586 results on '"Grogin, N A"'
Search Results
152. Non-parametric analysis of the rest-frame UV sizes and morphological disturbance amongstL*galaxies at 4 < 8
- Author
-
Curtis-Lake, E., primary, McLure, R. J., additional, Dunlop, J. S., additional, Rogers, A. B., additional, Targett, T., additional, Dekel, A., additional, Ellis, R. S., additional, Faber, S. M., additional, Ferguson, H. C., additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, Kocevski, D. D., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, Lai, K., additional, Mármol-Queraltó, E., additional, and Robertson, B. E., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
153. X-ray variability in the Chandra Deep Field South
- Author
-
Paolillo, M., Schreier, E. J., Giacconi, R., Anton Koekemoer, Grogin, N. A., Paolillo, Maurizio, SCHREIER E., J, Giacconi, R, KOEKEMOER A., M, and Grogin, N. A.
- Abstract
We present the preliminary results of an X-ray variability study of sources detected in the Chandra Deep Field South (Giacconi et al. 2002). We both investigate the long-term variability, binning the lightcurves in order to achieve the maximum S/N ratio for faint sources, and analyze the short-term variability of stronger sources. We found that the fraction of variable objects increases with total counts, consistent with the better statistics. To validate our quantitative analysis we perform extensive simulations mimicking the observing conditions for each source. We use our simulations to predict the fraction of sources which are variable. We will quantify the variable flux fraction, and the dependence of variability on several physical parameters.
- Published
- 2003
154. A CANDELS-3D-HST synergy: Resolved Star Formation Patterns at 0.7 1.5
- Author
-
Wuyts, S., Förster Schreiber, N., Nelson, E., Dokkum, P.G. van, Brammer, G., Chang, Y., Faber, S.M., Ferguson, H.C., Franx, M., Fumagalli, M., Genzel, R., Grogin, N., Kocevski, D., Koekemoer, A., Lundgren, B., Lutz, D., McGrath, E., Momcheva, I., Rosario, D., Skelton, R., Tacconi, L., Wel, A. van der, Whitaker, K., Förster, Schreiber N., and Förster, Schreiber N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We analyze the resolved stellar populations of 473 massive star-forming galaxies at 0.7 {lt} z {lt} 1.5, with multi-wavelength broadband imaging from CANDELS and H{$α$} surface brightness profiles at the same kiloparsec resolution from 3D-HST. Together, this unique data set sheds light on how the assembled stellar mass is distributed within galaxies, and where new stars are being formed. We find the H{$α$} morphologies to resemble more closely those observed in the ACS I band than in the WFC3 H band, especially for the larger systems. We next derive a novel prescription for H{$α$} dust corrections, which accounts for extra extinction toward H II regions. The prescription leads to consistent star formation rate (SFR) estimates and reproduces the observed relation between the H{$α$}/UV luminosity ratio and visual extinction, on both a pixel-by-pixel and a galaxy-integrated level. We find the surface density of star formation to correlate with the surface density of assembled stellar mass for spatially resolved regions within galaxies, akin to the so-called ''main sequence of star formation'' established on a galaxy-integrated level. Deviations from this relation toward lower equivalent widths are found in the inner regions of galaxies. Clumps and spiral features, on the other hand, are associated with enhanced H{$α$} equivalent widths, bluer colors, and higher specific SFRs compared to the underlying disk. Their H{$α$}/UV luminosity ratio is lower than that of the underlying disk, suggesting that the ACS clump selection preferentially picks up those regions of elevated star formation activity that are the least obscured by dust. Our analysis emphasizes that monochromatic studies of galaxy structure can be severely limited by mass-to-light ratio variations due to dust and spatially inhomogeneous star formation histories.
- Published
- 2013
155. The morphologies of massive galaxies at 1 <
- Author
-
Bruce, V. A., Dunlop, J. S., Cirasuolo, M., McLure, R. J., Targett, T. A., Bell, E. F., Croton, D. J., Dekel, A., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Grogin, N. A., Kocevski, D. D., Koekemoer, A. M., Koo, D. C., Lai, K., Lotz, J. M., McGrath, E. J., Newman, J. A., and van der Wel, A.
- Subjects
Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We have used deep, HST, near-IR imaging to study the morphological properties of the most massive galaxies at high z, modelling the WFC3/IR H-band images of the ~200 galaxies in the CANDELS-UDS field with 1 < z_phot < 3, and stellar masses M_star > 10^11 M_sun. We have used both single-Sersic and bulge+disk models, have investigated the errors/biases introduced by uncertainties in the background and the PSF, and have obtained formally-acceptable model fits to >90% of the galaxies. Our results indicate that these massive galaxies at 1 < z < 3 lie both on and below the local size-mass relation, with a median R_e~2.6 kpc, a factor of ~2.3 smaller than comparably-massive local galaxies. Moreover, we find that bulge-dominated objects in particular show evidence for a growing bimodality in the size-mass relation with increasing z, and by z > 2 the compact bulges display effective radii a factor ~4 smaller than local ellipticals of comparable mass. These trends appear to extend to the bulge components of disk-dominated galaxies, and vice versa. We also find that, while such massive galaxies at low z are bulge-dominated, at 1 < z < 2 they are predominantly mixed bulge+disk systems, and by z > 2 they are mostly disk-dominated. The majority of the disk-dominated galaxies are actively forming stars, but this is also true for many of the bulge-dominated systems. Interestingly, however, while most of the quiescent galaxies are bulge-dominated, we find that a significant fraction (25-40%) of the most quiescent galaxies have disk-dominated morphologies. Thus, while our results show that the massive galaxy population is undergoing dramatic changes at this crucial epoch, they also suggest that the physical mechanisms which quench star-formation activity are not simply connected to those responsible for the morphological transformation of massive galaxies into present-day giant ellipticals., 39 pages, 19 figures, 2 tables, submitted to MNRAS
- Published
- 2012
156. The inferred evolution of the cold gas properties of CANDELS galaxies at 0.5 < 3.0
- Author
-
Popping, G., primary, Caputi, K. I., additional, Trager, S. C., additional, Somerville, R. S., additional, Dekel, A., additional, Kassin, S. A., additional, Kocevski, D. D., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, Faber, S. M., additional, Ferguson, H. C., additional, Galametz, A., additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, Guo, Y., additional, Lu, Y., additional, Wel, A. van der, additional, and Weiner, B. J., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
157. S-CANDELS: THE SPITZER -COSMIC ASSEMBLY NEAR-INFRARED DEEP EXTRAGALACTIC SURVEY. SURVEY DESIGN, PHOTOMETRY, AND DEEP IRAC SOURCE COUNTS
- Author
-
Ashby, M. L. N., primary, Willner, S. P., additional, Fazio, G. G., additional, Dunlop, J. S., additional, Egami, E., additional, Faber, S. M., additional, Ferguson, H. C., additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, Hora, J. L., additional, Huang, J.-S., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, Labbé, I., additional, and Wang, Z., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
158. Faint AGNs atz>4 in the CANDELS GOODS-S field: looking for contributors to the reionization of the Universe
- Author
-
Giallongo, E., primary, Grazian, A., additional, Fiore, F., additional, Fontana, A., additional, Pentericci, L., additional, Vanzella, E., additional, Dickinson, M., additional, Kocevski, D., additional, Castellano, M., additional, Cristiani, S., additional, Ferguson, H., additional, Finkelstein, S., additional, Grogin, N., additional, Hathi, N., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, Newman, J. A., additional, and Salvato, M., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
159. THE ROLE OF BULGE FORMATION IN THE HOMOGENIZATION OF STELLAR POPULATIONS ATZ∼ 2 AS REVEALED BY INTERNAL COLOR DISPERSION IN CANDELS
- Author
-
Boada, Steven, primary, Tilvi, V., additional, Papovich, C., additional, Quadri, R. F., additional, Hilton, M., additional, Finkelstein, S., additional, Guo, Yicheng, additional, Bond, N., additional, Conselice, C., additional, Dekel, A., additional, Ferguson, H., additional, Giavalisco, M., additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, Kocevski, D. D., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, and Koo, D. C., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
160. Star formation and quenching among the most massive galaxies at z ∼ 1.7
- Author
-
Mancini, C., primary, Renzini, A., additional, Daddi, E., additional, Rodighiero, G., additional, Berta, S., additional, Grogin, N., additional, Kocevski, D., additional, and Koekemoer, A., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
161. STELLAR MASSES FROM THE CANDELS SURVEY: THE GOODS-SOUTH AND UDS FIELDS
- Author
-
Santini, P., primary, Ferguson, H. C., additional, Fontana, A., additional, Mobasher, B., additional, Barro, G., additional, Castellano, M., additional, Finkelstein, S. L., additional, Grazian, A., additional, Hsu, L. T., additional, Lee, B., additional, Lee, S.-K., additional, Pforr, J., additional, Salvato, M., additional, Wiklind, T., additional, Wuyts, S., additional, Almaini, O., additional, Cooper, M. C., additional, Galametz, A., additional, Weiner, B., additional, Amorin, R., additional, Boutsia, K., additional, Conselice, C. J., additional, Dahlen, T., additional, Dickinson, M. E., additional, Giavalisco, M., additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, Guo, Y., additional, Hathi, N. P., additional, Kocevski, D., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, Kurczynski, P., additional, Merlin, E., additional, Mortlock, A., additional, Newman, J. A., additional, Paris, D., additional, Pentericci, L., additional, Simons, R., additional, and Willner, S. P., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
162. The galaxy stellar mass function at 3.5 ≤z≤ 7.5 in the CANDELS/UDS, GOODS-South, and HUDF fields
- Author
-
Grazian, A., primary, Fontana, A., additional, Santini, P., additional, Dunlop, J. S., additional, Ferguson, H. C., additional, Castellano, M., additional, Amorin, R., additional, Ashby, M. L. N., additional, Barro, G., additional, Behroozi, P., additional, Boutsia, K., additional, Caputi, K. I., additional, Chary, R. R., additional, Dekel, A., additional, Dickinson, M. E., additional, Faber, S. M., additional, Fazio, G. G., additional, Finkelstein, S. L., additional, Galametz, A., additional, Giallongo, E., additional, Giavalisco, M., additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, Guo, Y., additional, Kocevski, D., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, Koo, D. C., additional, Lee, K.-S., additional, Lu, Y., additional, Merlin, E., additional, Mobasher, B., additional, Nonino, M., additional, Papovich, C., additional, Paris, D., additional, Pentericci, L., additional, Reddy, N., additional, Renzini, A., additional, Salmon, B., additional, Salvato, M., additional, Sommariva, V., additional, Song, M., additional, and Vanzella, E., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
163. Galaxy Zoo:CANDELS barred discs and bar fractions
- Author
-
Simmons, B. D., Melvin, Thomas, Lintott, Chris, Masters, Karen L., Willett, Kyle W., Keel, William C., Smethurst, R. J., Cheung, Edmond, Nichol, Robert C., Schawinski, Kevin, Rutkowski, Michael, Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Bell, Eric F., Casteels, Kevin R. V., Conselice, Christopher J., Almaini, Omar, Ferguson, Henry C., Fortson, Lucy, Hartley, William, Kocevski, Dale, Koekemoer, Anton M., Mcintosh, Daniel H., Mortlock, Alice, Newman, Jeffrey A., Ownsworth, Jamie, Bamford, Steven, Dahlen, Tomas, Faber, Sandra M., Finkelstein, Steven L., Fontana, Adriano, Galametz, Audrey, Grogin, N. A., Grützbauch, Ruth, Guo, Yicheng, Häußler, Boris, Jek, Kian J., Kaviraj, Sugata, Lucas, Ray A., Peth, Michael, Salvato, Mara, Wiklind, Tommy, Wuyts, Stijn, Simmons, B. D., Melvin, Thomas, Lintott, Chris, Masters, Karen L., Willett, Kyle W., Keel, William C., Smethurst, R. J., Cheung, Edmond, Nichol, Robert C., Schawinski, Kevin, Rutkowski, Michael, Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Bell, Eric F., Casteels, Kevin R. V., Conselice, Christopher J., Almaini, Omar, Ferguson, Henry C., Fortson, Lucy, Hartley, William, Kocevski, Dale, Koekemoer, Anton M., Mcintosh, Daniel H., Mortlock, Alice, Newman, Jeffrey A., Ownsworth, Jamie, Bamford, Steven, Dahlen, Tomas, Faber, Sandra M., Finkelstein, Steven L., Fontana, Adriano, Galametz, Audrey, Grogin, N. A., Grützbauch, Ruth, Guo, Yicheng, Häußler, Boris, Jek, Kian J., Kaviraj, Sugata, Lucas, Ray A., Peth, Michael, Salvato, Mara, Wiklind, Tommy, and Wuyts, Stijn
- Abstract
The formation of bars in disc galaxies is a tracer of the dynamical maturity of the population. Previous studies have found that the incidence of bars in discs decreases from the local Universe to z ∼ 1, and by z > 1 simulations predict that bar features in dynamically mature discs should be extremely rare. Here, we report the discovery of strong barred structures in massive disc galaxies at z ∼ 1.5 in deep rest-frame optical images from the Cosmic Assembly Near-Infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey. From within a sample of 876 disc galaxies identified by visual classification in Galaxy Zoo, we identify 123 barred galaxies. Selecting a subsample within the same region of the evolving galaxy luminosity function (brighter than L*), we find that the bar fraction across the redshift range 0.5 ≤ z ≤ 2 ( fbar=10.7+6.3−3.5fbar=10.7−3.5+6.3 per cent after correcting for incompleteness) does not significantly evolve. We discuss the implications of this discovery in the context of existing simulations and our current understanding of the way disc galaxies have evolved over the last 11 billion years.
- Published
- 2014
164. The host galaxies of X-ray selected active galactic nuclei toz= 2.5: Structure, star formation, and their relationships from CANDELS andHerschel/PACS
- Author
-
Rosario, D. J., primary, McIntosh, D. H., additional, van der Wel, A., additional, Kartaltepe, J., additional, Lang, P., additional, Santini, P., additional, Wuyts, S., additional, Lutz, D., additional, Rafelski, M., additional, Villforth, C., additional, Alexander, D. M., additional, Bauer, F. E., additional, Bell, E. F., additional, Berta, S., additional, Brandt, W. N., additional, Conselice, C. J., additional, Dekel, A., additional, Faber, S. M., additional, Ferguson, H. C., additional, Genzel, R., additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, Kocevski, D. D., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, Koo, D. C., additional, Lotz, J. M., additional, Magnelli, B., additional, Maiolino, R., additional, Mozena, M., additional, Mullaney, J. R., additional, Papovich, C. J., additional, Popesso, P., additional, Tacconi, L. J., additional, Trump, J. R., additional, Avadhuta, S., additional, Bassett, R., additional, Bell, A., additional, Bernyk, M., additional, Bournaud, F., additional, Cassata, P., additional, Cheung, E., additional, Croton, D., additional, Donley, J., additional, DeGroot, L., additional, Guedes, J., additional, Hathi, N., additional, Herrington, J., additional, Hilton, M., additional, Lai, K., additional, Lani, C., additional, Martig, M., additional, McGrath, E., additional, Mutch, S., additional, Mortlock, A., additional, McPartland, C., additional, O’Leary, E., additional, Peth, M., additional, Pillepich, A., additional, Poole, G., additional, Snyder, D., additional, Straughn, A., additional, Telford, O., additional, Tonini, C., additional, and Wandro, P., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
165. Gauging the Dark Matter Fraction in an L* S0 Galaxy at z = 0.47 Through Gravitational Lensing from Deep Hubble Space Telescope/Advanced Camera for Surveys Imaging
- Author
-
Covone, G., Paolillo, M., Napolitano, N. R., Capaccioli, M., Longo, G., Kneib, J.-P., Jullo, E., Richard, J., Khovanskaya, O., Sazhin, M., Grogin, N. A., and Schreier, E.
- Subjects
Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We analyze a new gravitational lens OAC-GL J1223-1239, serendipitously found in a deep I814-band image of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS). The lens is an L*, edge-on S0 galaxy at zl = 0.4656. The gravitational arc has a radius of 0farcs42 sime 1.74 h^ –1 kpc. We have determined the total mass and the dark matter (DM) fraction within the Einstein radius R E as a function of the lensed source redshift, which is presently unknown. For z s ~ 1.3, which is in the middle of the redshift range plausible for the source according to some external constraints, we find the central velocity dispersion to be ~180 km s^–1. With this value, close to that obtained by means of the Faber-Jackson relation at the lens redshift, we compute a 30% DM fraction within RE (given the uncertainty in the source redshift, the allowed range for the DM fraction is 25%-35% in our lensing model). When compared with the galaxies in the local universe, the lensing galaxy OAC-GL J1223-1239 seems to fall in the transition regime between massive, DM-dominated galaxies and lower-mass, DM-deficient systems.
- Published
- 2009
166. Galaxy Zoo: CANDELS barred discs and bar fractions★
- Author
-
Simmons, B. D., primary, Melvin, Thomas, additional, Lintott, Chris, additional, Masters, Karen L., additional, Willett, Kyle W., additional, Keel, William C., additional, Smethurst, R. J., additional, Cheung, Edmond, additional, Nichol, Robert C., additional, Schawinski, Kevin, additional, Rutkowski, Michael, additional, Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., additional, Bell, Eric F., additional, Casteels, Kevin R. V., additional, Conselice, Christopher J., additional, Almaini, Omar, additional, Ferguson, Henry C., additional, Fortson, Lucy, additional, Hartley, William, additional, Kocevski, Dale, additional, Koekemoer, Anton M., additional, McIntosh, Daniel H., additional, Mortlock, Alice, additional, Newman, Jeffrey A., additional, Ownsworth, Jamie, additional, Bamford, Steven, additional, Dahlen, Tomas, additional, Faber, Sandra M., additional, Finkelstein, Steven L., additional, Fontana, Adriano, additional, Galametz, Audrey, additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, Grützbauch, Ruth, additional, Guo, Yicheng, additional, Häußler, Boris, additional, Jek, Kian J., additional, Kaviraj, Sugata, additional, Lucas, Ray A., additional, Peth, Michael, additional, Salvato, Mara, additional, Wiklind, Tommy, additional, and Wuyts, Stijn, additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
167. The Hawk-I UDS and GOODS Survey (HUGS): Survey design and deepK-band number counts
- Author
-
Fontana, A., primary, Dunlop, J. S., additional, Paris, D., additional, Targett, T. A., additional, Boutsia, K., additional, Castellano, M., additional, Galametz, A., additional, Grazian, A., additional, McLure, R., additional, Merlin, E., additional, Pentericci, L., additional, Wuyts, S., additional, Almaini, O., additional, Caputi, K., additional, Chary, R.-R., additional, Cirasuolo, M., additional, Conselice, C. J., additional, Cooray, A., additional, Daddi, E., additional, Dickinson, M., additional, Faber, S. M., additional, Fazio, G., additional, Ferguson, H. C., additional, Giallongo, E., additional, Giavalisco, M., additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, Hathi, N., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, Koo, D. C., additional, Lucas, R. A., additional, Nonino, M., additional, Rix, H. W., additional, Renzini, A., additional, Rosario, D., additional, Santini, P., additional, Scarlata, C., additional, Sommariva, V., additional, Stark, D. P., additional, van der Wel, A., additional, Vanzella, E., additional, Wild, V., additional, Yan, H., additional, and Zibetti, S., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
168. The mass evolution of the first galaxies: stellar mass functions and star formation rates at 4 < z < 7 in the CANDELS GOODS-South field
- Author
-
Duncan, K., primary, Conselice, C. J., additional, Mortlock, A., additional, Hartley, W. G., additional, Guo, Y., additional, Ferguson, H. C., additional, Dave, R., additional, Lu, Y., additional, Ownsworth, J., additional, Ashby, M. L. N., additional, Dekel, A., additional, Dickinson, M., additional, Faber, S., additional, Giavalisco, M., additional, Grogin, N., additional, Kocevski, D., additional, Koekemoer, A., additional, Somerville, R. S., additional, and White, C. E., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
169. The decomposed bulge and disc size–mass relations of massive galaxies at 1 < z < 3 in CANDELS
- Author
-
Bruce, V. A., primary, Dunlop, J. S., additional, McLure, R. J., additional, Cirasuolo, M., additional, Buitrago, F., additional, Bowler, R. A. A., additional, Targett, T. A., additional, Bell, E. F., additional, McIntosh, D. H., additional, Dekel, A., additional, Faber, S. M., additional, Ferguson, H. C., additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, Hartley, W., additional, Kocevski, D. D., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, Koo, D. C., additional, and McGrath, E. J., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
170. The bulge–disc decomposed evolution of massive galaxies at 1 < z < 3 in CANDELS
- Author
-
Bruce, V. A., primary, Dunlop, J. S., additional, McLure, R. J., additional, Cirasuolo, M., additional, Buitrago, F., additional, Bowler, R. A. A., additional, Targett, T. A., additional, Bell, E. F., additional, McIntosh, D. H., additional, Dekel, A., additional, Faber, S. M., additional, Ferguson, H. C., additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, Hartley, W., additional, Kocevski, D. D., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, Koo, D. C., additional, and McGrath, E. J., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
171. 3D-HST+CANDELS: THE EVOLUTION OF THE GALAXY SIZE-MASS DISTRIBUTION SINCEz= 3
- Author
-
van der Wel, A., primary, Franx, M., additional, van Dokkum, P. G., additional, Skelton, R. E., additional, Momcheva, I. G., additional, Whitaker, K. E., additional, Brammer, G. B., additional, Bell, E. F., additional, Rix, H.-W., additional, Wuyts, S., additional, Ferguson, H. C., additional, Holden, B. P., additional, Barro, G., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, Chang, Yu-Yen, additional, McGrath, E. J., additional, Häussler, B., additional, Dekel, A., additional, Behroozi, P., additional, Fumagalli, M., additional, Leja, J., additional, Lundgren, B. F., additional, Maseda, M. V., additional, Nelson, E. J., additional, Wake, D. A., additional, Patel, S. G., additional, Labbé, I., additional, Faber, S. M., additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, and Kocevski, D. D., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
172. The colour distribution of galaxies at redshift five
- Author
-
Rogers, A. B., primary, McLure, R. J., additional, Dunlop, J. S., additional, Bowler, R. A. A., additional, Curtis-Lake, E. F., additional, Dayal, P., additional, Faber, S. M., additional, Ferguson, H. C., additional, Finkelstein, S. L., additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, Hathi, N. P., additional, Kocevski, D., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, and Kurczynski, P., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
173. Evidence for two modes of black hole accretion in massive galaxies at z∼2
- Author
-
Rangel, C., primary, Nandra, K., additional, Barro, G., additional, Brightman, M., additional, Hsu, L., additional, Salvato, M., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, Brusa, M., additional, Laird, E. S., additional, Trump, J. R., additional, Croton, D. J., additional, Koo, D. C., additional, Kocevski, D., additional, Donley, J. L., additional, Hathi, N. P., additional, Peth, M., additional, Faber, S. M., additional, Mozena, M., additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, Ferguson, H. C., additional, and Lai, K., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
174. Morphologies of z ∼ 0.7 AGN host galaxies in CANDELS: no trend of merger incidence with AGN luminosity
- Author
-
Villforth, C., primary, Hamann, F., additional, Rosario, D. J., additional, Santini, P., additional, McGrath, E. J., additional, Wel, A. van der, additional, Chang, Y. Y., additional, Guo, Y., additional, Dahlen, T., additional, Bell, E. F., additional, Conselice, C. J., additional, Croton, D., additional, Dekel, A., additional, Faber, S. M., additional, Grogin, N., additional, Hamilton, T., additional, Hopkins, P. F., additional, Juneau, S., additional, Kartaltepe, J., additional, Kocevski, D., additional, Koekemoer, A., additional, Koo, D. C., additional, Lotz, J., additional, McIntosh, D., additional, Mozena, M., additional, Somerville, R., additional, and Wild, V., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
175. The colour distribution of galaxies at redshift five
- Author
-
Rogers, A. B., McLure, R. J., Dunlop, J. S., Bowler, R. A. A., Curtis-Lake, E. F., Dayal, P., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Finkelstein, S. L., Grogin, N. A., Hathi, N. P., Kocevski, D., Koekemoer, A. M., Kurczynski, P., Rogers, A. B., McLure, R. J., Dunlop, J. S., Bowler, R. A. A., Curtis-Lake, E. F., Dayal, P., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Finkelstein, S. L., Grogin, N. A., Hathi, N. P., Kocevski, D., Koekemoer, A. M., and Kurczynski, P.
- Abstract
We present the results of a study investigating the rest-frame ultra-violet (UV) spectral slopes of redshift z~5 Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs). By combining deep Hubble Space Telescope imaging of the CANDELS and HUDF fields with ground-based imaging from the UKIDSS Ultra Deep Survey (UDS), we have produced a large sample of z~5 LBGs spanning an unprecedented factor of >100 in UV luminosity. Based on this sample we find a clear colour-magnitude relation (CMR) at z~5, such that the rest-frame UV slopes (beta) of brighter galaxies are notably redder than their fainter counterparts. We determine that the z~5 CMR is well described by a linear relationship of the form: d beta = (-0.12 +/- 0.02) d Muv, with no clear evidence for a change in CMR slope at faint magnitudes (i.e. Muv > -18.9). Using the results of detailed simulations we are able, for the first time, to infer the intrinsic (i.e. free from noise) variation of galaxy colours around the CMR at z~5. We find significant (12 sigma) evidence for intrinsic colour variation in the sample as a whole. Our results also demonstrate that the width of the intrinsic UV slope distribution of z~5 galaxies increases from Delta(beta)=0.1 at Muv=-18 to Delta(beta)=0.4 at Muv=-21. We suggest that the increasing width of the intrinsic galaxy colour distribution and the CMR itself are both plausibly explained by a luminosity independent lower limit of beta=-2.1, combined with an increase in the fraction of red galaxies in brighter UV-luminosity bins., Comment: 13 pages, 8 colour figures. Updated in response to referee report; accepted in MNRAS
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
176. A Rapidly Star-forming Galaxy 700 Million Years After the Big Bang at z=7.51
- Author
-
Finkelstein, S. L., Papovich, C., Dickinson, M., Song, M., Tilvi, V., Koekemoer, A. M., Finkelstein, K. D., Mobasher, B., Ferguson, H. C., Giavalisco, M., Reddy, N., Ashby, M. L. N., Dekel, A., Fazio, G. G., Fontana, A., Grogin, N. A., Huang, J. -S., Kocevski, D., Rafelski, M., Weiner, B. J., Willner, S. P., Finkelstein, S. L., Papovich, C., Dickinson, M., Song, M., Tilvi, V., Koekemoer, A. M., Finkelstein, K. D., Mobasher, B., Ferguson, H. C., Giavalisco, M., Reddy, N., Ashby, M. L. N., Dekel, A., Fazio, G. G., Fontana, A., Grogin, N. A., Huang, J. -S., Kocevski, D., Rafelski, M., Weiner, B. J., and Willner, S. P.
- Abstract
Out of several dozen z > 7 candidate galaxies observed spectroscopically, only five have been confirmed via Lyman-alpha emission, at z=7.008, 7.045, 7.109, 7.213 and 7.215. The small fraction of confirmed galaxies may indicate that the neutral fraction in the intergalactic medium (IGM) rises quickly at z > 6.5, as Lyman-alpha is resonantly scattered by neutral gas. However, the small samples and limited depth of previous observations makes these conclusions tentative. Here we report the results of a deep near-infrared spectroscopic survey of 43 z > 6.5 galaxies. We detect only a single galaxy, confirming that some process is making Lyman-alpha difficult to detect. The detected emission line at 1.0343 um is likely to be Lyman-alpha emission, placing this galaxy at a redshift z = 7.51, an epoch 700 million years after the Big Bang. This galaxy's colors are consistent with significant metal content, implying that galaxies become enriched rapidly. We measure a surprisingly high star formation rate of 330 Msol/yr, more than a factor of 100 greater than seen in the Milky Way. Such a galaxy is unexpected in a survey of our size, suggesting that the early universe may harbor more intense sites of star-formation than expected., Comment: To be published in Nature on 24 October. Under press embargo until 1pm EDT on 23 October. 12 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables (including supplementary information)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
177. Discovery of a Quadruple Lens in CANDELS with a Record Lens Redshift z=1.53
- Author
-
van der Wel, A., van de Ven, G., Maseda, M., Rix, H. W., Rudnick, G. H., Grazian, A., Finkelstein, S. L., Koo, D. C., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Koekemoer, A. M., Grogin, N. A., Kocevski, D. D., van der Wel, A., van de Ven, G., Maseda, M., Rix, H. W., Rudnick, G. H., Grazian, A., Finkelstein, S. L., Koo, D. C., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Koekemoer, A. M., Grogin, N. A., and Kocevski, D. D.
- Abstract
Using spectroscopy from the Large Binocular Telescope and imaging from the Hubble Space Telescope we discovered the first strong galaxy lens at z(lens)>1. The lens has a secure photometric redshift of z=1.53+/-0.09 and the source is spectroscopically confirmed at z=3.417. The Einstein radius (0.35"; 3.0 kpc) encloses 7.6 x 10^10 Msol, with an upper limit on the dark matter fraction of 60%. The highly magnified (40x) source galaxy has a very small stellar mass (~10^8 Msol) and shows an extremely strong [OIII]_5007A emission line (EW_0 ~ 1000A) bolstering the evidence that intense starbursts among very low-mass galaxies are common at high redshift., Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
178. Discovery of Lyman Break Galaxies at z~7 from the ZFOURGE Survey
- Author
-
Tilvi, V., Papovich, C., Tran, K. -V. H., Labbe, I., Spitler, L. R., Straatman, C. M. S., Persson, S. E., Monson, A., Glazebrook, K., Quadri, R. F., van Dokkum, P., Ashby, M. L. N., Faber, S. M., Fazio, G. G., Finkelstein, S. L., Ferguson, H. C., Grogin, N. A., Kacprzak, G. G., Kelson, D. D., Koekemoer, A. M., Murphy, D., McCarthy, P. J., Newman, J. A., Salmon, B., Willner, S. P., Tilvi, V., Papovich, C., Tran, K. -V. H., Labbe, I., Spitler, L. R., Straatman, C. M. S., Persson, S. E., Monson, A., Glazebrook, K., Quadri, R. F., van Dokkum, P., Ashby, M. L. N., Faber, S. M., Fazio, G. G., Finkelstein, S. L., Ferguson, H. C., Grogin, N. A., Kacprzak, G. G., Kelson, D. D., Koekemoer, A. M., Murphy, D., McCarthy, P. J., Newman, J. A., Salmon, B., and Willner, S. P.
- Abstract
Star-forming galaxies at redshifts z>6 are likely responsible for the reionization of the universe, and it is important to study the nature of these galaxies. We present three candidates for z~7 Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs) from a 155 arcmin^2 area in the CANDELS/COSMOS field imaged by the deep FourStar Galaxy Evolution (zFourGE) survey. The FourStar medium-band filters provide the equivalent of R~10 spectroscopy, which cleanly distinguishes between z~7 LBGs and brown dwarf stars. The distinction between stars and galaxies based on an object's angular size can become unreliable even when using HST imaging; there exists at least one very compact z~7 candidate (FWHM~0.5-1 kpc) that is indistinguishable from a point source. The medium-band filters provide narrower redshift distributions compared with broad-band-derived redshifts. The UV luminosity function derived using the three z~7 candidates is consistent with previous studies, suggesting an evolution at the bright end (MUV -21.6 mag) from z~7 to z~5. Fitting the galaxies' spectral energy distributions, we predict Lyman-alpha equivalent widths for the two brightest LBGs, and find that the presence of a Lyman-alpha line affects the medium-band flux thereby changing the constraints on stellar masses and UV spectral slopes. This illustrates the limitations of deriving LBG properties using only broad-band photometry. The derived specific star-formation rates for the bright LBGs are ~13 per Gyr, slightly higher than the lower-luminosity LBGs, implying that the star-formation rate increases with stellar mass for these galaxies., Comment: Accepted in ApJ
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
179. Constraining The Assembly Of Normal And Compact Passively Evolving Galaxies From Redshift z=3 To The Present With CANDELS
- Author
-
Cassata, P., Giavalisco, M., Williams, C. C., Guo, Yicheng, Lee, Bomee, Renzini, A., Ferguson, H., Faber, S. F., Barro, G., McIntosh, D. H., Lu, Yu, Bell, E. F., Koo, D. C., Papovich, C. J., Ryan, R. E., Conselice, C. J., Grogin, N., Koekemoer, A., Hathi, N. P., Cassata, P., Giavalisco, M., Williams, C. C., Guo, Yicheng, Lee, Bomee, Renzini, A., Ferguson, H., Faber, S. F., Barro, G., McIntosh, D. H., Lu, Yu, Bell, E. F., Koo, D. C., Papovich, C. J., Ryan, R. E., Conselice, C. J., Grogin, N., Koekemoer, A., and Hathi, N. P.
- Abstract
We study the evolution of the number density, as a function of the size, of passive early-type galaxies with a wide range of stellar masses 10^10
10^10 M_sun), passive (SSFR<10^-2 Gyr^-1) and morphologically spheroidal galaxies at 1.2 2 are all compact or ultra-compact, while normal sized ETGs (meaning ETGs with sizes comparable to those of local counterparts of the same mass) are the most common ETGs only at z<1. The increase of the average size of ETGs at 0 - Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
180. The Morphologies of Massive Galaxies at 1 < z < 3 in the CANDELS-UDS Field
- Author
-
Bruce, V. A., Dunlop, J. S., Cirasuolo, M., McLure, R. J., Targett, T. A., Bell, E. F., Croton, D. J., Dekel, A., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Grogin, N. A., Kocevski, D. D., Koekemoer, A. M., Koo, D. C., Lai, K., Lotz, J. M., McGrath, E. J., Newman, J. A., van der Wel, A., Bruce, V. A., Dunlop, J. S., Cirasuolo, M., McLure, R. J., Targett, T. A., Bell, E. F., Croton, D. J., Dekel, A., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Grogin, N. A., Kocevski, D. D., Koekemoer, A. M., Koo, D. C., Lai, K., Lotz, J. M., McGrath, E. J., Newman, J. A., and van der Wel, A.
- Abstract
We have used high-resolution, HST WFC3/IR, near-infrared imaging to conduct a detailed bulge-disk decomposition of the morphologies of ~200 of the most massive (M_star > 10^11 M_solar) galaxies at 1
2 they are mostly disk-dominated. Interestingly, we find that while most of the quiescent galaxies are bulge-dominated, a significant fraction (25-40%) of the most quiescent galaxies, have disk-dominated morphologies. Thus, our results suggest that the physical mechanisms which quench star-formation activity are not simply connected to those responsible for the morphological transformation of massive galaxies., Comment: Contributed article (4 pages, 2 figures), IAU Symposium 295 on "The intriguing life of massive galaxies", to appear in the proceedings of the IAU XXVIII General Assembly, Beijing, 2012, (Eds: Daniel Thomas, Anna Pasquali, Ignacio Ferreras) - Published
- 2013
181. Structural Parameters of Galaxies in CANDELS
- Author
-
van der Wel, A., Bell, E. F., Haussler, B., McGrath, E. J., Chang, Yu-Yen, Guo, Yicheng, McIntosh, D. H., Rix, H. -W., Barden, M., Cheung, E., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Galametz, A., Grogin, N. A., Hartley, W., Kartaltepe, J. S., Kocevski, D. D., Koekemoer, A. M., Lotz, J., Mozena, M., Peth, M. A., Peng, Chien Y., van der Wel, A., Bell, E. F., Haussler, B., McGrath, E. J., Chang, Yu-Yen, Guo, Yicheng, McIntosh, D. H., Rix, H. -W., Barden, M., Cheung, E., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Galametz, A., Grogin, N. A., Hartley, W., Kartaltepe, J. S., Kocevski, D. D., Koekemoer, A. M., Lotz, J., Mozena, M., Peth, M. A., and Peng, Chien Y.
- Abstract
We present global structural parameter measurements of 109,533 unique, H_F160W-selected objects from the CANDELS multi-cycle treasury program. Sersic model fits for these objects are produced with GALFIT in all available near-infrared filters (H_F160W, J_F125W and, for a subset, Y_F105W). The parameters of the best-fitting Sersic models (total magnitude, half-light radius, Sersic index, axis ratio, and position angle) are made public, along with newly constructed point spread functions for each field and filter. Random uncertainties in the measured parameters are estimated for each individual object based on a comparison between multiple, independent measurements of the same set of objects. To quantify systematic uncertainties we create a mosaic with simulated galaxy images with a realistic distribution of input parameters and then process and analyze the mosaic in an identical manner as the real data. We find that accurate and precise measurements -- to 10% or better -- of all structural parameters can typically be obtained for galaxies with H_F160W < 23, with comparable fidelity for basic size and shape measurements for galaxies to H_F160W ~ 24.5., Comment: public data release of structural parameters from CANDELS WFC3 data: http://www.mpia-hd.mpg.de/homes/vdwel/candels.html
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
182. The properties of (sub)millimetre-selected galaxies as revealed by CANDELS HST WFC3/IR imaging in GOODS-South
- Author
-
Targett, T. A., Dunlop, J. S., Cirasuolo, M., McLure, R. J., Bruce, V. A., Fontana, A., Galametz, A., Paris, D., Davé, R., Dekel, A., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Grogin, N. A., Kartaltepe, J. S., Kocevski, D. D., Koekemoer, A. M., Kurczynski, P., Lai, K., Lotz, J., Targett, T. A., Dunlop, J. S., Cirasuolo, M., McLure, R. J., Bruce, V. A., Fontana, A., Galametz, A., Paris, D., Davé, R., Dekel, A., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Grogin, N. A., Kartaltepe, J. S., Kocevski, D. D., Koekemoer, A. M., Kurczynski, P., Lai, K., and Lotz, J.
- Abstract
We have exploited the HST CANDELS WFC3/IR imaging to study the properties of (sub-)mm galaxies in GOODS-South. After using the deep radio and Spitzer imaging to identify galaxy counterparts for the (sub-)mm sources, we have used the new CANDELS data in two ways. First, we have derived improved photometric redshifts and stellar masses, confirming that the (sub-)mm galaxies are massive (
=2.2x10^11 M_solar) galaxies at z=1-3. Second, we have exploited the depth and resolution of the WFC3/IR imaging to determine the sizes and morphologies of the galaxies at rest-frame optical wavelengths, fitting two-dimensional axi-symmetric Sersic models. Crucially, the WFC3/IR H-band imaging enables modelling of the mass-dominant galaxy, rather than the blue high-surface brightness features which often dominate optical (rest-frame UV) images of (sub-)mm galaxies, and can confuse visual morphological classification. As a result of this analysis we find that >95% of the rest-frame optical light in almost all of the (sub-)mm galaxies is well-described by either a single exponential disk, or a multiple-component system in which the dominant constituent is disk-like. We demonstrate that this conclusion is consistent with the results of high-quality ground-based K-band imaging, and explain why. The massive disk galaxies which host luminous (sub-)mm emission are reasonably extended (r_e=4 kpc), consistent with the sizes of other massive star-forming disks at z~2. In many cases we find evidence of blue clumps within the sources, with the mass-dominant disk becoming more significant at longer wavelengths. Finally, only a minority of the sources show evidence for a major galaxy-galaxy interaction. Taken together, these results support the view that most (sub-)mm galaxies at z~2 are simply the most extreme examples of normal star-forming galaxies at that era., Comment: 30 pages, 9 figures - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
183. The size-luminosity relation at z=7 in CANDELS and its implication on reionization
- Author
-
Grazian, A., Castellano, M., Fontana, A., Pentericci, L., Dunlop, J. S., McLure, R. J., Koekemoer, A. M., Dickinson, M. E., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Galametz, A., Giavalisco, M., Grogin, N. A., Hathi, N. P., Kocevski, D. D., Lai, K., Newman, J. A., Vanzella, E., Grazian, A., Castellano, M., Fontana, A., Pentericci, L., Dunlop, J. S., McLure, R. J., Koekemoer, A. M., Dickinson, M. E., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Galametz, A., Giavalisco, M., Grogin, N. A., Hathi, N. P., Kocevski, D. D., Lai, K., Newman, J. A., and Vanzella, E.
- Abstract
The exploration of the relation between galaxy sizes and other physical parameters has provided important clues for understanding galaxy formation. We use the CANDELS Deep+Wide surveys in the GOODS-South, UDS and EGS fields, complemented by data from the HUDF09 program, to address the relation between size and luminosity at z\sim7. We select 153 z-band drop-out galaxies in six different fields characterized by a wide combination of depth and areal coverage, ideally suited to sample without biases the observed size-magnitude plane. Detailed simulations allow us to derive the completeness as a function of size and magnitude and to quantify measurements errors/biases. We find that the half light radius distribution function of z\sim7 galaxies fainter than J=26.6 is peaked at <0.1 arcsec (or equivalently 0.5 kpc proper), while at brighter magnitudes high-z galaxies are typically larger than ~0.15 arcsec. We also find a well defined size-luminosity relation, Rh\simL^1/2. We compute the Luminosity Function in the HUDF and P12HUDF fields, finding large spatial variation on the number density of faint galaxies. Adopting the size distribution and the size-luminosity relation found for faint galaxies at z=7, we derive a mean slope of -1.7\pm0.1 for the luminosity function of LBGs at this redshift. Using this LF, we find that the amount of ionizing photons cannot keep the Universe re-ionized if the IGM is clumpy (C_HII>3) and the Lyman continuum escape fraction of high-z LBGs is relatively low (f_esc<0.3). With future CANDELS data, we can put severe limits to the role of galaxies in the reionization of the Universe., Comment: 21 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
184. The ages, masses and star-formation rates of spectroscopically confirmed z~6 galaxies in CANDELS
- Author
-
Curtis-Lake, E., McLure, R. J., Dunlop, J. S., Schenker, M., Rogers, A. B., Targett, T., Cirasuolo, M., Almaini, O., Ashby, M. L. N., Bradshaw, E. J., Finkelstein, S. L., Dickinson, M., Ellis, R. S., Faber, S. M., Fazio, G. G., Ferguson, H. C., Fontana, A., Grogin, N. A., Hartley, W. G., Kocevski, D. D., Koekemoer, A. M., Lai, K., Robertson, B. E., Vanzella, E., Willner, S. P., Curtis-Lake, E., McLure, R. J., Dunlop, J. S., Schenker, M., Rogers, A. B., Targett, T., Cirasuolo, M., Almaini, O., Ashby, M. L. N., Bradshaw, E. J., Finkelstein, S. L., Dickinson, M., Ellis, R. S., Faber, S. M., Fazio, G. G., Ferguson, H. C., Fontana, A., Grogin, N. A., Hartley, W. G., Kocevski, D. D., Koekemoer, A. M., Lai, K., Robertson, B. E., Vanzella, E., and Willner, S. P.
- Abstract
We report the results of a study exploring the stellar populations of 13 luminous (L>L*), spectroscopically confirmed, galaxies in the redshift interval 5.5
= 300 Myr, the degeneracies introduced by dust extinction mean that only two of these objects actually require a >300 Myr old stellar population to reproduce the observed photometry. Moreover, when considering only smoothly-varying star-formation histories, we observe a clear tension between the data and models such that a galaxy SED template with an old age is often chosen in order to try and fit objects with blue UV-slopes but red UV-to-optical colours. To break this tension we explore SED fitting with two-component models (burst plus on-going star-formation) and allow for nebular emission. On average, the inclusion of nebular emission leads to lower stellar-mass estimates (median offset 0.18 dex), moderately higher specific star-formation rates, and allows for a wider range of plausible stellar ages. However, based on our SED modelling, we find no strong evidence for extremely young ages in our sample (<50 Myr). Finally, considering all of the different star-formation histories explored, we find that the median best-fitting ages are of the order 200-300 Myr and that the objects with the tightest constraints indicate ages in the range 50-200 Myr (Abridged)., Comment: 23 pages, 12 figures, for submission to MNRAS - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
185. The Morphologies of Massive Galaxies at 1<z<3 in the CANDELS-UDS Field: Compact Bulges, and the Rise and Fall of Massive Disks
- Author
-
Bruce, V. A., Dunlop, J. S., Cirasuolo, M., McLure, R. J., Targett, T. A., Bell, E. F., Croton, D. J., Dekel, A., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Grogin, N. A., Kocevski, D. D., Koekemoer, A. M., Koo, D. C., Lai, K., Lotz, J. M., McGrath, E. J., Newman, J. A., van der Wel, A., Bruce, V. A., Dunlop, J. S., Cirasuolo, M., McLure, R. J., Targett, T. A., Bell, E. F., Croton, D. J., Dekel, A., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Grogin, N. A., Kocevski, D. D., Koekemoer, A. M., Koo, D. C., Lai, K., Lotz, J. M., McGrath, E. J., Newman, J. A., and van der Wel, A.
- Abstract
We have used deep, HST, near-IR imaging to study the morphological properties of the most massive galaxies at high z, modelling the WFC3/IR H-band images of the ~200 galaxies in the CANDELS-UDS field with 1 < z_phot < 3, and stellar masses M_star > 10^11 M_sun. We have used both single-Sersic and bulge+disk models, have investigated the errors/biases introduced by uncertainties in the background and the PSF, and have obtained formally-acceptable model fits to >90% of the galaxies. Our results indicate that these massive galaxies at 1 < z < 3 lie both on and below the local size-mass relation, with a median R_e~2.6 kpc, a factor of ~2.3 smaller than comparably-massive local galaxies. Moreover, we find that bulge-dominated objects in particular show evidence for a growing bimodality in the size-mass relation with increasing z, and by z > 2 the compact bulges display effective radii a factor ~4 smaller than local ellipticals of comparable mass. These trends appear to extend to the bulge components of disk-dominated galaxies, and vice versa. We also find that, while such massive galaxies at low z are bulge-dominated, at 1 < z < 2 they are predominantly mixed bulge+disk systems, and by z > 2 they are mostly disk-dominated. The majority of the disk-dominated galaxies are actively forming stars, but this is also true for many of the bulge-dominated systems. Interestingly, however, while most of the quiescent galaxies are bulge-dominated, we find that a significant fraction (25-40%) of the most quiescent galaxies have disk-dominated morphologies. Thus, while our results show that the massive galaxy population is undergoing dramatic changes at this crucial epoch, they also suggest that the physical mechanisms which quench star-formation activity are not simply connected to those responsible for the morphological transformation of massive galaxies into present-day giant ellipticals., Comment: 39 pages, 19 figures, 2 tables, submitted to MNRAS
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
186. Clustering properties of BzK-selected galaxies in goods-N: Environmental quenching and triggering of star formation at z ~ 2
- Author
-
Lin, L., Dickinson, M., Jian, H., Merson, A., Baugh, C., Scott, D., Foucaud, S., Wang, W., Yan, C., Yan, H., Cheng, Y., Guo, Y., Helly, J., Kirsten, Franz, Koo, D., Lagos, C., Meger, N., Messias, H., Pope, A., Simard, L., Grogin, N., Wang, S., Lin, L., Dickinson, M., Jian, H., Merson, A., Baugh, C., Scott, D., Foucaud, S., Wang, W., Yan, C., Yan, H., Cheng, Y., Guo, Y., Helly, J., Kirsten, Franz, Koo, D., Lagos, C., Meger, N., Messias, H., Pope, A., Simard, L., Grogin, N., and Wang, S.
- Abstract
Using a sample of BzK-selected galaxies at z ~ 2 identified from the CFHT/WIRCAM near-infrared survey of GOODS-North, we discuss the relation between star formation rate (SFR), specific star formation rate (SSFR), and stellar mass (M *), and the clustering of galaxies as a function of these parameters. For star-forming galaxies (sBzKs), the UV-based SFR, corrected for extinction, scales with the stellar mass as SFRM a * with a = 0.74 ± 0.20 down to M * 109 M ?, indicating a weak dependence on the stellar mass of the SFR efficiency, namely, SSFR. We also measure the angular correlation function and hence infer the correlation length for sBzK galaxies as a function of M *, SFR, and SSFR, as well as K-band apparent magnitude. We show that passive galaxies (pBzKs) are more strongly clustered than sBzK galaxies at a given stellar mass, mirroring the color-density relation seen at lower redshifts. We also find that the correlation length of sBzK galaxies ranges from 4 to 20h -1Mpc, being a strong function of MK , M *, and SFR. On the other hand, the clustering dependence on SSFR changes abruptly at 2 × 10-9yr-1, which is the typical value for "main-sequence" star-forming galaxies at z ~ 2. We show that the correlation length reaches a minimum at this characteristic value, and is larger for galaxies with both smaller and larger SSFRs; a dichotomy that is only marginally implied from the predictions of the semi-analytical models. Our results suggest that there are two types of environmental effects at work at z ~ 2. Stronger clustering for relatively quiescent galaxies implies that the environment has started to play a role in quenching star formation. At the same time, stronger clustering for galaxies with elevated SSFRs (" starbursts") might be attributed to an increased efficiency for galaxy interactions and mergers in dense environments. © © 2012. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2012
187. PDS 144: The First Confirmed Herbig Ae - Herbig Ae Wide Binary
- Author
-
Hornbeck, J. B., Grady, C. A., Perrin, M. D., Wisniewski, J. P., Tofflemire, B. M., Brown, A., Holtzman, J. A., Arraki, K., Hamaguchi, K., Woodgate, B., Petre, R., Daly, B., Grogin, N. A., Bonfield, D. G., Williger, G. M., Lauroesch, J. T., Hornbeck, J. B., Grady, C. A., Perrin, M. D., Wisniewski, J. P., Tofflemire, B. M., Brown, A., Holtzman, J. A., Arraki, K., Hamaguchi, K., Woodgate, B., Petre, R., Daly, B., Grogin, N. A., Bonfield, D. G., Williger, G. M., and Lauroesch, J. T.
- Abstract
PDS 144 is a pair of Herbig Ae stars that are separated by 5.35" on the sky. It has previously been shown to have an A2Ve Herbig Ae star viewed at 83\circ inclination as its northern member and an A5Ve Herbig Ae star as its southern member. Direct imagery revealed a disk occulting PDS 144 N - the first edge-on disk observed around a Herbig Ae star. The lack of an obvious disk in direct imagery suggested PDS 144 S might be viewed face-on or not physically associated with PDS 144 N. Multi-epoch Hubble Space Telescope imagery of PDS 144 with a 5 year baseline demonstrates PDS 144 N & S are comoving and have a common proper motion with TYC 6782-878-1. TYC 6782-878-1 has previously been identified as a member of Upper Sco sub-association A at d = 145 \pm 2 pc with an age of 5-10 Myr. Ground-based imagery reveals jets and a string of Herbig-Haro knots extending 13' (possibly further) which are aligned to within 7\circ \pm 6\circ on the sky. By combining proper motion data and the absence of a dark mid-plane with radial velocity data, we measure the inclination of PDS 144 S to be i = 73\circ \pm 7\circ. The radial velocity of the jets from PDS 144 N & S indicates they, and therefore their disks, are misaligned by 25\circ \pm 9\circ. This degree of misalignment is similar to that seen in T Tauri wide binaries., Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
188. X-ray selected AGN Hosts are Similar to Inactive Galaxies out to z=3: Results from CANDELS/CDF-S
- Author
-
Rosario, D. J., Mozena, M., Wuyts, S., Nandra, K., Koekemoer, A., McGrath, E., Hathi, N., Dekel, A., Donley, J., Dunlop, J. S., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H., Giavalisco, M., Grogin, N., Guo, Y., Newman, J., Kocevski, D. D., Koo, D. C., Laird, E., Rangel, C., Somerville, R., Rosario, D. J., Mozena, M., Wuyts, S., Nandra, K., Koekemoer, A., McGrath, E., Hathi, N., Dekel, A., Donley, J., Dunlop, J. S., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H., Giavalisco, M., Grogin, N., Guo, Y., Newman, J., Kocevski, D. D., Koo, D. C., Laird, E., Rangel, C., and Somerville, R.
- Abstract
We use multi-band spatially resolved photometry from the Cosmic Assembly Near-IR Deep Legacy Survey (CANDELS) in the 4 MSec Chandra Deep Field-South (CDF-S) to explore the nuclear and extended colors, color gradients and stellar populations of X-ray selected AGN host galaxies out to z=3. Based on a study of their central light, we develop X-ray based criteria to exclude objects with strong AGN contamination. We use stellar masses from the FIREWORKS database to understand and account for stellar mass selection effects, and carefully study, for the first time, the resolved host galaxy properties of AGNs at z~2 in their rest-frame optical light without substantial nuclear contamination. AGN hosts span a sizable range of stellar masses, colors and color gradients at these redshifts. Their colors, color gradients and stellar population properties are very similar to inactive galaxies of the same stellar mass. At z~1, we find a slightly narrower range in host colors compared to inactive galaxies, as well as hints of more recent star-formation. These differences are weaker or non-existent among AGN hosts at z~2. We discuss the importance of AGN driven feedback in the quenching of galaxies at z>~1 and speculate on possible evolution in the relationship between black hole accretion and the host galaxy towards high redshifts., Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
189. Caught in the Act: The Assembly of Massive Cluster Galaxies at z=1.62
- Author
-
Lotz, J. M., Papovich, C., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Grogin, N., Guo, Y., Kocevski, D., Koekemoer, A. M., Lee, K-S., McIntosh, D., Momcheva, I., Rudnick, G., Saintonge, A., Tran, K-V., van der Wel, A., Willmer, C., Lotz, J. M., Papovich, C., Faber, S. M., Ferguson, H. C., Grogin, N., Guo, Y., Kocevski, D., Koekemoer, A. M., Lee, K-S., McIntosh, D., Momcheva, I., Rudnick, G., Saintonge, A., Tran, K-V., van der Wel, A., and Willmer, C.
- Abstract
We present the recent merger history of massive galaxies in a spectroscopically-confirmed proto-cluster at z=1.62. Using HST WFC3 near-infrared imaging from the Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS), we select cluster galaxies and z ~ 1.6 field galaxies with M_star >= 3 x 10^10 M_sun, and determine the frequency of double nuclei or close companions with projected separations less than 20 kpc co-moving and stellar mass ratios between 1:1 and roughly 10:1. We find that four out of five spectroscopically-confirmed massive proto-cluster galaxies have double nuclei, and 42 +13/-25 % of all M_star >= 3 x 10^10 M_sun cluster candidates are either in close pair systems or have double nuclei. In contrast, only 4.5 +/- 2.6% of the field galaxies are in close pair/double nuclei systems. The implied merger rate per massive galaxy in the proto-cluster is 3-10 times higher than the merger rate of massive field galaxies at z ~ 1.6, depending upon the assumed mass ratios. Close pairs in the cluster have minor merger stellar mass ratios (M_primary:M_satellite ~ 6:1), while the field pairs are typically major mergers with stellar mass ratios between 1:1 and 4:1. At least half of the cluster mergers are dissipationless, as indicated by their red colors and low 24 micron fluxes. Two of the double-nucleated cluster members have X-ray detected AGN with L_x > 10^43 erg/s, and are strong candidates for dual or offset super-massive black holes. We conclude that the massive z = 1.62 proto-cluster galaxies are undergoing accelerated assembly relative to the field population, and discuss the implications for galaxy evolution in proto-cluster environments., Comment: 9 paper, 6 color figure, 1 table; submitted to ApJ
- Published
- 2011
190. Extreme Emission Line Galaxies in CANDELS: Broad-Band Selected, Star-Bursting Dwarf Galaxies at z>1
- Author
-
van der Wel, A., Straughn, A. N., Rix, H. -W., Finkelstein, S. L., Koekemoer, A. M., Weiner, B. J., Wuyts, S., Bell, E. F., Faber, S. M., Trump, J. R., Koo, D. C., Ferguson, H. C., Scarlata, C., Hathi, N. P., Dunlop, J. S., Newman, J. A., Dickinson, M., Jahnke, K., Salmon, B. W., de Mello, D. F., Kocevski, D. D., Lai, K., Grogin, N. A ., Rodney, S. A., Guo, Yicheng, McGrath, E. G., Lee, K. -S., Barro, G., Huang, K. -H., Riess, A. G., Ashby, M. L. N., Willner, S. P., van der Wel, A., Straughn, A. N., Rix, H. -W., Finkelstein, S. L., Koekemoer, A. M., Weiner, B. J., Wuyts, S., Bell, E. F., Faber, S. M., Trump, J. R., Koo, D. C., Ferguson, H. C., Scarlata, C., Hathi, N. P., Dunlop, J. S., Newman, J. A., Dickinson, M., Jahnke, K., Salmon, B. W., de Mello, D. F., Kocevski, D. D., Lai, K., Grogin, N. A ., Rodney, S. A., Guo, Yicheng, McGrath, E. G., Lee, K. -S., Barro, G., Huang, K. -H., Riess, A. G., Ashby, M. L. N., and Willner, S. P.
- Abstract
We identify an abundant population of extreme emission line galaxies (EELGs) at redshift z~1.7 in the Cosmic Assembly Near-IR Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS) imaging from Hubble Space Telescope/Wide Field Camera 3 (HST/WFC3). 69 EELG candidates are selected by the large contribution of exceptionally bright emission lines to their near-infrared broad-band magnitudes. Supported by spectroscopic confirmation of strong [OIII] emission lines -- with rest-frame equivalent widths ~1000\AA -- in the four candidates that have HST/WFC3 grism observations, we conclude that these objects are galaxies with 10^8 Msol in stellar mass, undergoing an enormous starburst phase with M_*/(dM_*/dt) of only ~15 Myr. These bursts may cause outflows that are strong enough to produce cored dark matter profiles in low-mass galaxies. The individual star formation rates and the co-moving number density (3.7x10^-4 Mpc^-3) can produce in ~4 Gyr much of the stellar mass density that is presently contained in 10^8-10^9 Msol dwarf galaxies. Therefore, our observations provide a strong indication that many or even most of the stars in present-day dwarf galaxies formed in strong, short-lived bursts, mostly at z>1., Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ; 10 pages; 6 figures; 1 table
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
191. Lensed galaxies in CANDELS
- Author
-
Cooray, Asantha, Fu, Hai, Calanog, Jae, Wardlow, J. L., Chiu, A., Kim, Sam, Smidt, Joseph, Acquaviva, V., Ferguson, H. C., Faber, S. M., Galametz, A., Grogin, N. A., Hartley, W., Kocevski, D., Koekemoer, A., Koo, D. C., Lucas, R. A., Moustakas, L., Newman, J. A., Cooray, Asantha, Fu, Hai, Calanog, Jae, Wardlow, J. L., Chiu, A., Kim, Sam, Smidt, Joseph, Acquaviva, V., Ferguson, H. C., Faber, S. M., Galametz, A., Grogin, N. A., Hartley, W., Kocevski, D., Koekemoer, A., Koo, D. C., Lucas, R. A., Moustakas, L., and Newman, J. A.
- Abstract
We present results from a search for gravitationally lensed galaxies present in the Hubble Space Telescope (HST)/Wide Field Camera-3 (WFC3) images of the Cosmic Assembly Near-IR Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS). We present one bona fide lens system in UDS and two compact lens candidates in the GOODS-S field. The lensing system in UDS involves two background galaxies, one at z=1.847 lensed to an arc and a counterimage, and the second at a photometric redshift of z=2.32^{+0.10}_{-0.06} lensed to a double image. We reconstruct the lensed sources in the source plane and find in each of the two cases the sources can be separated to a pair of galaxies. The sources responsible for the arc are compact with effective radii of 0.3 to 0.4 kpc in WFC3 J_{125}-band and a total stellar mass and a star-formation rate of 2.1_{-0.4}^{+2.4} times 10^7 M_sun and 2.3_{-1.7}^{+ 0.6} M_sun yr^{-1}, respectively.The abnormally high H_{160}-band flux of this source is likely due to OIII emission lines with a rest-frame equivalent width about 700 Angstroms for OIII 5007 Angstroms. The sources responsible for the double image have corresponding values of about 0.4 to 0.5 kpc, 1.4_{-0.8}^{+1.9} times 10^9 M_sun, and 8.7_{-7.0}^{+11.1} M_sun yr^{-1}. Once completed CANDELS is expected to contain about 15 lensing systems and will allow statistical studies on both lensing mass profiles and z ~ 2 lensed galaxies., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables. Submitted to ApJL
- Published
- 2011
192. The relative abundance of compact and normal massive early-type galaxies and its evolution from redshift z~2 to the present
- Author
-
Cassata, P., Giavalisco, M., Guo, Yicheng, Renzini, A., Ferguson, H., Koekemoer, A. M., Salimbeni, S., Scarlata, C., Grogin, N. A., Conselice, C. J., Dahlen, T., Lotz, J. M., Dickinson, M., Lin, Lihwai, Cassata, P., Giavalisco, M., Guo, Yicheng, Renzini, A., Ferguson, H., Koekemoer, A. M., Salimbeni, S., Scarlata, C., Grogin, N. A., Conselice, C. J., Dahlen, T., Lotz, J. M., Dickinson, M., and Lin, Lihwai
- Abstract
We report on the evolution of the number density and size of early-type galaxies from z~2 to z~0. We select a sample of 563 massive (M>10^{10} Msun), passively evolving (SSFR<10^{-2} Gyr^{-1}) and morphologically spheroidal galaxies at 0
1.2 and z<1.2, respectively). We measure a significant evolution of the mass-size relation of early-type galaxies, with the fractional increment that is almost independent on the stellar mass. Early-type galaxies (ETGs) formed at z>1 appear to be preferentially small, and the evolution of the mass-size relation at z<1 is driven by both the continuous size growth of the compact galaxies and the appearance of new ETGs with large sizes. We also find that the number density of all passive early-type galaxies increases rapidly, by a factor of 5, from z~2 to z~1, and then more mildly by another factor of 1.5 from z~1 to z~0. We interpret these results as the evidence that the bulk of the ETGs are formed at 1 - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
193. Obscured GOODS AGN and Their Host Galaxies at z < 1.25: The Slow Black Hole Growth Phase
- Author
-
Simmons, B. D., Van Duyne, J., Urry, C. M., Treister, E., Koekemoer, A. M., Grogin, N. A., Team, the GOODS, Simmons, B. D., Van Duyne, J., Urry, C. M., Treister, E., Koekemoer, A. M., Grogin, N. A., and Team, the GOODS
- Abstract
We compute black hole masses and bolometric luminosities for 87 obscured AGN in the redshift range 0.25 < z < 1.25, selected from the GOODS deep multi-wavelength survey fields via their X-ray emission. We fit the optical images and obtain morphological parameters for the host galaxy, separating the galaxy from its central point source, thereby obtaining a four-band optical SED for each active nucleus. We calculate bolometric luminosities for these AGN by reddening a normalized mean SED of GOODS broad-line AGN to match the observed central point-source SED of each obscured AGN. This estimate of Lbol has a smaller spread than simple bolometric corrections to the X-ray luminosity or direct integration of the observed multi-wavelength SED, suggesting it is a better measure. We estimate central black hole masses from the bulge luminosities. The black hole masses span a wide range, 7 x 10^6 M_sun to 6 x 10^9 M_sun; the median black hole mass is 5 x 10^8 M_sun. The majority of these AGN have L/L_Edd < 0.01, and we detect no significant evolution of the mean Eddington ratio to z = 1.25. This implies that the bulk of black hole growth in these obscured AGN must have occurred at z > 1 and that we are observing these AGN in a slow- or no-growth state., Comment: Accepted to ApJ; 17 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables; Updated version has 1 corrected reference
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
194. Obscured goods active galactic nuclei and their host galaxies at z <1.25:the slow black hole growth phase
- Author
-
Simmons, B. D., Van Duyne, J., Urry, C. M., Treister, E., Koekemoer, A. M., Grogin, N. A., Simmons, B. D., Van Duyne, J., Urry, C. M., Treister, E., Koekemoer, A. M., and Grogin, N. A.
- Abstract
We compute black hole masses and bolometric luminosities for 87 obscured active galactic nuclei (AGNs) in the redshift range 0.25 ≤ z ≤ 1.25, selected from the GOODS deep multi-wavelength survey fields via their X-ray emission. We fit the optical images and obtain morphological parameters for the host galaxy, separating the galaxy from its central point source, thereby obtaining a four-band optical spectral energy distribution (SED) for each active nucleus. We calculate bolometric luminosities for these AGNs by reddening a normalized mean SED of GOODS broad-line AGNs to match the observed central point-source SED of each obscured AGN. This estimate of L bol has a smaller spread than simple bolometric corrections to the X-ray luminosity or direct integration of the observed multi-wavelength SED, suggesting it is a better measure. We estimate central black hole masses from the bulge luminosities. The black hole masses span a wide range, 7 × 106 M ☉ to 6 × 109 M ☉; the median black hole mass is 5 × 108 M ☉. The majority of these AGNs have L/L Edd ≤ 0.01, and we detect no significant evolution of the mean Eddington ratio to z = 1.25. This implies that the bulk of black hole growth in these obscured AGNs must have occurred at z gsim 1 and that we are observing these AGNs in a slow- or no-growth state.
- Published
- 2011
195. Candels: The cosmic assembly near-infrared deep extragalactic legacy survey - The hubble space telescope observations, imaging data products, and mosaics
- Author
-
Koekemoer, A, Faber, S, Ferguson, H, Grogin, N, Kocevski, D, Koo, D, Lai, K, Lotz, J, Lucas, R, Mcgrath, E, Ogaz, S, Rajan, A, Riess, A, Rodney, S, Strolger, L, Casertano, S, Castellano, M, Dahlen, T, Dickinson, M, Dolch, T, Fontana, A, Giavalisco, M, Grazian, A, Guo, Y, Hathi, N, Huang, K, van der Wel, A, Yan, H, Acquaviva, V, Alexander, D, Almaini, O, Ashby, M, Barden, M, Bell, E, Bournaud, F, Brown, T, Caputi, K, Cassata, P, Challis, P, Chary, R, Cheung, E, Cirasuolo, M, Conselice, C, Cooray, A, Croton, D, Daddi, E, Davé, R, de Mello, D, de Ravel, L, Dekel, A, Donley, J, Dunlop, J, Dutton, A, Elbaz, D, Fazio, G, Filippenko, A, Finkelstein, S, Frazer, C, Gardner, J, Garnavich, P, Gawiser, E, Gruetzbauch, R, Hartley, W, Häussler, B, Herrington, J, Hopkins, P, Huang, J, Jha, S, Johnson, A, Kartaltepe, J, Khostovan, A, Kirshner, R, Lani, C, Lee, K, Li, W, Madau, P, Mccarthy, P, Mcintosh, D, Mclure, R, Mcpartland, C, Mobasher, B, Moreira, H, Mortlock, A, Moustakas, L, Mozena, M, Nandra, K, Newman, J, Nielsen, J, Niemi, S, Noeske, K, Papovich, C, Pentericci, L, Pope, A, Primack, J, Ravindranath, S, Reddy, N, Renzini, A, Rix, H, Robaina, A, Rosario, D, Rosati, P, Salimbeni, S, Scarlata, C, Siana, B, Simard, L, Smidt, J, Snyder, D, Somerville, R, Spinrad, H, Straughn, A, Telford, O, Teplitz, H, Trump, J, Vargas, C, Villforth, C, Wagner, C, Wandro, P, Wechsler, R, Weiner, B, Wiklind, T, Wild, V, Wilson, G, Wuyts, S, Yun, M, Koekemoer, AM, Faber, SM, Ferguson, HC, Grogin, NA, Kocevski, DD, Koo, DC, Lotz, JM, Lucas, RA, McGrath, EJ, Riess, AG, Rodney, SA, Guo, YC, Hathi, NP, Huang, KH, Yan, HJ, Alexander, DM, Ashby, MLN, Bell, EF, Brown, TM, Caputi, KI, Challis, PJ, Chary, RR, Conselice, CJ, Cooray, AR, Croton, DJ, de Mello, DF, Donley, JL, Dunlop, JS, Dutton, AA, Fazio, GG, Filippenko, AV, Finkelstein, SL, Gardner, JP, Garnavich, PM, Hartley, WG, Hopkins, PF, Huang, JS, Jha, SW, Kartaltepe, JS, Khostovan, AA, Kirshner, RP, Lee, KS, Li, WD, McCarthy, PJ, McIntosh, DH, McLure, RJ, McPartland, C, Moustakas, LA, Newman, JA, Nielsen, JL, Noeske, KG, Papovich, CJ, Primack, JR, Reddy, NA, Rix, HW, Robaina, AR, Rosario, DJ, Somerville, RS, Straughn, AN, Teplitz, HI, Trump, JR, Wagner, CR, Wechsler, RH, Weiner, BJ, Yun, MS, Koekemoer, A, Faber, S, Ferguson, H, Grogin, N, Kocevski, D, Koo, D, Lai, K, Lotz, J, Lucas, R, Mcgrath, E, Ogaz, S, Rajan, A, Riess, A, Rodney, S, Strolger, L, Casertano, S, Castellano, M, Dahlen, T, Dickinson, M, Dolch, T, Fontana, A, Giavalisco, M, Grazian, A, Guo, Y, Hathi, N, Huang, K, van der Wel, A, Yan, H, Acquaviva, V, Alexander, D, Almaini, O, Ashby, M, Barden, M, Bell, E, Bournaud, F, Brown, T, Caputi, K, Cassata, P, Challis, P, Chary, R, Cheung, E, Cirasuolo, M, Conselice, C, Cooray, A, Croton, D, Daddi, E, Davé, R, de Mello, D, de Ravel, L, Dekel, A, Donley, J, Dunlop, J, Dutton, A, Elbaz, D, Fazio, G, Filippenko, A, Finkelstein, S, Frazer, C, Gardner, J, Garnavich, P, Gawiser, E, Gruetzbauch, R, Hartley, W, Häussler, B, Herrington, J, Hopkins, P, Huang, J, Jha, S, Johnson, A, Kartaltepe, J, Khostovan, A, Kirshner, R, Lani, C, Lee, K, Li, W, Madau, P, Mccarthy, P, Mcintosh, D, Mclure, R, Mcpartland, C, Mobasher, B, Moreira, H, Mortlock, A, Moustakas, L, Mozena, M, Nandra, K, Newman, J, Nielsen, J, Niemi, S, Noeske, K, Papovich, C, Pentericci, L, Pope, A, Primack, J, Ravindranath, S, Reddy, N, Renzini, A, Rix, H, Robaina, A, Rosario, D, Rosati, P, Salimbeni, S, Scarlata, C, Siana, B, Simard, L, Smidt, J, Snyder, D, Somerville, R, Spinrad, H, Straughn, A, Telford, O, Teplitz, H, Trump, J, Vargas, C, Villforth, C, Wagner, C, Wandro, P, Wechsler, R, Weiner, B, Wiklind, T, Wild, V, Wilson, G, Wuyts, S, Yun, M, Koekemoer, AM, Faber, SM, Ferguson, HC, Grogin, NA, Kocevski, DD, Koo, DC, Lotz, JM, Lucas, RA, McGrath, EJ, Riess, AG, Rodney, SA, Guo, YC, Hathi, NP, Huang, KH, Yan, HJ, Alexander, DM, Ashby, MLN, Bell, EF, Brown, TM, Caputi, KI, Challis, PJ, Chary, RR, Conselice, CJ, Cooray, AR, Croton, DJ, de Mello, DF, Donley, JL, Dunlop, JS, Dutton, AA, Fazio, GG, Filippenko, AV, Finkelstein, SL, Gardner, JP, Garnavich, PM, Hartley, WG, Hopkins, PF, Huang, JS, Jha, SW, Kartaltepe, JS, Khostovan, AA, Kirshner, RP, Lee, KS, Li, WD, McCarthy, PJ, McIntosh, DH, McLure, RJ, McPartland, C, Moustakas, LA, Newman, JA, Nielsen, JL, Noeske, KG, Papovich, CJ, Primack, JR, Reddy, NA, Rix, HW, Robaina, AR, Rosario, DJ, Somerville, RS, Straughn, AN, Teplitz, HI, Trump, JR, Wagner, CR, Wechsler, RH, Weiner, BJ, and Yun, MS
- Abstract
This paper describes the Hubble Space Telescope imaging data products and data reduction procedures for the Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS). This survey is designed to document the evolution of galaxies and black holes at z ≈ 1.5-8, and to study Type Ia supernovae at z > 1.5. Five premier multi-wavelength sky regions are selected, each with extensive multi-wavelength observations. The primary CANDELS data consist of imaging obtained in the Wide Field Camera 3 infrared channel (WFC3/IR) and the WFC3 ultraviolet/optical channel, along with the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS). The CANDELS/Deep survey covers ∼ 125 arcmin 2 within GOODS-N and GOODS-S, while the remainder consists of the CANDELS/Wide survey, achieving a total of ∼ 800 arcmin2 across GOODS and three additional fields (Extended Groth Strip, COSMOS, and Ultra-Deep Survey). We summarize the observational aspects of the survey as motivated by the scientific goals and present a detailed description of the data reduction procedures and products from the survey. Our data reduction methods utilize the most up-to-date calibration files and image combination procedures. We have paid special attention to correcting a range of instrumental effects, including charge transfer efficiency degradation for ACS, removal of electronic bias-striping present in ACS data after Servicing Mission 4, and persistence effects and other artifacts in WFC3/IR. For each field, we release mosaics for individual epochs and eventual mosaics containing data from all epochs combined, to facilitate photometric variability studies and the deepest possible photometry. A more detailed overview of the science goals and observational design of the survey are presented in a companion paper.
- Published
- 2011
196. Mid-infrared variability from the spitzer deep wide-field survey
- Author
-
Kozlowski, S., Kochanek, C., Stern, D., Ashby, M., Assef, R., Bock, J., Borys, C., Brand, K., Brodwin, M., Brown, M., Cool, R., Cooray, A., Croft, S., Dey, A., Eisenhardt, P., Gonzalez, A., Gorjian, V., Griffith, R., Grogin, N., Ivison, R., Jacob, J., Jannuzi, B., Mainzer, A., Moustakas, L., Röttgering, H., Seymour, Nick, Smith, H., Stanford, S., Stauffer, J., Sullivan, I., Van Breugel, W., Willner, S., Wright, E., Kozlowski, S., Kochanek, C., Stern, D., Ashby, M., Assef, R., Bock, J., Borys, C., Brand, K., Brodwin, M., Brown, M., Cool, R., Cooray, A., Croft, S., Dey, A., Eisenhardt, P., Gonzalez, A., Gorjian, V., Griffith, R., Grogin, N., Ivison, R., Jacob, J., Jannuzi, B., Mainzer, A., Moustakas, L., Röttgering, H., Seymour, Nick, Smith, H., Stanford, S., Stauffer, J., Sullivan, I., Van Breugel, W., Willner, S., and Wright, E.
- Abstract
We use the multi-epoch, mid-infrared Spitzer Deep Wide-Field Survey to investigate the variability of objects in 8.1 deg2 of the NOAO Deep Wide Field Survey Boötes field. We perform a Difference Image Analysis of the four available epochs between 2004 and 2008, focusing on the deeper 3.6 and 4.5 µm bands. Out of 474, 179 analyzed sources, 1.1% meet our standard variability selection criteria that the two light curves are strongly correlated (r>0.8) and that their joint variance (s12) exceeds that for all sources with the same magnitude by 2s. We then examine the mid-IR colors of the variable sources and match them with X-ray sources from the XBoötes survey, radio catalogs, 24 µm selected active galactic nucleus (AGN) candidates, and spectroscopically identified AGNs from the AGN and Galaxy Evolution Survey (AGES). Based on their mid-IR colors, most of the variable sources are AGNs (76%), with smaller contributions from stars (11%), galaxies (6%), and unclassified objects, although most of the stellar, galaxy, and unclassified sources are false positives. For our standard selection criteria, 11%-12% of the mid-IR counterparts to X-ray sources, 24 µm AGN candidates, and spectroscopically identified AGNs show variability. The exact fractions depend on both the search depth and the selection criteria. For example, 12% of the 1131 known z>1 AGNs in the field and 14%-17% of the known AGNs with well-measured fluxes in all four Infrared Array Camera bands meet our standard selection criteria. The mid-IR AGN variability can be well described by a single power-law structure function with an index of ? ˜ 0.5 at both 3.6 and 4.5 µm, and an amplitude of S 0 ? 0.1 mag on rest-frame timescales of 2 yr. The variability amplitude is higher for shorter rest-frame wavelengths and lower luminosities. © 2010. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2010
197. The spitzer deep, wide-field survey
- Author
-
Ashby, M., Stern, D., Brodwin, M., Griffith, R., Eisenhardt, P., Kozlowski, S., Kochanek, C., Bock, J., Borys, C., Brand, K., Brown, M., Cool, R., Cooray, A., Croft, S., Dey, A., Eisenstein, D., Gonzalez, A., Gorjian, V., Grogin, N., Ivison, R., Jacob, J., Jannuzi, B., Mainzer, A., Moustakas, L., Röttgering, H., Seymour, Nick, Smith, H., Stanford, S., Stauffer, J., Sullivan, I., Van Breugel, W., Willner, S., Wright, E., Ashby, M., Stern, D., Brodwin, M., Griffith, R., Eisenhardt, P., Kozlowski, S., Kochanek, C., Bock, J., Borys, C., Brand, K., Brown, M., Cool, R., Cooray, A., Croft, S., Dey, A., Eisenstein, D., Gonzalez, A., Gorjian, V., Grogin, N., Ivison, R., Jacob, J., Jannuzi, B., Mainzer, A., Moustakas, L., Röttgering, H., Seymour, Nick, Smith, H., Stanford, S., Stauffer, J., Sullivan, I., Van Breugel, W., Willner, S., and Wright, E.
- Abstract
The Spitzer Deep, Wide-Field Survey (SDWFS) is a four-epoch infrared survey of 10 deg2 in the Boötes field of the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey using the IRAC instrument on the Spitzer Space Telescope. SDWFS, a Spitzer Cycle 4 Legacy project, occupies a unique position in the area-depth survey space defined by other Spitzer surveys. The four epochs that make up SDWFS permit - for the first time - the selection of infrared-variable and high proper motion objects over a wide field on timescales of years. Because of its large survey volume, SDWFS is sensitive to galaxies out to z ~ 3 with relatively little impact from cosmic variance for all but the richest systems. The SDWFS data sets will thus be especially useful for characterizing galaxy evolution beyond z ~ 1.5. This paper explains the SDWFS observing strategy and data processing, presents the SDWFS mosaics and source catalogs, and discusses some early scientific findings. The publicly released, full-depth catalogs contain 6.78, 5.23, 1.20, and 0.96 × 105 distinct sources detected to the average 5s, 4?-diameter, aperture-corrected limits of 19.77, 18.83, 16.50, and 15.82 Vega mag at 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8.0µm, respectively. The SDWFS number counts and color-color distribution are consistent with other, earlier Spitzer surveys. At the 6 minute integration time of the SDWFS IRAC imaging, >50% of isolated Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty cm radio sources and >80% of on-axis XBoötes sources are detected out to 8.0µm. Finally, we present the four highest proper motion IRAC-selected sources identified from the multi-epoch imaging, two of which are likely field brown dwarfs of mid-T spectral class. © 2009. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2009
198. DISCOVERY OF A QUADRUPLE LENS IN CANDELS WITH A RECORD LENS REDSHIFT z = 1.53
- Author
-
van der Wel, A., primary, van de Ven, G., additional, Maseda, M., additional, Rix, H. W., additional, Rudnick, G. H., additional, Grazian, A., additional, Finkelstein, S. L., additional, Koo, D. C., additional, Faber, S. M., additional, Ferguson, H. C., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, and Kocevski, D. D., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
199. CONSTRAINING THE ASSEMBLY OF NORMAL AND COMPACT PASSIVELY EVOLVING GALAXIES FROM REDSHIFTz= 3 TO THE PRESENT WITH CANDELS
- Author
-
Cassata, P., primary, Giavalisco, M., additional, Williams, C. C., additional, Guo, Yicheng, additional, Lee, Bomee, additional, Renzini, A., additional, Ferguson, H., additional, Faber, S. F., additional, Barro, G., additional, McIntosh, D. H., additional, Lu, Yu, additional, Bell, E. F., additional, Koo, D. C., additional, Papovich, C. J., additional, Ryan, R. E., additional, Conselice, C. J., additional, Grogin, N., additional, Koekemoer, A., additional, and Hathi, N. P., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
200. The properties of (sub-)millimetre-selected galaxies as revealed by CANDELS HST WFC3/IR imaging in GOODS-South
- Author
-
Targett, T. A., primary, Dunlop, J. S., additional, Cirasuolo, M., additional, McLure, R. J., additional, Bruce, V. A., additional, Fontana, A., additional, Galametz, A., additional, Paris, D., additional, Davé, R., additional, Dekel, A., additional, Faber, S. M., additional, Ferguson, H. C., additional, Grogin, N. A., additional, Kartaltepe, J. S., additional, Kocevski, D. D., additional, Koekemoer, A. M., additional, Kurczynski, P., additional, Lai, K., additional, and Lotz, J., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.