latitudes and using PIZA to estimate real-space distances. We find the dipole to be stable between 80 and 180 hMpc, although there appears to be a significant contribution to the dipole around 200 hMpc. The overall misalignment with the CMB dipole remains at 20degrees. The implied value of beta is in the range 0.40-0.55 with statistical error +-0.1. We also present the density field and a preliminary dipole analysis from the almost completed Behind The Plane survey, which extends the PSCz to cover 93% of the sky including the proposed core of the Great Attractor. We find a density peak at (325,-5,3500km/s), about half as massive as Centaurus or Pavo-Indus, and forming part of a continuous filament linking them across the Plane. We also find evidence for a much larger `Greater Attractor' directly behind the GA, at a distance of 125 hMpc, and more massive than the Shapley concentration. At large distances the dipole direction is in much improved agreement with the CMB: at 250-300hMpc, the misalignment is only 5-10 degrees, though this depends on the incompleteness corrections made. The dipole amplitude implies a value for the parameter beta of 0.44+-0.1., Comment: 10 pages. To appear in 'The Hidden Universe', procs Guanajuarto conference 2/00, ASP Conference series, eds R.C. Kraan-Korteweg, P.A. Henning and H. Andernach
- Published
- 2000
55. The Behind The Plane Survey - source selection, identifications and completeness
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Saunders, Will, D'Mellow, Kenton, Tully, Brent, Carrasco, Esperanza, Mobasher, Bahram, Maddox, Steve, Hau, George, Sutherland, Will, Clements, Dave, and Staveley-Smith, Lister
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present details of the Behind The Plane survey of IRAS galaxies, which extends the PSCz survey to cover the 93% of the sky with complete and reliable IRAS data from the Point Source Catalog. At low latitudes, our catalogue is not complete to 0.6Jy, but the incompleteness is physically understood and can be corrected for. IRAS galaxies at low latitudes are heavily or completely obscured optically, and are heavily outnumbered by Galactic sources with similar IRAS properties. We have used radio, optical, mm, near and far-infrared data to identify the galaxies, and the 2D catalogue is now complete. We have used optical and HI spectroscopy to obtain redshifts for the galaxies; the southern spectroscopy is completed and the north nearly so., Comment: 3 pages. To appear in 'The Hidden Universe', procs Guanajuarto conference 2/00. ASP Conference series, eds R.C. Kraan-Korteweg, P.A. Henning and H. Andernach
- Published
- 2000
56. The Behind The Plane Survey
- Author
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Saunders, Will, d'Mellow, Kenton, Tully, Brent, Mobasher, Bahram, Maddox, Steve, Sutherland, Will, Carrasco, Esperanza, Hau, George, Clements, Dave, and Staveley-Smith
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have extended the PSCz to cover 93% of the sky, the practical limit for any catalogue based on the Point Source Catalog. The galaxy identifications are complete, and the core of the Great Attractor is quantitatively mapped for the first time. We discuss the likely effect of the increased sky coverage on the IRAS dipole., Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. To be published in 'Towards an Understanding of Cosmic Flows of Large-Scale Structure', Victoria, July 1999, eds Courteau,S., Strauss,M., Willick,J., to be published by PASP
- Published
- 1999
57. Density and Velocity Fields from the PSCz Survey
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Saunders, Will, Branchini, Enzo, Teodoro, Luis, Heavens, Alan, Taylor, Andy, Valentine, Helen, D'Mellow, Kenton, Oliver, Seb, Keeble, Oliver, Rowan-Robinson, Michael, Sharpe, Jacob, Maddox, Steve, McMahon, Richard, Efstathiou, George, Sutherland, Will, Tadros, Helen, Ballinger, Bill, Schmolt, Inga, Frenk, Carlos, and White, Simon
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results for the predicted density and peculiar velocity fields and the dipole from the PSCz survey of 15,000 IRAS galaxies over 84% of the sky. We find a significant component to the dipole arising between 6000 and 15,000 km/s, but no significant component from greater distances. The misalignment with the CMB is 20 degrees. The most remarkable feature of the PSCz model velocity field is a coherent large-scale flow along the baseline connecting Perseus-Pisces, the Local Supercluster, Great Attractor and the Shapley Concentration. We have measured the parameter beta using the amplitude of the dipole, bulk flow and point by point comparisons between the individual velocities of galaxies in the MarkIII and SFI datasets, and the large-scale clustering distortion in redshift space.All our results are consistent with beta = 0.6 +- 0.1., Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures. To appear in 'Towards an Understanding of Cosmic Flows', Victoria, July 1999, eds Courteau,S., Strauss,M., Willick,J. PASP
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- 1999
58. The PSCz catalogue
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Saunders, Will, Oliver, Seb, Keeble, Oliver, Rowan-Robinson, Michael, Maddox, Steve, McMahon, Richard, Efstathiou, George, Sutherland, Will, Tadros, Helen, White, Simon, and Frenk, Carlos
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the catalogue and redshift data for the PSCz survey of 15,000 IRAS galaxies over 84% of the sky. The uniformity, completeness and data quality are assessed, and guidelines and caveats for its use are given., Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure. To be published in 'Towards an Understanding of Cosmic Flows of Large-Scale Structure', Victoria, July 1999, eds Courteau,S., Strauss,M., Willick,J., PASP
- Published
- 1999
59. PSCz-1.2 Jy Comparison: A Spherical Harmonics Approach
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Teodoro, Luis, Branchini, Enzo, Frenk, Carlos, Saunders, Will, Oliver, Seb, Keeble, Oliver, Rowan-Robinson, Michael, Maddox, Steve, Efstathiou, George, Sutherland, Will, and White, Simon
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We perform a detailed comparison of the IRAS PSCz and 1.2-Jy spherical harmonic coefficients of the density and velocity fields in redshift space. The monopole terms predicted from the two surveys show some differences. The mismatch between the velocity monopoles arises from faint sources and disappears when extracting a PSCz subsample of galaxies with fluxes larger than 1.2 Jy. The analysis of PSCz dipole moments confirms the same inconsistencies found by Davis, Nusser and Willick (1996) between the IRAS 1.2-Jy gravity field and MARK III peculiar velocities. We conclude that shot-noise, which is greatly reduced in our PSCz gravity field, cannot be responsible for the observed mismatch., Comment: 4 pages Latex, 2 figures. Cosmic Flows Workshop, Victoria, Canada, July 1999, ed. S. Courteau, M. Strauss & J. Willick, ASP series
- Published
- 1999
60. Gravitational Microlensing - A Report on the MACHO Project
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Sutherland, Will
- Subjects
Astrophysics ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
There is abundant evidence that the mass of the Universe is dominated by dark matter of unknown form. The MACHO project is one of several teams searching for the dark matter around our Galaxy in the form of Massive Compact Halo Objects (MACHOs). If a compact object passes very close to the line of sight to a background star, the gravitational deflection of light causes an apparent brightening of the star, i.e. a gravitational `microlensing' event. Such events will be very rare, so millions of stars must be monitored for many years. We describe our search for microlensing using a very large CCD camera on the dedicated 1.27m telescope at Mt. Stromlo, Australia: currently some 14 events have been discovered towards the Large Magellanic Cloud. The lack of short-timescale events excludes planetary mass MACHOs as a major contributor to the dark matter, but the observed long events (durations 1--6 months) suggest that a major fraction may be in fairly massive objects $\sim 0.5 \Msun$. It is currently difficult but not impossible to explain these events by other lens populations; we discuss some prospects for clarifying the nature of the lenses., Comment: RevTex, 20 pages incl. 11 Postscript figures. Rev. Mod. Phys. 'Colloquium' article, to appear Jan. 1999
- Published
- 1998
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61. The APM Galaxy Survey:- V. Catalogues of Galaxy Clusters
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Dalton, Gavin, Maddox, Steve, Sutherland, Will, and Efstathiou, George
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe the construction of catalogues of galaxy clusters from the APM Galaxy survey using an automated algorithm based on Abell-like selection criteria. We investigate the effects of varying several parameters in our selection algorithm, including the magnitude range, and radius from the cluster centre used to estimate the cluster richnesses. We quantify the accuracy of the photometric distance estimates by comparing with measured redshifts, and we investigate the stability and completeness of the resulting catalogues. We find that the angular correlation functions for different cluster catalogues are in good agreement with one another, and are also consistent with the observed amplitude of the spatial correlation function of rich clusters., Comment: 14 pages, PostScript, including 15 figures, submitted to MNRAS. Also available from ftp://ftp-astro.physics.ox.ac.uk/pub/gbd/papers/apm5.ps.gz
- Published
- 1997
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62. The richness dependence of galaxy cluster correlations: Results from a redshift survey of rich APM clusters
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Croft, Rupert A. C., Dalton, Gavin B., Efstathiou, George, Sutherland, Will, and Maddox, Steve
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We analyse the spatial clustering properties of a new catalogue of very rich galaxy clusters selected from the APM Galaxy Survey. These clusters are of comparable richness and space density to Abell Richness Class $\geq 1$ clusters, but selected using an objective algorithm from a catalogue demonstrably free of artificial inhomogeneities. Evaluation of the two-point correlation function $\xi_{cc}(r)$ for the full sample and for richer subsamples reveals that the correlation amplitude is consistent with that measured for lower richness APM clusters and X-ray selected clusters. We apply a maxmimum likelihood estimator to find the best fitting slope and amplitude of a power law fit to $\xi_{cc}(r)$, and to estimate the correlation length $r_{0}$ (the value of $r$ at which $\xi_{cc}(r)$ is equal to unity). For clusters with a mean space density of $1.6\times 10^{-6}\hmpccc$ (equivalent to the space density of Abell Richness $\geq 2$ clusters), we find $r_{0}=21.3^{+11.1}_{-9.3} \hmpc$ (95% confidence limits). This is consistent with the weak richness dependence of $\xi_{cc}(r)$ expected in Gaussian models of structure formation. In particular, the amplitude of $\xi_{cc}(r)$ at all richnesses matches that of $\xi_{cc}(r)$ for clusters selected in N-Body simulations of a low density Cold Dark Matter model., Comment: MNRAS submitted, 9 pages, LaTeX (mn), 7 figures. Also available at http://www-astronomy.mps.ohio-state.edu/~racc/
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- 1997
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63. Strong constraints on the gravitational law from Gaia DR3 wide binaries.
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Banik, Indranil, Pittordis, Charalambos, Sutherland, Will, Famaey, Benoit, Ibata, Rodrigo, Mieske, Steffen, and Zhao, Hongsheng
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MARKOV chain Monte Carlo ,MONTE Carlo method ,ORBITAL velocity ,GRAVITATIONAL fields ,BINARY stars - Abstract
We test Milgromian dynamics (MOND) using wide binary stars (WBs) with separations of 2–30 kAU. Locally, the WB orbital velocity in MOND should exceed the Newtonian prediction by |$\approx 20~{{\ \rm per\ cent}}$| at asymptotically large separations given the Galactic external field effect (EFE). We investigate this with a detailed statistical analysis of Gaia DR3 data on 8611 WBs within 250 pc of the Sun. Orbits are integrated in a rigorously calculated gravitational field that directly includes the EFE. We also allow line-of-sight contamination and undetected close binary companions to the stars in each WB. We interpolate between the Newtonian and Milgromian predictions using the parameter α
grav , with 0 indicating Newtonian gravity and 1 indicating MOND. Directly comparing the best Newtonian and Milgromian models reveals that Newtonian dynamics is preferred at 19σ confidence. Using a complementary Markov Chain Monte Carlo analysis, we find that |$\alpha _{\rm {grav}} = -0.021^{+0.065}_{-0.045}$| , which is fully consistent with Newtonian gravity but excludes MOND at 16σ confidence. This is in line with the similar result of Pittordis and Sutherland using a somewhat different sample selection and less thoroughly explored population model. We show that although our best-fitting model does not fully reproduce the observations, an overwhelmingly strong preference for Newtonian gravity remains in a considerable range of variations to our analysis. Adapting the MOND interpolating function to explain this result would cause tension with rotation curve constraints. We discuss the broader implications of our results in light of other works, concluding that MOND must be substantially modified on small scales to account for local WBs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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64. Algorithmic Management and Algorithmic Competencies: Understanding and Appropriating Algorithms in Gig Work
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Jarrahi, Mohammad Hossein, primary and Sutherland, Will, additional
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- 2019
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65. Organizing Oceanographic Infrastructure: The Work of Making a Software Pipeline Repurposable
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Neang, Andrew B., primary, Sutherland, Will, additional, Ribes, David, additional, and Lee, Charlotte P., additional
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- 2023
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66. Digital Nomads Beyond the Buzzword: Defining Digital Nomadic Work and Use of Digital Technologies
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Nash, Caleece, primary, Jarrahi, Mohammad Hossein, additional, Sutherland, Will, additional, and Phillips, Gabriela, additional
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- 2018
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67. Wide Binaries from GAIA EDR3: preference for GR over MOND?
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Pittordis, Charalambos, primary and Sutherland, Will, additional
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- 2023
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68. Wide Binaries as a Modified Gravity test: prospects for detecting triple-system contamination
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Manchanda, Dhruv, primary, Sutherland, Will, additional, and Pittordis, Charalambos, additional
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- 2023
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69. VISTA Public Surveys and VLT followup
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Sutherland, Will, Burton, W. B., editor, Christensen, Lars Lindberg, editor, and Moorwood, Alan, editor
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- 2009
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70. Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): Data Release 4 and the z < 0.1 total and z < 0.08 morphological galaxy stellar mass functions
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Driver, Simon P, primary, Bellstedt, Sabine, additional, Robotham, Aaron S G, additional, Baldry, Ivan K, additional, Davies, Luke J, additional, Liske, Jochen, additional, Obreschkow, Danail, additional, Taylor, Edward N, additional, Wright, Angus H, additional, Alpaslan, Mehmet, additional, Bamford, Steven P, additional, Bauer, Amanda E, additional, Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, additional, Bilicki, Maciej, additional, Bravo, Matías, additional, Brough, Sarah, additional, Casura, Sarah, additional, Cluver, Michelle E, additional, Colless, Matthew, additional, Conselice, Christopher J, additional, Croom, Scott M, additional, de Jong, Jelte, additional, D’Eugenio, Franceso, additional, De Propris, Roberto, additional, Dogruel, Burak, additional, Drinkwater, Michael J, additional, Dvornik, Andrej, additional, Farrow, Daniel J, additional, Frenk, Carlos S, additional, Giblin, Benjamin, additional, Graham, Alister W, additional, Grootes, Meiert W, additional, Gunawardhana, Madusha L P, additional, Hashemizadeh, Abdolhosein, additional, Häußler, Boris, additional, Heymans, Catherine, additional, Hildebrandt, Hendrik, additional, Holwerda, Benne W, additional, Hopkins, Andrew M, additional, Jarrett, Tom H, additional, Heath Jones, D, additional, Kelvin, Lee S, additional, Koushan, Soheil, additional, Kuijken, Konrad, additional, Lara-López, Maritza A, additional, Lange, Rebecca, additional, López-Sánchez, Ángel R, additional, Loveday, Jon, additional, Mahajan, Smriti, additional, Meyer, Martin, additional, Moffett, Amanda J, additional, Napolitano, Nicola R, additional, Norberg, Peder, additional, Owers, Matt S, additional, Radovich, Mario, additional, Raouf, Mojtaba, additional, Peacock, John A, additional, Phillipps, Steven, additional, Pimbblet, Kevin A, additional, Popescu, Cristina, additional, Said, Khaled, additional, Sansom, Anne E, additional, Seibert, Mark, additional, Sutherland, Will J, additional, Thorne, Jessica E, additional, Tuffs, Richard J, additional, Turner, Ryan, additional, van der Wel, Arjen, additional, van Kampen, Eelco, additional, and Wilkins, Steve M, additional
- Published
- 2022
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71. Testing the Zeldovich Spectrum
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Sutherland, Will, Shanks, T., editor, Banday, A. J., editor, Ellis, R. S., editor, Frenk, C. S., editor, and Wolfendale, A. W., editor
- Published
- 1991
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72. Time for Historicism in CSCW: An Invitation
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Soden, Robert, primary, Ribes, David, additional, Avle, Seyram, additional, and Sutherland, Will, additional
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- 2021
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73. Pathways to Data: From Plans to Datasets
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Bennett, Anastasia, primary, Sutherland, Will, additional, Tian, Yubing, additional, Finn, Megan, additional, and Acker, Amelia, additional
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- 2021
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74. Algorithmic management in a work context
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Jarrahi, Mohammad Hossein, primary, Newlands, Gemma, additional, Lee, Min Kyung, additional, Wolf, Christine T., additional, Kinder, Eliscia, additional, and Sutherland, Will, additional
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- 2021
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75. Construction of Shared Situational Awareness in Traffic Management
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Jones, Ridley, primary, Beach, Michael W., additional, McClure Haughey, Melinda, additional, Sutherland, Will, additional, and Lee, Charlotte P., additional
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- 2021
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76. Data Integration as Coordination
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Neang, Andrew B., primary, Sutherland, Will, additional, Beach, Michael W., additional, and Lee, Charlotte P., additional
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- 2021
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77. A measurement of the cosmological mass density from clustering in the 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey
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Peacock, John A., Cole, Shaun, Norberg, Peder, Baugh, Carlton M., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Bridges, Terry, Cannon, Russell D., Colless, Matthew, Collins, Chris, Couch, Warrick, Dalton, Gavin, Deeley, Kathryn, De Propris, Roberto, Driver, Simon P., Efstathiou, George, Ellis, Richard S., Frenk, Carlos S., Glazebrook, Karl, Jackson, Carole, Lahav, Ofer, Lewis, Ian, Lumsden, Stuart, Maddox, Steve, Percival, Will J., Peterson, Bruce A., Price, Ian, Sutherland, Will, and Taylor, Keith
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Environmental issues ,Science and technology ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Abstract
Author(s): John A. Peacock (corresponding author) [1]; Shaun Cole [2]; Peder Norberg [2]; Carlton M. Baugh [2]; Joss Bland-Hawthorn [3]; Terry Bridges [3]; Russell D. Cannon [3]; Matthew Colless [4]; [...]
- Published
- 2001
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78. Nomadic work and location independence: The role of space in shaping the work of digital nomads
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Nash, (Evyn) Caleece, primary, Jarrahi, Mohammad Hossein, additional, and Sutherland, Will, additional
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- 2020
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79. The New Reality of Reproducibility: The Role of Data Work in Scientific Research
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Feinberg, Melanie, primary, Sutherland, Will, additional, Nelson, Sarah Beth, additional, Jarrahi, Mohammad Hossein, additional, and Rajasekar, Arcot, additional
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- 2020
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80. ‘The Cloud is Not <italic>Not</italic> IT’: Ecological Change in Research Computing in the Cloud.
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Sutherland, Will, Paine, Drew, and Lee, Charlotte P.
- Abstract
Along with a number of other computing technologies, cloud computing services are increasingly being promoted as a way of enabling openness, reproducibility, and the acceleration of scientific work. While there have been a variety of studies of the cloud in terms of computing performance, there has been little empirical attention to the changes going on around cloud computing at the level of work and practice. Through a qualitative, ethnographic study, we follow a cosmology research group’s transition from a shared high performance computing cluster to a cloud computing service, and examine the cloud service as a coordinative artifact being integrated into a larger ecology of existing practices and artifacts. We find that the transition involves both change and continuity in the group’s coordinative work and maintenance work, and point out some of the effects this adoption has on the group’s larger set of practices. Finally, we discuss practical implications this has for the broader adoption of cloud computing in university-based scientific work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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81. Work Precarity and Gig Literacies in Online Freelancing
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Sutherland, Will, primary, Jarrahi, Mohammad Hossein, additional, Dunn, Michael, additional, and Nelson, Sarah Beth, additional
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- 2019
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82. Platformic Management, Boundary Resources for Gig Work, and Worker Autonomy
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Jarrahi, Mohammad Hossein, primary, Sutherland, Will, additional, Nelson, Sarah Beth, additional, and Sawyer, Steve, additional
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- 2019
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83. Fostering Historical Research in CSCW & HCI
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Soden, Robert, primary, Ribes, David, additional, Jack, Maggie, additional, Sutherland, Will, additional, Khovanskaya, Vera, additional, Avle, Seyram, additional, Sengers, Phoebe, additional, and Bødker, Susanne, additional
- Published
- 2019
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84. Gig Platforms, Tensions, Alliances and Ecosystems
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Kinder, Eliscia, primary, Jarrahi, Mohammad Hossein, additional, and Sutherland, Will, additional
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- 2019
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85. Testing modified gravity with wide binaries in Gaia DR2
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Pittordis, Charalambos, primary and Sutherland, Will, additional
- Published
- 2019
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86. Personalization of knowledge, personal knowledge ecology, and digital nomadism
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Jarrahi, Mohammad Hossein, primary, Philips, Gabriela, additional, Sutherland, Will, additional, Sawyer, Steve, additional, and Erickson, Ingrid, additional
- Published
- 2019
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87. Nomadic work and location independence: The role of space in shaping the work of digital nomads.
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Nash, (Evyn) Caleece, Jarrahi, Mohammad Hossein, and Sutherland, Will
- Subjects
TELECOMMUTING ,DIGITAL technology ,SOCIAL media ,WORK environment ,DIGITAL nomads - Abstract
The enthusiasm around remote and independent working has rapidly gained momentum in the last few years. The digital nomad phenomenon has frequently been portrayed as an exemplar of this pattern and referred to by the media as a highly location‐independent form of nomadic work. However, findings from this study highlight the centrality of various spaces in digital nomadic work and suggest finding and configuring these spaces allows digital nomads to accomplish productive work. Building on interviews with 23 digital nomads and analyzing pictures of workspaces from Twitter, this study examines the unique relationship among disparate workspaces, work practices, and technologies that shape nomadic work. Our findings refine the common argument that nomadic workers can work from "anywhere, anytime," by attending to the large roles that space may play in shaping work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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88. Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA): Variation in Galaxy Structure Across the Green Valley
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Lee, Kelvin S, Bremer, Malcolm N, Phillipps, Steven, James, Philip A, Davies, Luke J M, De Propris, Roberto, Moffett, Amanda J, Percival, Susan M, Baldry, Ivan K, Collins, Chris A, Alpaslan, Mehmet, Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Brough, Sarah, Cluver, Michelle, Driver, Simon P, Hashemizadeh, Abdolhosein, Holwerda, Benne W, Laine, Jarkko, Lara-Lopez, Maritza A, Liske, Jochen, Maciejewski, Witold, Napolitano, Nicola R, Penny, Samantha J, Popescu, Cristina, Sansom, Anne E, Sutherland, Will, Taylor, Edward N, Kampen, Eelco van, Wang, Lingyu, Lee, Kelvin S, Bremer, Malcolm N, Phillipps, Steven, James, Philip A, Davies, Luke J M, De Propris, Roberto, Moffett, Amanda J, Percival, Susan M, Baldry, Ivan K, Collins, Chris A, Alpaslan, Mehmet, Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Brough, Sarah, Cluver, Michelle, Driver, Simon P, Hashemizadeh, Abdolhosein, Holwerda, Benne W, Laine, Jarkko, Lara-Lopez, Maritza A, Liske, Jochen, Maciejewski, Witold, Napolitano, Nicola R, Penny, Samantha J, Popescu, Cristina, Sansom, Anne E, Sutherland, Will, Taylor, Edward N, Kampen, Eelco van, and Wang, Lingyu
- Abstract
Using a sample of 472 local Universe (z < 0.06) galaxies in the stellar mass range 10.25 < log M*/MG < 10.75, we explore the variation in galaxy structure as a function of morphology and galaxy colour. Our sample of galaxies is sub-divided into red, green and blue colour groups and into elliptical and non-elliptical (disk-type) morphologies. Using KiDS and VIKING derived postage stamp images, a group of eight volunteers visually classified bars, rings, morphological lenses, tidal streams, shells and signs of merger activity for all systems. We find a significant surplus of rings (2.3σ) and lenses (2.9σ) in disk-type galaxies as they transition across the green valley. Combined, this implies a joint ring/lens green valley surplus significance of 3.3σ relative to equivalent disk-types within either the blue cloud or the red sequence. We recover a bar fraction of ∼ 44% which remains flat with colour, however, we find that the presence of a bar acts to modulate the incidence of rings and (to a lesser extent) lenses, with rings in barred disk-type galaxies more common by ∼ 20 − 30 percentage points relative to their unbarred counterparts, regardless of colour. Additionally, green valley disk-type galaxies with a bar exhibit a significant 3.0σ surplus of lenses relative to their blue/red analogues. The existence of such structures rules out violent transformative events as the primary end-of-life evolutionary mechanism, with a more passive scenario the favoured candidate for the majority of galaxies rapidly transitioning across the green valley. Key words: galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD – galaxies: spiral – galaxies: evo- lution – galaxies: star formation – galaxies: statistics – galaxies: structure
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- 2018
89. Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA):variation in galaxy structure across the green valley
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Kelvin, Lee S., Bremer, Malcolm N., Phillipps, Steven, James, Philip A., Davies, Luke J. M., De Propris, Roberto, Moffett, Amanda J., Percival, Susan M., Baldry, Ivan K., Collins, Chris A., Alpaslan, Mehmet, Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Brough, Sarah, Cluver, Michelle, Driver, Simon P., Hashemizadeh, Abdolhosein, Holwerda, Benne W., Laine, Jarkko, Lara-Lopez, Maritza A., Liske, Jochen, Maciejewski, Witold, Napolitano, Nicola R., Penny, Samantha J., Popescu, Cristina C., Sansom, Anne E., Sutherland, Will, Taylor, Edward N., van Kampen, Eelco, Wang, Lingyu, Kelvin, Lee S., Bremer, Malcolm N., Phillipps, Steven, James, Philip A., Davies, Luke J. M., De Propris, Roberto, Moffett, Amanda J., Percival, Susan M., Baldry, Ivan K., Collins, Chris A., Alpaslan, Mehmet, Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Brough, Sarah, Cluver, Michelle, Driver, Simon P., Hashemizadeh, Abdolhosein, Holwerda, Benne W., Laine, Jarkko, Lara-Lopez, Maritza A., Liske, Jochen, Maciejewski, Witold, Napolitano, Nicola R., Penny, Samantha J., Popescu, Cristina C., Sansom, Anne E., Sutherland, Will, Taylor, Edward N., van Kampen, Eelco, and Wang, Lingyu
- Published
- 2018
90. Galaxy and Mass Assembly: FUV, NUV, ugrizYJHK Petrosian, Kron and Sérsic photometry
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Hill, David T., Kelvin, Lee S., Driver, Simon P., Robotham, Aaron S. G., Cameron, Ewan, Cross, Nicholas J. G., Andrae, Ellen, Baldry, Ivan K., Bamford, Steven P., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Brough, Sarah, Conselice, Christopher J., Dye, Simon, Hopkins, Andrew M., Liske, Jochen, Loveday, Jon, Norberg, Peder, Peacock, John A., Croom, Scott M., Frenk, Carlos S., Graham, Alister W., Jones, David Heath, Kuijken, Konrad, Madore, Barry F., Nichol, Robert C., Parkinson, Hannah R., Phillipps, Steven, Pimbblet, Kevin A., Popescu, Cristina C., Prescott, Matthew, Seibert, Mark, Sharp, Robert G., Sutherland, Will J., Thomas, Daniel, Tuffs, Richard J., and Van Kampen, Eelco
- Subjects
Cosmology and Gravitation - Abstract
In order to generate credible 0.1–2 μm spectral energy distributions, the Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA) project requires many gigabytes of imaging data from a number of instruments to be reprocessed into a standard format. In this paper, we discuss the software infrastructure we use, and create self-consistent ugrizYJHK photometry for all sources within the GAMA sample. Using UKIDSS and SDSS archive data, we outline the pre-processing necessary to standardize all images to a common zero-point, the steps taken to correct for the seeing bias across the data set and the creation of gigapixel-scale mosaics of the three 4 × 12 deg2 GAMA regions in each filter. From these mosaics, we extract source catalogues for the GAMA regions using elliptical Kron and Petrosian matched apertures. We also calculate Sérsic magnitudes for all galaxies within the GAMA sample using sigma, a galaxy component modelling wrapper for galfit 3. We compare the resultant photometry directly and also calculate the r-band galaxy luminosity function for all photometric data sets to highlight the uncertainty introduced by the photometric method. We find that (1) changing the object detection threshold has a minor effect on the best-fitting Schechter parameters of the overall population (M*± 0.055 mag, α± 0.014, ϕ*± 0.0005 h3 Mpc−3); (2) there is an offset between data sets that use Kron or Petrosian photometry, regardless of the filter; (3) the decision to use circular or elliptical apertures causes an offset in M* of 0.20 mag; (4) the best-fitting Schechter parameters from total-magnitude photometric systems (such as SDSS modelmag or Sérsic magnitudes) have a steeper faint-end slope than photometric systems based upon Kron or Petrosian measurements; and (5) our Universe’s total luminosity density, when calculated using Kron or Petrosian r-band photometry, is underestimated by at least 15 per cent.
- Published
- 2017
91. Testing modified-gravity theories via wide binaries and GAIA
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Pittordis, Charalambos, primary and Sutherland, Will, additional
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- 2018
- Full Text
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92. Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA): variation in galaxy structure across the green valley
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Kelvin, Lee S, primary, Bremer, Malcolm N, additional, Phillipps, Steven, additional, James, Philip A, additional, Davies, Luke J M, additional, De Propris, Roberto, additional, Moffett, Amanda J, additional, Percival, Susan M, additional, Baldry, Ivan K, additional, Collins, Chris A, additional, Alpaslan, Mehmet, additional, Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, additional, Brough, Sarah, additional, Cluver, Michelle, additional, Driver, Simon P, additional, Hashemizadeh, Abdolhosein, additional, Holwerda, Benne W, additional, Laine, Jarkko, additional, Lara-Lopez, Maritza A, additional, Liske, Jochen, additional, Maciejewski, Witold, additional, Napolitano, Nicola R, additional, Penny, Samantha J, additional, Popescu, Cristina C, additional, Sansom, Anne E, additional, Sutherland, Will, additional, Taylor, Edward N, additional, van Kampen, Eelco, additional, and Wang, Lingyu, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
93. The CMB neutrino mass/vacuum energy degeneracy: a simple derivation of the degeneracy slopes
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Sutherland, Will, primary
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- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
94. The Gig Economy and Information Infrastructure
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Sutherland, Will, primary and Jarrahi, Mohammad Hossein, additional
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
95. The 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey: Wiener reconstruction of the cosmic web
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Erdoğdu, Pirin, Lahav, Ofer, Zaroubi, Saleem, Efstathiou, George, Moody, Steve, Peacock, John A., Colless, Matthew, Baldry, Ivan K., Baugh, Carlton M., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Bridges, Terry, Cannon, Russell, Cole, Shaun, Collins, Chris, Couch, Warrick, Dalton, Gavin, De Propris, Roberto, Driver, Simon P., Ellis, Richard S., Frenk, Carlos S., Glazebrook, Karl, Jackson, Carole, Lewis, Ian, Lumsden, Stuart, Maddox, Steve, Madgwick, Darren, Norberg, Peder, Peterson, Bruce A., Sutherland, Will, Taylor, Keith, Erdoğdu, Pirin, Lahav, Ofer, Zaroubi, Saleem, Efstathiou, George, Moody, Steve, Peacock, John A., Colless, Matthew, Baldry, Ivan K., Baugh, Carlton M., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Bridges, Terry, Cannon, Russell, Cole, Shaun, Collins, Chris, Couch, Warrick, Dalton, Gavin, De Propris, Roberto, Driver, Simon P., Ellis, Richard S., Frenk, Carlos S., Glazebrook, Karl, Jackson, Carole, Lewis, Ian, Lumsden, Stuart, Maddox, Steve, Madgwick, Darren, Norberg, Peder, Peterson, Bruce A., Sutherland, Will, and Taylor, Keith
- Abstract
We reconstruct the underlying density field of the Two-degree Field Galaxy Redshift Survey (2dFGRS) for the redshift range 0.035 < z < 0.200 using the Wiener filtering method. The Wiener filter suppresses shot noise and accounts for selection and incompleteness effects. The method relies on prior knowledge of the 2dF power spectrum of fluctuations and the combination of matter density and bias parameters, however the results are only slightly affected by changes to these parameters. We present maps of the density field. We use a variable smoothing technique with two different effective resolutions: 5 and 10 h−1 Mpc at the median redshift of the survey. We identify all major superclusters and voids in the survey. In particular, we find two large superclusters and two large local voids. The full set of colour maps can be viewed on the World Wide Web at
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- 2017
96. The 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey: the blue galaxy fraction and implications for the Butcher—Oemler effect
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De Propris, Roberto, Colless, Matthew, Peacock, John A., Couch, Warrick J., Driver, Simon P., Balogh, Michael L., Baldry, Ivan K., Baugh, Carlton M., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Bridges, Terry, Cannon, Russell, Cole, Shaun, Collins, Chris, Cross, Nicholas, Dalton, Gavin, Efstathiou, George, Ellis, Richard S., Frenk, Carlos S., Glazebrook, Karl, Hawkins, Edward, Jackson, Carole, Lahav, Ofer, Lewis, Ian, Lumsden, Stuart, Maddox, Steve, Madgwick, Darren, Norberg, Peder, Percival, Will, Peterson, Bruce A., Sutherland, Will, Taylor, Keith, De Propris, Roberto, Colless, Matthew, Peacock, John A., Couch, Warrick J., Driver, Simon P., Balogh, Michael L., Baldry, Ivan K., Baugh, Carlton M., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Bridges, Terry, Cannon, Russell, Cole, Shaun, Collins, Chris, Cross, Nicholas, Dalton, Gavin, Efstathiou, George, Ellis, Richard S., Frenk, Carlos S., Glazebrook, Karl, Hawkins, Edward, Jackson, Carole, Lahav, Ofer, Lewis, Ian, Lumsden, Stuart, Maddox, Steve, Madgwick, Darren, Norberg, Peder, Percival, Will, Peterson, Bruce A., Sutherland, Will, and Taylor, Keith
- Abstract
We derive the fraction of blue galaxies in a sample of clusters at z < 0.11 and the general field at the same redshift. The value of the blue fraction is observed to depend on the luminosity limit adopted, cluster-centric radius and, more generally, local galaxy density, but it does not depend on cluster properties. Changes in the blue fraction are due to variations in the relative proportions of red and blue galaxies but the star formation rate for these two galaxy groups remains unchanged. Our results are most consistent with a model where the star formation rate declines rapidly and the blue galaxies tend to be dwarfs and do not favour mechanisms where the Butcher-Oemler effect is caused by processes specific to the cluster environment
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- 2017
97. Substructure analysis of selected low-richness 2dFGRS clusters of galaxies
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Burgett, William S., Vick, Michael M., Davis, David S., Colless, Matthew, De Propris, Roberto, Baldry, Ivan, Baugh, Carlton, Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Bridges, Terry, Cannon, Russell, Cole, Shaun, Collins, Chris, Couch, Warrick, Cross, Nicholas, Dalton, Gavin, Driver, Simon, Efstathiou, George, Ellis, Richard, Frenk, Carlos S., Glazebrook, Karl, Hawkins, Edward, Jackson, Carole, Lahav, Ofer, Lewis, Ian, Lumsden, Stuart, Maddox, Steve, Madgwick, Darren, Norberg, Peder, Peacock, John A., Percival, Will, Peterson, Bruce, Sutherland, Will, Taylor, Keith, Burgett, William S., Vick, Michael M., Davis, David S., Colless, Matthew, De Propris, Roberto, Baldry, Ivan, Baugh, Carlton, Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Bridges, Terry, Cannon, Russell, Cole, Shaun, Collins, Chris, Couch, Warrick, Cross, Nicholas, Dalton, Gavin, Driver, Simon, Efstathiou, George, Ellis, Richard, Frenk, Carlos S., Glazebrook, Karl, Hawkins, Edward, Jackson, Carole, Lahav, Ofer, Lewis, Ian, Lumsden, Stuart, Maddox, Steve, Madgwick, Darren, Norberg, Peder, Peacock, John A., Percival, Will, Peterson, Bruce, Sutherland, Will, and Taylor, Keith
- Abstract
Complementary one-, two- and three-dimensional tests for detecting the presence of substructure in clusters of galaxies are applied to recently obtained data from the 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey. The sample of 25 clusters used in this study includes 16 clusters not previously investigated for substructure. Substructure is detected at or greater than the 99 per cent confidence level in at least one test for 21 of the 25 clusters studied here. From the results, it appears that low-richness clusters commonly contain subclusters participating in mergers. About half of the clusters have two or more components within 0.5 h−1 Mpc of the cluster centroid, and at least three clusters (Abell 1139, Abell 1663 and Abell S333) exhibit velocity-position characteristics consistent with the presence of possible cluster rotation, shear, or infall dynamics. The geometry of certain features is consistent with influence by the host supercluster environments. In general, our results support the hypothesis that low-richness clusters relax to structureless equilibrium states on very long dynamical time-scales (if at all)
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- 2017
98. Galaxy groups in the 2dFGRS: the group-finding algorithm and the 2PIGG catalogue
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Eke, V. R., Baugh, Carlton M., Cole, Shaun, Frenk, Carlos S., Norberg, Peder, Peacock, John A., Baldry, Ivan K., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Bridges, Terry, Cannon, Russell, Colless, Matthew, Collins, Chris, Couch, Warrick, Dalton, Gavin, Propris, Roberto De, Driver, Simon P., Efstathiou, George, Ellis, Richard S., Glazebrook, Karl, Jackson, Carole, Lahav, Ofer, Lewis, Ian, Lumsden, Stuart, Maddox, Steve, Madgwick, Darren, Peterson, Bruce A., Sutherland, Will, Taylor, Keith, Eke, V. R., Baugh, Carlton M., Cole, Shaun, Frenk, Carlos S., Norberg, Peder, Peacock, John A., Baldry, Ivan K., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Bridges, Terry, Cannon, Russell, Colless, Matthew, Collins, Chris, Couch, Warrick, Dalton, Gavin, Propris, Roberto De, Driver, Simon P., Efstathiou, George, Ellis, Richard S., Glazebrook, Karl, Jackson, Carole, Lahav, Ofer, Lewis, Ian, Lumsden, Stuart, Maddox, Steve, Madgwick, Darren, Peterson, Bruce A., Sutherland, Will, and Taylor, Keith
- Abstract
The construction of a catalogue of galaxy groups from the Two-degree Field Galaxy Redshift Survey (2dFGRS) is described. Groups are identified by means of a friends-of-friends percolation algorithm which has been thoroughly tested on mock versions of the 2dFGRS generated from cosmological N-body simulations. The tests suggest that the algorithm groups all galaxies that it should be grouping, with an additional 40 per cent of interlopers. About 55 per cent of the ∼190 000 galaxies considered are placed into groups containing at least two members of which ∼29 000 are found. Of these, ∼7000 contain at least four galaxies, and these groups have a median redshift of 0.11 and a median velocity dispersion of 260 km s−1. This 2dFGRS Percolation-Inferred Galaxy Group (2PIGG) catalogue represents the largest available homogeneous sample of galaxy groups. It is publicly available on the World Wide Web
- Published
- 2017
99. Molecular Gas in Threez∼ 7 Quasar Host Galaxies
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Venemans, Bram P., primary, Walter, Fabian, additional, Decarli, Roberto, additional, Ferkinhoff, Carl, additional, Weiß, Axel, additional, Findlay, Joseph R., additional, McMahon, Richard G., additional, Sutherland, Will J., additional, and Meijerink, Rowin, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. MACHOs in M 31? Absence of evidence but not evidence of absence
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de Jong, Jelte T. A., Widrow, Lawrence M., Cseresnjes, Patrick, Kuijken, Konrad, Crotts, Arlin P. S., Bergier, Alexander, Baltz, Edward A., Gyuk, Geza, Sackett, Penny D., Uglesich, Robert R., Sutherland, Will J., collaboration, the MEGA, Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, and Astronomy
- Subjects
Andromeda Galaxy ,gravitational lensing ,Extinction (astronomy) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,BULGE-HALO MODELS ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Gravitational microlensing ,dark matter ,POINT-AGAPE SURVEY ,law.invention ,ANDROMEDA GALAXY ,galaxies : individual : M 31 ,law ,Bulge ,DARK-MATTER ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics ,CANDIDATES ,Physics ,OPTICAL DEPTH ,Newtonian telescope ,Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,M31 ,REALISTIC MICROLENSING MODELS ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Galaxy ,Andromeda ,EVENT ,Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Halo ,STARS - Abstract
We present results of a microlensing survey toward the Andromeda Galaxy (M31) carried out during four observing seasons at the Isaac Newton Telescope (INT). This survey is part of the larger microlensing survey toward M31 performed by the Microlensing Exploration of the Galaxy and Andromeda (MEGA) collaboration. Using a fully automated search algorithm, we indentify 14 candidate microlensing events, three of which are reported here for the first time. Observations obtained at the Mayall telescope are combined with the INT data to produce composite lightcurves for these candidates. The results from the survey are compared with theoretical predictions for the number and distribution of events. These predictions are based on a Monte Carlo calculation of the detection efficiency and disk-bulge-halo models for M31. The models provide the full phase-space distribution functions for the lens and source populations and are motivated by dynamical and observational considerations. They include differential extinction and span a wide range of parameter space characterised primarily by the mass-to-light ratios for the disk and bulge. For most models, the observed event rate is consistent with the rate predicted for self-lensing -- a MACHO halo fraction of 30% or higher can be ruled at the 95% confidence level. The event distribution does show a large near-far asymmetry hinting at a halo contribution to the microlensing signal. Two candidate events are located at particularly large projected radii on the far side of the disk. These events are difficult to explain by self lensing and only somewhat easier to explain by MACHO lensing. A possibility is that one of these is due to a lens in a giant stellar stream., 38 pages, 48 figures, high-resolution pdf available at http://www.astro.columbia.edu/~arlin/astro-ph/0507286.pdf, several textual changes, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
- Published
- 2006
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