2,792 results on '"FAZIO, G."'
Search Results
152. SPITZER Observations of z~3 Lyman Break Galaxies: stellar masses and mid-infrared properties
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Rigopoulou, D., Huang, J. -S., Papovich, C., Ashby, M. L. N., Barmby, P., Shu, C., Bundy, K., Egami, E., Magdis, G., Smith, H., Willner, S. P., Wilson, G., and Fazio, G. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) at z~3 using deep mid-infrared and optical observations of the Extended Groth Strip, obtained with IRAC and MIPS on board Spitzer and from the ground, respectively. We focus on LBGs with detections at all four IRAC bands, in particular the 26 galaxies with IRAC 8 micron band (rest--frame K-band) detections. We use stellar population synthesis models and probe the stellar content of these galaxies. Based on best--fit continuous star-formation models we derive estimates of the stellar mass for these LBGs. As in previous studies, we find that a fraction of LBGs have very red colors and large estimated stellar masses (M_stellar > 5 x 10 ^{10} M_solar): the present Spitzer data allow us, for the first time, to study these massive LBGs in detail. We discuss the link between these LBGs and submm-luminous galaxies.We find that the number density of these massive LBGs at high redshift is higher than predicted by current semi-analytic models of galaxy evolution., Comment: accepted for publication by Astrophysical Journal
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- 2006
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153. A Spitzer/IRAC Search for Substellar Companions of the Debris Disk Star epsilon Eridani
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Marengo, M., Megeath, S. T., Fazio, G. G., Stapelfeldt, K. R., Werner, M. W., and Backman, D. E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have used the InfraRed Array Camera (IRAC) onboard the Spitzer Space telescope to search for low mass companions of the nearby debris disk star epsilon Eridani. The star was observed in two epochs 39 days apart, with different focal plane rotation to allow the subtraction of the instrumental Point Spread Function, achieving a maximum sensitivity of 0.01 MJy/sr at 3.6 and 4.5 um, and 0.05 MJy/sr at 5.8 and 8.0 um. This sensitivity is not sufficient to directly detect scattered or thermal radiation from the epsilon Eridani debris disk. It is however sufficient to allow the detection of Jovian planets with mass as low as 1 MJ in the IRAC 4.5 um band. In this band, we detected over 460 sources within the 5.70 arcmin field of view of our images. To test if any of these sources could be a low mass companion to epsilon Eridani, we have compared their colors and magnitudes with models and photometry of low mass objects. Of the sources detected in at least two IRAC bands, none fall into the range of mid-IR color and luminosity expected for cool, 1 Gyr substellar and planetary mass companions of epsilon Eridani, as determined by both models and observations of field M, L and T dwarf. We identify three new sources which have detections at 4.5 um only, the lower limit placed on their [3.6]-[4.5] color consistent with models of planetary mass objects. Their nature cannot be established with the currently available data and a new observation at a later epoch will be needed to measure their proper motion, in order to determine if they are physically associated to epsilon Eridani., Comment: 36 pages, to be published on The Astrophysical Journal, vol. 647, August 2006
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- 2006
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154. Mid-Infrared Identifications of SCUBA Galaxies in the CUDSS 14-Hour Field with the Spitzer Space Telescope
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Ashby, M. L. N., Dye, S., Huang, J. -S., Eales, S., Willner, S. P., Webb, T. M. A., Rigopoulou, D., Egami, E., McCracken, H., Lilly, S., Miyazaki, S., Brodwin, M., Blaylock, M., Cadien, J., and Fazio, G. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We identify 17 possible 8.0 micron-selected counterparts to the submillimeter galaxies in the CUDSS 14-hour field, derived from deep imaging carried out with the IRAC and MIPS instruments aboard the Spitzer Space Telescope. Ten of the 17 counterparts are not the same as those previously identified at shorter wavelengths. We argue that 8.0 micron selection offers a better means for identifying counterparts to submillimeter galaxies than near-infrared or optical selection. Based on the panchromatic SEDs, most counterparts appear to be powered by ongoing star formation. Power-law fits to the SEDs suggest that five objects in the 8.0 micron-selected counterpart sample harbor dominant AGNs; a sixth object is identified as a possible AGN. The 3.6 to 8.0 micron colors of the infrared-selected counterparts are significantly redder than the general IRAC galaxy population in the CUDSS 14-hour field., Comment: 36 pages, 9 figures, accepted by the Astrophysical Journal. This version corrects the bibliography and typographical errors in the text and table 1
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- 2006
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155. Spectacular Spitzer images of the Trifid Nebula: Protostars in a young, massive-star-forming region
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Rho, J., Reach, W. T., Lefloch, B., and Fazio, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Spitzer IRAC and MIPS images of the Trifid Nebula (M20) reveal its spectacular appearance in infrared light, highlighting the nebula's special evolutionary stage. The images feature recently-formed massive protostars and numerous young stellar objects, and a single O star that illuminates the surrounding molecular cloud from which it formed, and unveil large-scale, filamentary dark clouds. The hot dust grains show contrasting infrared colors in shells, arcs, bow-shocks and dark cores. Multiple protostars are detected in the infrared, within the cold dust cores of TC3 and TC4, which were previously defined as Class 0. The cold dust continuum cores of TC1 and TC2 contain only one protostar each. The Spitzer color-color diagram allowed us to identify ~160 young stellar objects and classify them into different evolutionary stages. The diagram also revealed a unique group of YSOs which are bright at 24 micron but have the spectral energy distribution peaking at 5-8 micron. Despite expectation that Class 0 sources would be "starless" cores, the Spitzer images, with unprecedented sensitivity, uncover mid-infrared emission from these Class 0 protostars. The mid-infrared detections of Class 0 protostars show that the emission escapes the dense, cold envelope of young protostars. The mid-infrared emission of the protostars can be fit by two temperatures of 150 and 400 K; the hot core region is probably optically thin in the mid-infrared regime, and the size of hot core is much smaller than that of the cold envelope. The presence of multiple protostars within the cold cores of Class 0 objects implies that clustering occurs at this early stage of star formation. The TC3 cluster shows that the most massive star is located at the center of the cluster and at the bottom of the gravitational-potential well., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. Full resolution images are available at http://spider.ipac.caltech.edu/staff/rho/
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- 2006
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156. Spitzer Imaging of nearby ULIRGs and their Progeny: Fine-Structure Elliptical Galaxies
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Surace, J. A., Wang, Z., Willner, S., Smith, H., Pipher, J., Forrest, W., Fazio, G., Howell, J., Evans, A., Hibbard, J., Yan, L., and Marleau, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results from two mid-infrared imaging programs of ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) and fine-structure elliptical galaxies. The former are known to nearly all be recent mergers between two gas-rich spiral galaxies, while the latter are also believed to be even more aged merger remnants. An examination of these two classes of objects, which may represent different stages of the same putative merger sequence, should reveal similarities in the distribution of their stellar populations and dust content consistent with that expected for time-evolution of the merger. The data reveal for the first time extended dust emission in the ULIRG galaxy bodies and along their tidal features. However, contrary to expectation, we find that the vast majority of the fine-structure elliptical galaxies lack such structured emission. This likely results from the optical selection of the elliptical sample, resulting in a population that reflects the IR-activity (or lack thereof) of optically selected interacting galaxies. Alternately, this may reflect an evolutionary process in the distribution of the dust content of the galaxy bodies., Comment: 5 pages, Proceedings of the 2005 Lijiang Conference, "Extreme Starbursts: Near and Far", editors: Yu Gao & D. B. Sanders, to be published in the special issue of Pub. of PMO
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- 2006
157. Mid-infrared properties of X-ray sources in the Extended Groth Strip
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Barmby, P., Alonso-Herrero, A., Donley, J. L., Egami, E., Fazio, G. G., Georgakakis, A., Huang, J. -S., Laird, E. S., Miyazaki, S., Nandra, K., Park, S. Q., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Rieke, G. H., Rigby, J. R., and Willner, S. P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Mid-infrared observations of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) are important for understanding of the physical conditions around the central accretion engines. Chandra and XMM-Newton X-ray observations of a 300 arcmin^2 region in the Extended Groth Strip are used to select a sample of~150 AGN. The Spitzer instruments IRAC and MIPS detect 68-80% of these sources, which show a wide range of mid-infrared properties. About 40% of the sources have red power-law spectral energy distributions (f_nu ~ nu^alpha, alpha<0) in the 3.6-8 um IRAC bands. In these sources the central engine dominates the emission at both X-ray and IR wavelengths. Another 40% of the sources have blue mid-IR spectral energy distributions (alpha>0) with their infrared emission dominated by the host galaxy; the remaining 20% are not well-fit by a power law. Published IRAC color criteria for AGN select most of the red sources, but only some of the blue sources. As with all other known methods, selecting AGN with mid-IR colors will not produce a sample that is simultaneously complete and reliable. The IRAC SED type does not directly correspond to X-ray spectral type (hard/soft). The mid-IR properties of X-ray-detected Lyman-break, radio, submillimeter, and optically-faint sources vary widely and, for the most part, are not distinct from those of the general X-ray/infrared source population. X-ray sources emit 6-11% of the integrated mid--IR light, making them significant contributors to the cosmic infrared background., Comment: Replaced to correct minor error in Figure 3 axis label and typo in author list. ApJ, in press; 40 pages, 12 figures
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- 2005
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158. An investigation of the submillimeter background radiation using SCUBA and Spitzer
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Dye, S., Eales, S. A., Ashby, M. L. N., Huang, J. -S., Webb, T. M. A., Barmby, P., Lilly, S., Brodwin, M., McCracken, H., Egami, E., and Fazio, G. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate the redshift dependence of the contribution to the extragalactic far-infrared/sub-millimeter background from galaxies detected by the Spitzer Space Telescope at 8um and 24um. Using seven-band optical to mid-infrared photometry, we estimate photometric redshifts for the Spitzer sources which appear to be mostly L* galaxies at a median redshift of z=1.0. These sources, extracted from deep 8um and 24um mosaics of the CUDSS 14-hour field with 5sigma limits of 5.8uJy and 70uJy respectively, exhibit significant 850um and 450um emission as observed by SCUBA. At 850um, after removing >=4sigma sources and those securely identified in our previous cross-matching paper, we measure stacked flux at the significance level of 4.4sigma and 2.9sigma from the full 8um and 24um galaxy catalogue respectively. At 450um, flux is detected from all 8um galaxies at the level of 3.5sigma, while there is no significant emission from the 24um galaxies. We find that the 850um flux is emitted almost exclusively at z>~1.3 from the Spitzer sources with 0.44mJy (4.7sigma) per 8um source and 0.51mJy (2.8sigma) per 24um source. This corresponds to a contribution of (16+/-3)% toward the 850um extra-galactic background from the 8um sources and (5.0+/-1.8)% from the 24um sources. At 450um, only the 8um sources within the redshift interval 1
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- 2005
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159. Discovery of a Planetary-Mass Brown Dwarf with a Circumstellar Disk
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Luhman, K. L., Adame, Lucia, D'Alessio, Paola, Calvet, Nuria, Hartmann, Lee, Megeath, S. T., and Fazio, G. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Using the Hubble Space Telescope, the 4 m Blanco telescope at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, and the Spitzer Space Telescope, we have performed deep imaging from 0.8 to 8 um of the southern subcluster in the Chamaeleon I star-forming region. In these data, we have discovered an object, Cha 110913-773444, whose colors and magnitudes are indicative of a very low-mass brown dwarf with a circumstellar disk. In a near-infrared spectrum of this source obtained with the Gemini Near-Infrared Spectrograph, the presence of strong steam absorption confirms its late-type nature (>=M9.5) while the shapes of the H- and K-band continua and the strengths of the Na I and K I lines demonstrate that it is a young, pre-main-sequence object rather than a field dwarf. A comparison of the bolometric luminosity of Cha 110913-773444 to the luminosities predicted by the evolutionary models of Chabrier and Baraffe and Burrows and coworkers indicates a mass of 8+7/-3 M_Jup, placing it fully within the mass range observed for extrasolar planetary companions (M<=15 M_Jup). The spectral energy distribution of this object exhibits mid-infrared excess emission at >5 um, which we have successfully modeled in terms of an irradiated viscous accretion disk with M'<=10e-12 M_sun/year. Cha 110913-773444 is now the least massive brown dwarf observed to have a circumstellar disk, and indeed is one of the least massive free-floating objects found to date. These results demonstrate that the raw materials for planet formation exist around free-floating planetary-mass bodies., Comment: 5 pages, accepted to Astrophysical Journal Letters
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- 2005
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160. Observations of IC348: The Disk Population at 2-3 Million Years
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Lada, C. J., Muench, A. A., Luhman, K. L., Allen, L., Hartmann, L., Megeath, T., Myers, P., Fazio, G., Wood, K., Muzerolle, J., Rieke, G., Siegler, N., and Young, E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present near and mid-infrared photometry obtained with the Spitzer Space Telescope of 300 known members of the IC348 cluster. We merge this photometry with existing ground-based optical and near-infrared photometry in order to construct optical-infrared spectral energy distributions (SEDs) for all the cluster members and present a complete atlas of these SEDs. We employ these observations to both investigate the frequency and nature of the circumstellar disk population in the cluster. The observations are sufficiently sensitive to enable the first detailed measurement of the disk frequency for very low mass stars at the peak of the stellar IMF. Using measurements of infrared excess between 3.6 and 8 microns we find the total frequency of disk-bearing stars in the cluster to be 50 +/- 6%. However, only 30 +/- 4% of the member stars are surrounded by optically thick, primordial disks, while the remaining disk-bearing stars are surrounded by what appear to be optically thin,anemic disks. The disk fraction appears to be a function of spectral type and stellar mass. The disk longevity and thus conditions for planet formation appear to be most favorable for stars which are of comparable mass to the sun. The optically thick disks around later type (> M4) stars appear to be less flared than the disks around earlier type stars. This may indicate a greater degree of dust settling and a more advanced evolutionary state for the late M disk population. Finally we find that the presence of an optically thick dust disk is correlated with gaseous accretion as measured by the strength of Halpha emission. These results suggest that it is more likely for dust disks to persist in the absence of active gaseous accretion than for active accretion to persist in the absence of dusty disks., Comment: To be published in the March 2006 issue of the Astronomical Journal. Paper consists of 40 pages with 10 figures. Complete set of 47 figures and 2 full electronic tables can be found at http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~clada/pubs_html/ic348_spitzer.html
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- 2005
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161. Spitzer/IRAC Photometry of the Eta Chameleontis Association
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Megeath, S. T., Hartmann, L., Luhman, K. L., and Fazio, G. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present IRAC 3.6, 4.5, 5.8 and 8 micron photometry for the 17 A, K and M type members of the Eta Chameleontis association. These data show infrared excesses toward six of the 15 K and M stars, indicating the presence of circumstellar disks around 40% of the stars with masses of 0.1-1 solar mass. The two A-stars show no infrared excesses. The excess emission around one of the stars is comparable to the median excess for classical T Tauri stars in the Taurus association; the remaining five show comparatively weak excess emission. Taking into account published Halpha spectroscopy that shows that five of the six stars are accreting, we argue that the disks with weak mid-infrared excesses are disks in which the inner disks have been largely depleted of small grains by grain growth, or, in one case, the small grains have settled to the midplane. This suggests that Eta Cha has a much higher fraction of disks caught in the act of transitioning into optically thin disks than that measured in younger clusters and associations., Comment: Accepted to ApJ letters
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- 2005
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162. The Disk Fractions of Brown Dwarfs in IC 348 and Chamaeleon I
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Luhman, K. L., Lada, C. J., Hartmann, L., Muench, A. A., Megeath, S. T., Allen, L. E., Myers, P. C., Muzerolle, J., Young, E., and Fazio, G. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Using the Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) aboard the Spitzer Space Telescope, we have obtained mid-infrared photometry for 25 and 18 low-mass members of the IC 348 and Chamaeleon I star-forming clusters, respectively (>M6, M<=0.08 Msun). We find that 42+/-13% and 50+/-17% of the two samples exhibit excess emission indicative of circumstellar disks. In comparison, the disk fractions for stellar members of these clusters are 33+/-4% and 45+/-7% (M0-M6, 0.7 Msun>=M>=0.1 Msun). The similarity of the disk fractions of stars and brown dwarfs is consistent with a common formation mechanism and indicates that the raw materials for planet formation are available around brown dwarfs as often as around stars., Comment: 6 pages
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- 2005
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163. A Spitzer/IRAC Survey of Massive Star-Forming Regions
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Allen, L. E., Hora, J. L., Megeath, S. T., Deutsch, L. K., Fazio, G. G., Chavarria, L., and Dell, R. W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We are conducting a survey of several regions of high-mass star formation to assess their content and structure. The observations include Spitzer observations, ground-based optical and near-IR imaging surveys, and optical and IR spectra of objects and locations in the molecular clouds. The goal of the survey is to gain a better understanding of the processes involved in high mass star formation by determining the characteristics of the stars detected in these regions and investigating the properties of the interstellar medium (ISM) environment in which these stars form. In this contribution, we present results on the identification and spatial analysis of young stars in three clusters, W5/AFGL 4029, S255, and S235. First we show how the IRAC data are used to roughly segregate young stars according to their mid-infrared colors, into two groups corresponding the SED Class I and Class II young stellar objects. Then using the IRAC data in combination with 2MASS, we show how more young stars can be identified. Finally, we examine the spatial distributions of young stars in these clusters and find a range of morphologies and of peak surface densities., Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of IAU Symposium 227, Massive Starbirth: A Crossroads of Astrophysics
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- 2005
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164. Infrared Luminous Lyman Break Galaxies: A Population that Bridges LBGs and SCUBA Galaxies
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Huang, J. -S., Rigopoulou, D., Willner, S. P., Papovich, C., Shu, C., Ashby, M. L. N., Barmby, P., Bundy, K., Conselice, C., Egami, E., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Rosenberg, J. L., Smith, H. A., Wilson, G., and Fazio, G. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
A deep mid- and far-infrared survey in the Extended Groth Strip (EGS) area gives 3.6 to 8\micron flux densities or upper limits for 253 Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs). The LBGs are a diverse population but with properties correlated with luminosity. The LBGs show a factor of 30 range in indicated stellar mass and a factor of 10 in apparent dust content relative to stellar mass. About 5% of LBGs are luminous at all wavelengths with powerful emission at rest 6\micron. In the rest 0.9 to 2\micron spectral range these galaxies have stellar spectral slopes with no sign of an AGN power law component, suggesting that their emission is mainly powered by intensive star formation. Galaxies in this luminous population share the infrared properties of cold SCUBA sources: both are massive and dusty starburst galaxies at $2
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- 2005
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165. A Spitzer/IRAC Survey of the Orion Molecular Clouds
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Megeath, S. T., Flaherty, K. M., Hora, J., Allen, L. E., Fazio, G. G., Hartmann, L., Myers, P. C., Muzerolle, J., Pipher, J. L., Siegler, N., Stauffer, J. R., and Young, E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present initial results from a survey of the Orion A and B molecular clouds made with the InfraRed Array Camera (IRAC) onboard the Spitzer Space Telescope. This survey encompasses a total of 5.6 square degrees with the sensitivity to detect objects below the hydrogen burning limit at an age of 1 Myr. These observations cover a number of known star forming regions, from the massive star forming clusters in the Orion Nebula and NGC 2024, to small groups of low mass stars in the L1641. We combine the IRAC photometry with photometry from the 2MASS point source catalog and use the resulting seven band data to identify stars with infrared excesses due to dusty disks and envelopes. Using the presence of an infrared excess as an indicator of youth, we show the distribution of young stars and protostars in the two molecular clouds. We find that roughly half of the stars are found in dense clusters surrounding the two regions of recent massive star formation in the Orion clouds, NGC 2024 and the Orion Nebula., Comment: To be published in the proceedings for the IAU Symposium 227, Massive Star Birth: A Crossroads of Astrophysics, A version of the paper can also be found at: http://www-cfa.harvard.edu/irac/publications
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- 2005
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166. UV Continuum Spectroscopy of a 6L* z=5.5 Starburst Galaxy
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Dow-Hygelund, C. C., Holden, B. P., Bouwens, R. J., van der Wel, A., Illingworth, G. D., Zirm, A., Franx, M., Rosati, P., Ford, H., van Dokkum, P. G., Stanford, S. A., Eisenhardt, P., and Fazio, G. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have obtained a high S/N (22.3 hr integration) UV continuum VLT FORS2 spectrum of an extremely bright (z_850 = 24.3) z = 5.515 +/- 0.003 starforming galaxy (BD38) in the field of the z = 1.24 cluster RDCS 1252.9-2927. This object shows substantial continuum (0.41 +/- 0.02 \muJy at \lambda1300) and low-ionization interstellar absorption features typical of LBGs at lower redshift (z ~ 3); this is the highest redshift LBG confirmed via metal absorption spectral features. The equivalent widths of the absorption features are similar to z ~ 3 strong Ly\alpha absorbers. No noticeable Ly\alpha emission was detected (F <= 1.4 * 10^-18 ergs cm^-2 s^-1, 3\sigma). The half-light radius of this object is 1.6 kpc (0\farcs25) and the star formation rate derived from the rest-frame UV luminosity is SFR_UV = 38 h^-2_0.7 M_sun yr^-1 (142 h^-2_0.7 M_sun yr^-1 corrected for dust extinction). In terms of recent determinations of the z ~ 6 UV luminosity function, this object appears to be 6L*. The Spitzer IRAC fluxes for this object are 23.3 and 23.2 AB mag (corrected for 0.3 mag of cluster lensing) in the 3.6\mu and 4.5\mu channels, respectively, implying a mass of 1-6 * 10^10 M_sun from population synthesis models. This galaxy is brighter than any confirmed z ~ 6 i-dropout to date in the z_850 band, and both the 3.6\mu and 4.5\mu channels, and is the most massive starbursting galaxy known at z > 5. -- Abstract Abridged, Comment: Accepted to ApJ Letters. 4 pages in emulate ApJ format, 3 color figures, 1 with lower resolution. Full resolution file available at http://physics.ucsc.edu/~cdow/bd38/bd38.pdf
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- 2005
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167. IRAC Mid-Infrared Imaging of the Hubble Deep Field South: Star Formation Histories and Stellar Masses of Red Galaxies at z>2
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Labbe, I., Huang, J., Franx, M., Rudnick, G., Barmby, P., Daddi, E., van Dokkum, P. G., Fazio, G. G., Schreiber, N. M. Forster, Moorwood, A. F. M., Rix, H. -W., Rottgering, H., Trujillo, I., and van der Werf, P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present deep 3.6 - 8 micron imaging of the Hubble Deep Field South with IRAC on the Spitzer Space Telescope. We study Distant Red Galaxies (DRGs) at z>2 selected by Js - Ks > 2.3 and compare them to a sample of Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) at z=2-3. The observed UV-to-8 micron spectral energy distributions are fit with stellar population models to constrain star formation histories and derive stellar masses. We find that 70% of the DRGs are best described by dust-reddened star forming models and 30% are very well fit with old and ``dead'' models. Using only the I - Ks and Ks - 4.5 micron colors we can effectively separate the two groups. The dead systems are among the most massive at z~2.5 (mean stellar mass
= 0.8 x 10^11 Msun) and likely formed most of their stellar mass at z>5. To a limit of 0.5 x 10^11 Msun their number density is ~10 x lower than that of local early-type galaxies. Furthermore, we use the IRAC photometry to derive rest-frame near-infrared J, H, and K fluxes. The DRGs and LBGs together show a large variation (a factor of 6) in the rest-frame K-band mass-to-light ratios (M/L_K), implying that even a Spitzer 8 micron-selected sample would be very different from a mass-selected sample. The average M/L_K of the DRGs is about three times higher than that of the LBGs, and DRGs dominate the high-mass end. The M/L_K ratios and ages of the two samples appear to correlate with derived stellar mass, with the most massive galaxies being the oldest and having the highest mass-to-light ratios, similar as found in the low-redshift universe., Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in the ApJ Letters, uses emulateapj - Published
- 2005
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168. The Vega Debris Disk -- A Surprise from Spitzer
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Su, K. Y. L., Rieke, G. H., Misselt, K. A., Stansberry, J. A., Moro-Martin, A., Stapelfeldt, K. R., Werner, M. W., Trilling, D. E., Bendo, G. J., Gordon, K. D., Hines, D. C., Wyatt, M. C., Holland, W. S., Marengo, M., Megeath, S. T., and Fazio, G. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high spatial resolution mid- and far-infrared images of the Vega debris disk obtained with the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS). The disk is well resolved and its angular size is much larger than found previously. The radius of the disk is at least 43" (330 AU), 70"(543 AU), and 105" (815 AU) in extent at 24, 70 and 160 um, respectively. The disk images are circular, smooth and without clumpiness at all three wavelengths. The radial surface brightness profiles imply an inner boundary at a radius of 11"+/-2" (86 AU). Assuming an amalgam of amorphous silicate and carbonaceous grains, the disk can be modeled as an axially symmetric and geometrically thin disk, viewed face-on, with the surface particle number density following an r^-1 power law. The disk radiometric properties are consistent with a range of models using grains of sizes ~1 to ~50 um. We find that a ring, containing grains larger than 180 um and at radii of 86-200 AU from the star, can reproduce the observed 850 um flux, while its emission does not violate the observed MIPS profiles. This ring could be associated with a population of larger asteroidal bodies analogous to our own Kuiper Belt. Cascades of collisions starting with encounters amongthese large bodies in the ring produce the small debris that is blown outward by radiation pressure to much larger distances where we detect its thermal emission. The dust production rate is >~10^15 g/s based on the MIPS results. This rate would require a very massive asteroidal reservoir for the dust to be produced in a steady state throughout Vega's life. Instead, we suggest that the disk we imaged is ephemeral and that we are witnessing the aftermath of a large and relatively recent collisional event, and subsequent collisional cascade., Comment: 13 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ. (Figures 2, 3a, 3b and 4 have been degraded to lower resolutions.)
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- 2005
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169. Why Optically--Faint AGN Are Faint: The Spitzer Perspective
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Rigby, J. R., Rieke, G. H., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Donley, J. L., Alonso-Herrero, A., Huang, J. -S., Barmby, P., and Fazio, G. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Optically--faint X-ray sources (those with f_X/f_R > 10) constitute about 20% of X-ray sources in deep surveys, and are potentially highly obscured and/or at high redshift. Their faint optical fluxes are generally beyond the reach of spectroscopy. For a sample of 20 optically--faint sources in CDFS, we compile 0.4--24 um photometry, relying heavily on Spitzer. We estimate photometric redshifts for 17 of these 20 sources. We find that these AGN are optically--faint both because they lie at significantly higher redshifts (median z ~ 1.6) than most X-ray--selected AGN, and because their spectra are much redder than standard AGN. They have 2--8 keV X-ray luminosities in the Seyfert range, unlike the QSO--luminosities of optically--faint AGN found in shallow, wide--field surveys. Their contribution to the X-ray Seyfert luminosity function is comparable to that of z>1 optically--bright AGN., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2005
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170. Spitzer Mid-Infrared Imaging of Nearby Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies
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Surace, J. A., Wang, Z., Willner, S., Smith, H., Pipher, J., Forrest, W., and Fazio, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have observed 14 nearby (z<0.16) Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies (ULIRGs) with Spitzer at 3.6-24 microns. The underlying host galaxies are well-detected, in addition to the luminous nuclear cores. While the spatial resolution of Spitzer is poor, the great sensitivity of the data reveals the underlying galaxy merger remnant, and provides the first look at off-nuclear mid-infrared activity., Comment: To appear in the conference proceedings for Spitzer New Views of the Universe, held Nov. 2004 in Pasadena, CA
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- 2005
171. Spitzer Identification of the Least Massive Known Brown Dwarf with a Circumstellar Disk
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Luhman, K. L., D'Alessio, Paola, Calvet, Nuria, Allen, Lori E., Hartmann, Lee, Megeath, S. T., Myers, P. C., and Fazio, G. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Using the Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) aboard the Spitzer Space Telescope, we have obtained mid-infrared photometry of the least massive known brown dwarf in the Chamaeleon I star-forming region. For this young brown dwarf, OTS 44, we have constructed a spectral energy distribution (SED) from 0.8-8 um by combining the measurements at 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8.0 um from IRAC with ground-based photometry at I, J, H, and K. The resulting SED for OTS 44 exhibits significant excess emission longward of 3 um relative to the SED expected from the photosphere of the brown dwarf. We have successfully modeled the source of this excess emission in terms of an irradiated viscous accretion disk with M'<=10^-10 M_sun/year. With a spectral type of M9.5 and a mass of ~15 M_Jup, OTS 44 is now the coolest and least massive brown dwarf observed to have a circumstellar disk. These measurements demonstrate that disks exist around brown dwarfs even down to the deuterium burning mass limit and the approximate upper mass limit of extrasolar planetary companions., Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure
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- 2005
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172. The Anatomy of Star Formation in NGC 300
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Helou, G., Roussel, H., Appleton, P., Frayer, D., Stolovy, S., Storrie-Lombardi, L., Hurt, R., Lowrance, P., Makovoz, D., Masci, F., Surace, J., Gordon, K. D., Alonso-Herrero, A., Engelbracht, C. W., Misselt, K., Rieke, G., Rieke, M., Willner, S. P., Pahre, M., Ashby, M. L. N., Fazio, G. G., and Smith, H. A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Spitzer Space Telescope was used to study the mid-infrared to far-infrared properties of NGC 300, and to compare dust emission to Halpha to elucidate the heating of the ISM and the star formation cycle at scales < 100 pc. The new data allow us to discern clear differences in the spatial distribution of 8 micron dust emission with respect to 24 micron dust and to HII regions traced by the Halpha light. The 8 micron emission highlights the rims of HII regions, and the 24 micron emission is more strongly peaked in star forming regions than at 8 microns. We confirm the existence and approximate amplitude of interstellar dust emission at 4.5 microns, detected statistically in Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) data, and conclude it arises in star forming regions. When averaging over regions larger than ~ 1 kpc, the ratio of Halpha to Aromatic Feature emission in NGC 300 is consistent with the values observed in disks of spiral galaxies. The mid-to-far-infrared spectral energy distribution of dust emission is generally consistent with pre-Spitzer models., Comment: to appear in the ApJS Spitzer special issue (September 2004)
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- 2004
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173. Spatial Distribution of Warm Dust in Early-Type Galaxies
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Pahre, M. A., Ashby, M. L. N., Fazio, G. G., and Willner, S. P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Images taken with the IRAC instrument on the Spitzer Space Telescope show that the spatial distribution of warm dust emission in lenticular galaxies is often organized into dynamically-stable structures strongly resembling spiral arms. These galaxies have bulge-to-disk-ratios and colors for their stellar content appropriate for their morphological classification. Two of the three galaxies with warm dust detected at 8.0 um also show far-IR emission expected from that dust. More importantly, the [5.8]-[8.0] color of the dust emission matches the colors found for late-type, star-forming galaxies, as well as theoretical predictions for PAH emission from dust grains. The spatially resolved dust structures may be powerful indicators of the evolutionary history of the lenticular class of galaxies, either as a tracer of on-going quiescent star formation or as a fossil record of a previous episode of more active star formation., Comment: 13 pages, LaTeX (or Latex, etc); Figures 1-2 are large, greyscale plate; full-resolution plates in .pdf format available at http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/irac/publications/
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- 2004
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174. SPITZER Observations of the SCUBA/VLA Sources in the Lockman Hole: Star Formation History of Infrared-Luminous Galaxies
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Egami, E., Dole, H., Huang, J. -S., Perez-Gonzalez, P., Floc'h, E. Le, Papovich, C., Barmby, P., Ivison, R. J., Serjeant, S., Mortier, A., Frayer, D. T., Rigopoulou, D., Lagache, G., Rieke, G. H., Willner, S. P., Alonso-Herrero, A., Bai, L., Engelbracht, C. W., Fazio, G. G., Gordon, K. D., Hines, D. C., Misselt, K. A., Miyazaki, S., Morrison, J. E., Rieke, M. J., Rigby, J. R., and Wilson, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present Spitzer IRAC (3.6, 4.5, 5.8, 8.0 um) and MIPS (24 um) observations of the SCUBA submillimeter sources and uJy VLA radio sources in a 5'x5' area in the Lockman Hole East region. Out of the ~40 SCUBA/VLA sources in the field, Spitzer counterparts were detected for nearly all except for the few low-weight SCUBA detections. We show that the majority (80-90%) of the detected sources are cold (i.e., starburst-like) infrared-luminous galaxies (L_{IR} > 10^{11} Lsun) at redshift 0.5
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- 2004
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175. The Off-nuclear Starbursts In NGC 4038/4039 (The Antennae Galaxies)
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Wang, Z., Fazio, G. G., Ashby, M. L. N., Huang, J. -S., Pahre, M. A., Smith, H. A., Willner, S. P., Forrest, W. J., Pipher, J. L., and Surace, J. A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Imaging of the Antennae galaxies (NGC 4038/4039) with the Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) aboard the Spitzer Space Telescope reveals large concentrations of star forming activity away from both nuclei of the two merging galaxies. These images confirm earlier findings based on ISO data with lower angular resolution. The short wavelength emission shows numerous compact sources identified as stellar clusters. At the longer wavelengths, bright, more amorphous and filamentary features correlate well with the known distributions of denser gas, warm dust, and HII regions. There are also fainter, more diffuse components at all wavelengths that permeate the entire region and extend into the two tidal tails. Non-stellar dust emission dominates the 5.8 and 8.0 micron images, accounting for as much as 79% of the light at 5.8 micron and 95% at 8 micron, averaged over the entire galaxy. Assuming that the non-stellar emission traces star formation, the IRAC data provide a view into the total underlying star forming activities unaffected by obscuration. Using the flux ratio of non-stellar to stellar emission as a guide, we map the local star formation rate in the Antennae and compare that to similar measurements in both normal and infrared-luminous galaxies. This rate in the active regions is found to be as high as those seen in starburst and some ultra-luminous infrared galaxies on ``per unit mass'' basis. The two galactic centers actually have lower star forming rates than the off-nuclear regions despite the presence of abundant dense gas and dust, suggesting that the latter is a necessary but not sufficient condition for on-going star formation., Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the ApJ Supplement, September 2004 (Spitzer Special Issue)
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- 2004
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176. The IRAC Shallow Survey
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Eisenhardt, P. R., Stern, D., Brodwin, M., Fazio, G. G., Rieke, G. H., Rieke, M. J., Werner, M. W., Wright, E. L., Allen, L. E., Arendt, R. G., Ashby, M. L. N., Barmby, P., Forrest, W. J., Hora, J. L., Huang, J. -S., Huchra, J., Pahre, M. A., Pipher, J. L., Reach, W. T., Smith, H. A., Stauffer, J. R., Wang, Z., Willner, S. P., Brown, M. J. I., Dey, A., Jannuzi, B. T., and Tiede, G. P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The IRAC shallow survey covers 8.5 square degrees in the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey in Bootes with 3 or more 30 second exposures per position. An overview of the survey design, reduction, calibration, star-galaxy separation, and initial results is provided. The survey includes approximately 370,000, 280,000, 38,000, and 34,000 sources brighter than the 5 sigma limits of 6.4, 8.8, 51, and 50 microJy at 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8 microns respectively, including some with unusual spectral energy distributions., Comment: To appear in ApJS, Spitzer special issue. For full resolution see http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/irac/publications
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- 2004
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177. The Spitzer Space Telescope Mission
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Werner, M. W., Roellig, T. L., Low, F. J., Rieke, G. H., Rieke, M., Hoffmann, W. F., Young, E., Houck, J. R., Brandl, B., Fazio, G. G., Hora, J. L., Gehrz, R. D., Helou, G., Soifer, B. T., Stauffer, J., Keene, J., Eisenhardt, P., Gallagher, D., Gautier, T. N., Irace, W., Lawrence, C. R., Simmons, L., Van Cleve, J. E., Jura, M., Wright, E. L., and Cruikshank, D. P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Spitzer Space Telescope, NASA's Great Observatory for infrared astronomy, was launched 2003 August 25 and is returning excellent scientific data from its Earth-trailing solar orbit. Spitzer combines the intrinsic sensitivity achievable with a cryogenic telescope in space with the great imaging and spectroscopic power of modern detector arrays to provide the user community with huge gains in capability for exploration of the cosmos in the infrared. The observatory systems are largely performing as expected and the projected cryogenic lifetime is in excess of 5 years. This paper summarizes the on-orbit scientific, technical and operational performance of Spitzer. Subsequent papers in this special issue describe the Spitzer instruments in detail and highlight many of the exciting scientific results obtained during the first six months of the Spitzer mission., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophyscial Journal Supplement Spitzer Special Issue, 22 pages, 3 figures. Higher resolution versions of the figures are available at http://ssc.spitzer.caltech.edu/pubs/journal2004.html
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- 2004
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178. The nature of luminous X-ray sources with mid-infrared counterparts
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Alonso-Herrero, A., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Rigby, J., Rieke, G. H., Floc'h, E. Le, Barmby, P., Page, M. J., Papovich, C., Dole, H., Egami, E., Huang, J. -S., Rigopoulou, D., Cristobal-Hornillos, D., Eliche-Moral, C., Balcells, M., Prieto, M., Erwin, P., Engelbracht, C. W., Gordon, K. D., Werner, M., Willner, S. P., Fazio, G. G., Frayer, D., Hines, D., Kelly, D., Latter, W., Misselt, K., Miyazaki, S., Morrison, J., Rieke, M. J., and Wilson, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate the luminous X-ray sources in the Lockman Hole (LH) and the Extended Groth Strip (EGS) detected at 24microns using MIPS and also with IRAC on board Spitzer. We assemble optical/infrared spectral energy distributions (SEDs) for 45 X-ray/24micron sources in the EGS and LH. Only about 1/4 of the hard X-ray/24micron sources show pure type 1 AGN SEDs. More than half of the X-ray/24micron sources have stellar-emission-dominated or obscured SEDs, similar to those of local type 2 AGN and spiral/starburst galaxies. One-third of the sources detected in hard X-rays do not have a 24micron counterpart. Two such sources in the LH have SEDs resembling those of S0/elliptical galaxies. The broad variety of SEDs in the optical-to-Spitzer bands of X-ray selected AGN means that AGN selected according to the behavior in the optical/infrared will have to be supplemented by other kinds of data (e.g., X-ray) to produce unbiased samples of AGN., Comment: Accepted to the ApJS Spitzer Special Issue
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- 2004
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179. Spitzer observations of MAMBO galaxies: weeding out active nuclei in starbursting proto-ellipticals
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Ivison, R. J., Greve, T. R., Serjeant, S., Bertoldi, F., Egami, E., Mortier, A. M. J., Alonso-Herrero, A., Barmby, P., Bei, L., Dole, H., Engelbracht, C. W., Fazio, G. G., Frayer, D. T., Gordon, K. D., Hines, D. C., Huang, J. -S., Floch, E. Le, Misselt, K. A., Miyazaki, S., Morrison, J. E., Papovich, C., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Rieke, M. J., Rieke, G. H., Rigby, J., Rigopoulou, D., Smail, I., Wilson, G., and Willner, S. P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present Spitzer observations in five wavebands between 3.6 and 24um of an unbiased sample of 9 luminous, dusty galaxies selected at 1200um by the MAMBO camera on the IRAM 30-m telescope, a population akin to the well-known submm or `SCUBA' galaxies (hereafter SMGs). Owing to the coarse resolution of submm/mm instrumentation, SMGs have traditionally been difficult to identify at other wavelengths. We compare our multi-wavelength catalogs to show that the overlap between 24 and 1200um must be close to complete at these flux levels. We find that all (4/4) of the most secure >=4sigma SMGs have robust >=4sigma counterparts at 1.4GHz, while the fraction drops to 7/9 using all >=3sigma SMGs. We show that combining mid-IR and marginal (>=3sigma) radio detections provides plausible identifications in the remaining cases, enabling us to identify the complete sample. Accretion onto an obscured central engine is betrayed by the shape of the mid-IR continuum emission for several sources, confirming Spitzer's potential to weed out active galaxies. We demonstrate the power of a S(24um)/S(8um) vs S(8um)/S(4.5um) color-color plot as a diagnostic for this purpose. However, we conclude that the majority (~75%) of SMGs have rest-frame mid-/far-IR SEDs commensurate with obscured starbursts. Sensitive 24-um observations are clearly a useful route to identify and characterize reliable counterparts to high-redshift far-IR-bright galaxies, complementing what is possible via deep radio imaging., Comment: Accepted, ApJS Spitzer Special Issue. Full resolution version at http://www.roe.ac.uk/~rji/ivison_letter.ps.gz
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- 2004
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180. Identification of luminous infrared galaxies at 1<z<2.5
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Floc'h, E. Le, Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Rieke, G. H., Papovich, C., Huang, J. -S., Barmby, P., Dole, H., Egami, E., Alonso-Herrero, A., Wilson, G., Miyazaki, S., Rigby, J. R., Bei, L., Blaylock, M., Engelbracht, C. W., Fazio, G. G., Frayer, D. T., Gordon, K. D., Hines, D. C., Misselt, K. A., Morrison, J. E., Muzerolle, J., Rieke, M. J., Rigopoulou, D., Su, K. Y. L., Willner, S. P., and Young, E. T.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present preliminary results on 24micron detections of luminous infrared galaxies at z>1 with the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS). Observations were performed in the Lockman Hole and the Extended Groth Strip (EGS), and were supplemented by data obtained with the Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) between 3 and 9microns. The positional accuracy of ~2arcsec for most MIPS/IRAC detections provides unambiguous identifications of their optical counterparts. Using spectroscopic redshifts from the Deep Extragalactic Evolutionary Probe survey, we identify 24micron sources at z>1 in the EGS, while the combination of the MIPS/IRAC observations with $BVRIJHK$ ancillary data in the Lockman Hole also shows very clear cases of galaxies with photometric redshifts at 1
=M*) galaxy counterparts. It is the first time that this population of luminous objects is detected up to z~2.5 in the infrared. Our work demonstrates the ability of the MIPS instrument to probe the dusty Universe at very high redshift, and illustrates how the forthcoming Spitzer deep surveys will offer a unique opportunity to illuminate a dark side of cosmic history not explored by previous infrared experiments., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Spitzer Special Issue of ApJS, 4 pages, 2 figures. 1 table - Published
- 2004
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181. The NGC 7129 Young Stellar Cluster: A Combined Spitzer, MMT, and 2MASS Census of Disks, Protostars, and Outflows
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Gutermuth, R. A., Megeath, S. T., Muzerolle, J., Allen, L. E., Pipher, J. L., Myers, P. C., and Fazio, G. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the analysis of seven band (1.2 to 8 micron) ground and space-based imaging of the NGC 7129 young stellar cluster from FLAMINGOS on MMT, 2MASS, and the Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) on the Spitzer Space Telescope. An analysis of the H-[4.5] vs. J-H colors reveals 84 objects with circumstellar disks. Of these, 42 are located within the cluster core, a 0.5 pc (100'') radius region of enhanced stellar surface density. From a luminosity and extinction limited sample of the stars within the cluster core boundary we have determined that 54% +/- 14% have circumstellar disks. Finally, we report the detection of several resolved outflows in the IRAC 4.5 micron mosaic., Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures. Accepted to the Spitzer special issue of ApJS. The full-resolution preprint can be obtained from http://astro.pas.rochester.edu/~rguter/preprints/gutermuth_ngc7129_a.tar.gz
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- 2004
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182. The 24-Micron View of Embedded Star Formation in NGC 7129
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Muzerolle, J., Megeath, S. T., Gutermuth, R. A., Allen, L. E., Pipher, J. L., Hartmann, L., Gordon, K. D., Padgett, D. L., Noriega-Crespo, A., Myers, P. C., Fazio, G. G., Rieke, G. H., Young, E. T., Morrison, J. E., Hines, D. C., Su, K. Y. L., Engelbracht, C. W., and Misselt, K. A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present observations of the star formation region NGC 7129 taken with the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS). A significant population of sources, likely pre-main sequence members of the young stellar cluster, is revealed outside the central photoionization region. Combining with Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) and ground-based near-infrared images, we have obtained colors and spectral energy distributions for some 60 objects. The [3.6]-[4.5] vs. [8]-[24] color-color plane shows sources clustered at several different loci, which roughly correspond to the archetypal evolutionary sequence Class 0, I, II, and III. We obtain preliminary classifications for 36 objects, and find significant numbers of both Class I and II objects. Most of the pre-main sequence candidates are associated with the densest part of the molecular cloud surrounding the photoionization region, indicating active star formation over a broad area outside the central cluster. We discuss three Class II candidates that exhibit evidence of inner disk clearing, which would be some of the youngest known examples of a transition from accretion to optically thin quiescent disks., Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures. Accepted to the Spitzer special issue of ApJS
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- 2004
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183. Sub-millimeter detections of Spitzer Space Telescope galaxy populations
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Serjeant, S., Mortier, A. M. J., Ivison, R. J., Egami, E., Rieke, G. H., Willner, S. P., Rigopoulou, D., Alonso-Herrero, A., Barmby, P., Bei, L., Dole, H., Engelbracht, C. W., Fazio, G. G., Floc'h, E. Le, Gordon, K. D., Greve, T. R., Hines, D. C., Huang, J. -S., Misselt, K. A., Miyazaki, S., Morrison, J. E., Papovich, C., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Rieke, M. J., Rigby, J., and Wilson, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present sub-millimeter statistical detections of galaxies discovered in the 5'x5' Spitzer Early Release Observations (to 4-15 microJy 5 sigma at 3.6-8 microns, 170 microJy at 24 microns) through a stacking analysis of our reanalysed SCUBA 8mJy survey maps, and a Spitzer identification of a new sub-millimeter point source in the 8mJy survey region. For sources detected at 5.8 or 8 microns (154 and 111 sources respectively), we detect positive skews in the sub-millimeter flux distributions at 99.2-99.8% confidence using Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests, at both 850 microns and 450 microns. We also marginally detect the Spitzer 24 micron galaxies at 850 microns at 97% confidence, and place limits on the mean sub-millimeter fluxes of the 3.6 and 4.5 micron sources. Integrating the sub-millimeter fluxes of the Spitzer populations, we find the 5.8 micron galaxies contribute 0.12 +/- 0.05 nW/m^2/sr to the 850 micron background, and 2.4 +/- 0.7 nW/m^2/sr to the 450 micron background; similar contributions are made by the 8 micron-selected sample. We infer that the populations dominating the 5.8 and 8 micron extragalactic background light also contribute around a quarter of the 850 micron background and the majority of the 450 micron background., Comment: Accepted for ApJS Spitzer Special Issue. 11 pages, 2 figures
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- 2004
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184. Initial Results from The Spitzer Young Stellar Cluster Survey
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Megeath, S. T., Allen, L. E., Gutermuth, R. A., Pipher, J. L., Myers, P. C., Calvet, N., Hartmann, L., Muzerolle, J., and Fazio, G. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report initial results from IRAC observations of four young stellar clusters. These regions are part of a larger Spitzer survey of 31 young stellar groups and clusters within 1 kpc of the Sun. In each of the four clusters, there are between 39 and 85 objects with colors inconsistent with reddened stellar photospheres. We identify these objects as young stars with significant emission from circumstellar dust. Applying an analysis developed in a companion paper (Allen et al. 2004), we classify these objects as either pre-main sequence stars with disks (class II) or protostellar objects (class I). These show that the sites of recent star formation are distributed over multi-parsec size scales. In two clusters, Cepheus C and S140, we find protostars embedded in filamentary dark clouds seen against diffuse emission in the IRAC bands., Comment: Accepted to the Spitzer special issue of the Astrophysical Journal Supplement
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- 2004
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185. IRAC Imaging of Lockman Hole
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Huang, J. -S., Barmby, P., Fazio, G. G., Willner, S. P., Wilson, G., Rigopoulou, D., Alonso-Herrero, A., Dole, H., Egami, E., Floc'h, E. Le, Papovich, C., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Rigby, J., Engelbracht, C. W., Gordon, K., Hines, D., Rieke, M., Rieke, G. H., Meisenheimer, K, and Miyzaki, S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
IRAC imaging of a 4'7x4'7 area in the Lockman Hole detected over 400 galaxies in the IRAC 3.6 micron and 4.5 micron bands, 120 in the 5.8 micron, and 80 in the 8 micron bandin 30 minutes of observing time. Color-color diagrams suggest that about half of these galaxies are at redshifts 0.6
1.3). We also detect IRAC counterparts for 6 of the 7 SCUBA sources and all 9 XMM sources in this area. The detection of the counterparts of the SCUBA sources and galaxies at z>1.3 demonstrates the ability of IRAC to probe the universe at very high redshifts., Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures. accepted by ApJS, Spizter Special Issue - Published
- 2004
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186. Deep mid-infrared observations of Lyman-break galaxies
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Barmby, P., Huang, J. -S., Fazio, G. G, Surace, J. A., Arendt, R. G., Hora, J. L., Pahre, M. A., Adelberger, K. L., Eisenhardt, P., Erb, D. K., Pettini, M., Reach, W. T., Reddy, N. A., Shapley, A. E., Steidel, C. C., Stern, D., Wang, Z., and Willner, S. P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
As part of the In-Orbit Checkout activities for the Spitzer Space Telescope, the IRAC team carried out a deep observation (average integration time ~8 hours) of a field surrounding the bright QSO HS 1700+6416. This field contains several hundred z~3 Lyman-break galaxy candidates, and we report here on their mid-infrared properties, including the IRAC detection rate, flux densities and colors, and the results of fitting population synthesis models to the optical, near-infrared, and IRAC magnitudes. The results of the model-fitting show that previous optical/near-infrared studies of LBGs were not missing large, hidden old stellar populations. The LBG candidates' properties are consistent with those of massive, star-forming galaxies at z~3. Other IRAC sources in the same field have similar properties, so IRAC selection may prove a promising method of finding additional high-redshift galaxies., Comment: ApJS in press (Spitzer special issue); 13 pages, 3 figures
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- 2004
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187. The Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) for the Spitzer Space Telescope
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Fazio, G. G. and team, the IRAC
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) is one of three focal plane instruments in the Spitzer Space Telescope. IRAC is a four-channel camera that obtains simultaneous broad-band images at 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8.0 microns. Two nearly adjacent 5.2x5.2 arcmin fields of view in the focal plane are viewed by the four channels in pairs (3.6 and 5.8 microns; 4.5 and 8 microns). All four detector arrays in the camera are 256x256 pixels in size, with the two shorter wavelength channels using InSb and the two longer wavelength channels using Si:As IBC detectors. IRAC is a powerful survey instrument because of its high sensitivity, large field of view, and four-color imaging. This paper summarizes the in-flight scientific, technical, and operational performance of IRAC., Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in the ApJS. A higher resolution version is at http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/irac/publications
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- 2004
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188. IRAC Observations of M81
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Willner, S. P., Ashby, M. L. N., Barmby, P., Fazio, G. G., Pahre, M., Smith, H. A., Kennicutt, Jr., R. C., Calzetti, D., Dale, D. A., Draine, B. T., Regan, M. W., Malhotra, S., Thornley, M. D., Appleton, P. N., Frayer, D., Helou, G., Stolovy, S., and Storrie-Lombardi, L.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
IRAC images of M81 show three distinct morphological constituents: a smooth distribution of evolved stars with bulge, disk, and spiral arm components; a clumpy distribution of dust emission tracing the spiral arms; and a pointlike nuclear source. The bulge stellar colors are consistent with M-type giants, and the disk colors are consistent with a slightly younger population. The dust emission generally follows the blue and ultraviolet emission, but there are large areas that have dust emission without ultraviolet and smaller areas with ultraviolet but little dust emission. The former are presumably caused by extinction, and the latter may be due to cavities in the gas and dust created by supernova explosions. The nucleus appears fainter at 8 um than expected from ground-based 10 um observations made four years ago., Comment: ApJS in press (Spitzer special issue); 15 pages, 3 figures. Changes: unused references removed, numbers and labels in Table 1 changed
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- 2004
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189. Extremely Red Objects in The Lockman Hole
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Wilson, G., Huang, J. -S., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Egami, E., Ivison, R. J., Rigby, J. R., Alonso-Herrero, A., Barmby, P., Dole, H., Fazio, G. G., Floc'h, E. Le, Papovich, C., Rigopoulou, D., Bai, L., Engelbracht, C. W., Frayer, D., Gordon, K. D., Hines, D. C., Misselt, K. A., Miyazaki, S., Morrison, J. E., Rieke, G. H., Rieke, M. J., and Surace, J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate Extremely Red Objects (EROs) using near- and mid-infrared observations in five passbands (3.6 to 24 micron) obtained from the Spitzer Space Telescope, and deep ground-based R and K imaging. The great sensitivity of the IRAC camera allows us to detect 64 EROs in only 12 minutes of IRAC exposure time, by means of an R-[3.6] color cut (analogous to the traditional red R-K cut). A pure infrared K-[3.6] red cut detects a somewhat different population and may be more effective at selecting z > 1.3 EROs. We find 17% of all galaxies detected by IRAC at 3.6 or 4.5 micron to be EROs. These percentages rise to about 40% at 5.8 micron, and about 60% at 8.0 micron. We utilize the spectral bump at 1.6 micron to divide the EROs into broad redshift slices using only near-infrared colors (2.2/3.6/4.5 micron). We conclude that two-thirds of all EROs lie at redshift z > 1.3. Detections at 24 micron imply that at least 11% of 0.6 < z < 1.3 EROs and at least 22% of z > 1.3 EROs are dusty star-forming galaxies., Comment: to appear in the special Spitzer issue of the ApJS
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- 2004
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190. Mid-Infrared Galaxy Morphology Along the Hubble Sequence
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Pahre, M. A., Ashby, M. L. N., Fazio, G. G., and Willner, S. P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The mid-infrared emission from 18 nearby galaxies imaged with the IRAC instrument on Spitzer Space Telescope samples the spatial distributions of the reddening-free stellar photospheric emission and the warm dust in the ISM. These two components provide a new framework for galaxy morphological classification, in which the presence of spiral arms and their emission strength relative to the starlight can be measured directly and with high contrast. Four mid-infrared classification methods are explored, three of which are based on quantitative global parameters (colors, bulge-to-disk ratio) similar to those used in the past for optical studies; in this limited sample, all correlate well with traditional B-band classification. We suggest reasons why infrared classification may be superior to optical classification., Comment: ApJS (in press), Spitzer Space Telescope Special Issue; 13 pages, LaTeX (or Latex, etc); Figure 1ab is large, color plate; full-resolution plates in .pdf format available at http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/irac/publications/
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- 2004
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191. Number Counts At 3 < lambda < 10 um From the Spitzer Space Telescope
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Fazio, G. G., Ashby, M. L. N., Barmby, P., Hora, J. L., Huang, J. -S., Pahre, M. A., Wang, Z., Willner, S. P., Arendt, R. G., Moseley, S. H., Brodwin, M., Eisenhardt, P., Stern, D., Tollestrup, E. V., and Wright, E. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Infrared source counts at wavelengths 3 < lambda < 10 um cover more than 10 magnitudes in source brightness, four orders of magnitude in surface density, and reach an integrated surface density of 10^5 sources/deg^2. At m<14 mag, most of the sources are Galactic stars, in agreement with models. After removal of Galactic stars, galaxy counts are consistent with what few measurements exist at nearby wavelengths. At 3.6 and 4.5 um, the galaxy counts follow the expectations of a Euclidean world model down to ~16 mag and drop below the Euclidean curve for fainter magnitudes. Counts at these wavelengths begin to show decreasing completeness around magnitude 19.5. At 5.8 and 8 um, the counts relative to a Euclidean world model show a large excess at bright magnitudes. This is probably because local galaxies emit strongly in the aromatic dust (``PAH'') features. The counts at 3.6 um resolve <50% of the Cosmic Infrared Background at that wavelength., Comment: ApJS (in press), in the Spitzer Space Telescope special issue; 14 pages, 2 color figures, 1 table (electronic only)
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- 2004
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192. Competition and entrepreneurship as engines of growth
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Fazio, G.
- Subjects
658.8 - Abstract
The thesis aims to bridge topics traditionally belonging to different areas of the subject: competition and entrepreneurship coming from microeconomics and industrial organization; and growth, from macroeconomics. It centres around the notion that market structure and conduct affect performance and hence growth. Firms optimize by anticipating changes in consumers' demand and in suppliers' behaviour, which are a function of the market structure and its changes. Market-entry can be explained by the level of competition in a market which can be altered by the implementation of specific policies (for instance, the way a competition authority handles mergers). Failing to have an appropriate antitrust regime will ultimately harm entrepreneurship since it will affect one's ability to understand and to handle the risks associated with launching a new venture. The thesis also explores how different definitions of entrepreneurship explain varying innovation mechanisms (neck-and-neck and leapfrogging) and how this dovetails with the structure and conduct within a market. For transition economies, we find that competition policy has played a growth-enhancing role and that this effect may be larger than the impact associated with privatization, and we also find evidence of policies' complementarities. These findings are also echoed by our individual-level analysis. We analyse the determinants of high growth expectations entrepreneurial entry (HGE) using individual data drawn on working age population, based on the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor surveys for the 1998-2004 period. We find that HGE is more likely to occur when the entrepreneur perceives a gap in the market with no other producers supplying the same product. This reinforces the theory that the amount of competition faced by an entrepreneur affects the rate of HGE and also provides a microeconomic foundation for the country-level growth effects described for transition countries.
- Published
- 2010
193. Harnack inequality and continuity of weak solutions for doubly degenerate elliptic equations
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Di Fazio, G., Fanciullo, M. S., and Zamboni, P.
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- 2019
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194. H-band observations of the Chandra Deep Field South
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Moy, E., Barmby, P., Rigopoulou, D., Huang, J-S., Willner, S. P., and Fazio, G. G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report preliminary results of our H-band survey of the Chandra Deep Field South (CDFS). The observations were made using SofI on the NTT, and cover 0.027 square degrees with a 50% completeness limit of H = 20.5, and 0.17 square degrees with a 50% completeness limit of H =19.8. We used SExtractor to extract sources from our fields. In total we have detected 4819 objects. Star-galaxy separation was performed using the SExtractor parameter ``stellarity index''. All objects with an index of 0.5 or lower were classified as galaxies. According to this criterion, 80 % of our detections are galaxies. We then compare our results with previous observations of the CDFS. Our astrometric solutions are in good agreement with the Las Campanas Infrared Survey (LCIRS), the COMBO-17 and the ESO-EIS surveys. The photometry of our catalog compares satisfactorily with the results of the LCIRS, as well as with the GOODS data. Galaxy number counts are presented and compared with the LCIRS results. The present data are intended to complement the recent and future multi-wavelenghth observations of the CDFS and will be used, in conjuction with additional multiband photometry, to find counterparts of the upcoming mid-infrared surveys with SIRTF., Comment: 7 figures, submitted to Astronomy and Astrophysics, catalogue available at http://www.mpe.mpg.de/~dmr/table1.dat
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- 2002
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195. The Role of Mass Asymmetry and Shell Structure in the Evaporation Residues Production
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Fazio, G., Giardina, G., Lamberto, A., Muminov, A. I., Nasirov, A. K., Yakhshiev, U. T., Oganessian, Yu. Ts., Popeko, A. G., Sagaidak, R. N., Yeremin, A. V., Hofmann, S., Hanappe, F., and Stuttge, L.
- Subjects
Nuclear Theory ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The effects of the entrance channel and shell structure of reacting nuclei on the experimental evaporation residues have been studied by analysing the 40Ar+176Hf, 86Kr+130,136Xe, 124Sn+92Zr and 48Ca+174Yb reactions leading to the 216Th* and 222Th* compound nuclei. The measured excitation function of evaporation residues for the 124Sn+92Zr reaction was larger than that for the 86Kr+130Xe reaction. The experimental values of evaporation residues in the 86Kr+136Xe reaction were about 500 times larger than that in the 86Kr+130Xe reaction. These results are explained by the initial angular momentum dependence of the fusion excitation functions calculated in framework of the dinuclear system concept and by the differences in survival probabilities calculated in framework of advanced statistical model. The dependencies of the fission barrier and the \Gamma_n / \Gamma_f ratio on the angular momentum of the excited compound nucleus are taken into account., Comment: 13 pages, 9 (eps) figures, uses revtex4, submitted to Phys.Rev. C
- Published
- 2002
196. Effects of shell structure in reactions leading to the same compound nucleus or different isotopes
- Author
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Nasirov, A. K., Fazio, G., Giardina, G., Lamberto, A., Ruggeri, R., Taccone, A., Muminov, A. I., Hanappe, F., Palamara, R., and Stuttg'e, L.
- Subjects
Nuclear Theory ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The role of the entrance channel in fusion-fission reactions was studied by the theoretical analysis of the experimental evaporation residue excitation functions for reactions leading to the same compound nucleus. The evaporation residues cross sections for xn-channels were calculated in the frame of the combined dinuclear system concept and advanced statistical model. The revealed differences between experimental data on the evaporation residues in the ^{40}Ar+^{176}Hf, ^{86}Kr + ^{130}Xe and ^{124}Sn + ^{92}Zr reactions leading to the ^{216}Th^* compound nucleus are explained by the different spin distributions of compound nuclei which are formed. It is shown that the intrinsic fusion barrier B^*_{fus} and size of potential well are different for every entrance channel., Comment: 14 pages, 5 EPS figures, Latex, ws-p8-50x6-00.cls is used, Talk given at the Conference NPBL2001, Lipari (Messina, Italy), 21-24 May, 2001
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- 2001
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197. Confusion limit due to galaxies: using SIRTF's Infrared Array Camera
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Vaisanen, P., Tollestrup, E. V., and Fazio, G. G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Recent ISO-data has allowed for the first time observationally based estimates for source confusion in mid-infrared surveys. We use the extragalactic source counts from ISOCAM in conjunction with K-band counts to predict the confusion due to galaxies in deep mid-IR observations. We specifically concentrate on the near-future Space Infrared Telescope Facility (SIRTF) mission, and calculate expected confusion for the Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) onboard SIRTF. A defining scientific goal of the IRAC instrument will be the study of high redshift galaxies using a deep, confusion limited wide field survey at 3-10 microns. A deep survey can reach 3 $\mu$Jy sources with reasonable confidence in the shorter wavelength IRAC bands. Truly confusion limited images at 8 microns will be difficult to obtain due to practical time constraints, unless infrared galaxies exhibit very strong evolution beyond the deepest current observations. We find L^star galaxies to be detectable to z=3-3.5 at 8 microns, which is slightly more pessimistic than found by Simpson & Eisenhardt (1999)., Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures included, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2001
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198. Subarcsecond Mid-IR Structure of the Dust Shell around IRAS 22272+5435
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Ueta, T., Meixner, M., Hinz, P. M., Hoffmann, W. F., Brandner, W., Dayal, A., Deutsch, L. K., Fazio, G. G., and Hora, J. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report sub-arcsecond imaging of extended mid-infrared emission from a proto-planetary nebula (PPN), \iras 22272+5435, performed at the MMT observatory with its newly upgraded 6.5 m aperture telescope and at the Keck observatory. The mid-infrared emission structure is resolved into two emission peaks separated by $0\arcsec.5 - 0\arcsec.6$ in the MMT 11.7 $\um$ image and in the Keck 7.9, 9.7, and 12.5 $\um$ images, corroborating the predictions based on previous multi-wavelength morphological studies and radiative transfer calculations. The resolved images show that the PPN dust shell has a toroidal structure with the $0\arcsec.5$ inner radius. In addition, an unresolved mid-IR excess appears at the nebula center. Radiative transfer model calculations suggest that the highly equatorially-enhanced ($\rho_{\rm eq}/\rho_{\rm pole} = 9$) structure of the PPN shell was generated by an axisymmetric superwind with ${\dot M}_{\rm sw} = 4 \times 10^{-6} M_{\odot}$ yr$^{-1}$, which was preceded by a spherical asymptotic giant branch (AGB) wind with ${\dot M}_{\rm AGB} = 8 \times 10^{-7} M_{\odot}$ yr$^{-1}$. These model calculations also indicate that the superwind shell contains larger dust grains than the AGB wind shell. The unresolved mid-infrared excess may have been produced by a post-AGB mass loss at a rate of $2 - 6 \times 10^{-7} M_{\odot}$ yr$^{-1}$. While the central star left the AGB about 380 years ago after the termination of the superwind, the star seems to have been experiencing an ambient post-AGB mass loss with a sudden, increased mass ejection about 10 years ago., Comment: (25 pages in AASTeX preprint mode, 6 figures; to appear in the Astrophysical Journal)
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- 2001
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199. Wide-Field Thermal Imaging of the Orion Nebula at High Spatial Resolution
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Deutsch, L. K., Kassis, M., Smith, N., Hora, J. L., Butner, H. M., Hoffmann, W. F., Fazio, G. G., and Dayal, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe multi-wavelength (8--20 micron), diffraction-limited, mid-infrared images of the OMC-1 cloud core in Orion, covering an approximately two arcminute area around the Trapezium and BN/KL regions. We have detected mid-infrared emission at the locations of a subset of the previously identified proplyds in the Orion Nebula along with two new infrared sources. The Ney-Allen nebula surrounding the OB star theta 1 Ori d exhibits a ring or toroidal structure at the longest wavelengths. The BN/KL complex appears as an extended, butterfly-shaped structure with significant bipolar symmetry which is bifurcated by a dust lane at the longer wavelengths. The infrared sources IRc3, 4, and 5 give the appearance of a ring-like structure with a possible jet-like protrusion from its center along a line from IRc2. Derived color temperature and dust opacity maps suggest that IRc3, 4, and 5 may not be self-luminous objects., Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, To appear in The Orion Complex Revisited, eds. M. J. McCaughrean and A. Burkert, ASP Conference Series
- Published
- 2000
200. The Halo of 14Be
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Labiche, M., Orr, N. A., Marques, F. M., Angelique, J. C., Axelsson, L., Benoit, B., Bergmann, U. C., Borge, M. J. G., Catford, W. N., Chappell, S. P. G., Clarke, N. M., Costa, G., Curtis, N., D'Arrigo, A., Brennand, E. de Goes, Dorvaux, O., Fazio, G., Freer, M., Fulton, B. R., Giardina, G., Grevy, S., Guillemaud-Mueller, D., Hanappe, F., Jones, B. Heusch K. L., Jonson, B., Brun, C. Le, Leenhardt, S., Lewitowicz, M., Lopez, M. J., Markenroth, K., Mueller, A. C., Nilsson, T., Ninane, A., Nyman, G., de Oliveira, F., Piqueras, I., Riisager, K., Laurent, M. G. Saint, Sarazin, F., Singer, S. M., Sorlin, O., and Stuttge, L.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The two-neutron halo nucleus 14Be has been investigated in a kinematically complete measurement of the fragments (12Be and neutrons) produced in dissociation at 35 MeV/nucleon on C and Pb targets. Two-neutron removal cross-sections, neutron angular distributions and invariant mass spectra characteristic of a halo were observed and the electromagnetic (EMD) contributions deduced. Comparison with three-body model predictions indicate that the halo wavefunction contains a large 2s1/2^2 admixture. The EMD invariant mass spectrum exhibited a relatively narrow structure near threshold (Edecay=1.8+/-0.1 MeV, Gamma = 0.8+/-0.4 MeV) consistent with a soft-dipole excitation., Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures
- Published
- 2000
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