5,949 results on '"Taniguchi Y."'
Search Results
152. Evolution of the Frequency of Luminous (\geq L_V*) Close Galaxy Pairs at z < 1.2 in the COSMOS Field
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Kartaltepe, J. S., Sanders, D. B., Scoville, N. Z., Calzetti, D., Capak, P., Koekemoer, A., Mobasher, B., Murayama, T., Salvato, M., Sasaki, S. S., and Taniguchi, Y.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We measure the fraction of luminous galaxies in pairs at projected separations of 5-20 kpc out to z=1.2 in the COSMOS field using ACS images and photometric redshifts derived from an extensive multiwavelength dataset. Analysis of a complete sample of 106,188 galaxies more luminous than M_V=-19.8 (~ L_V*) in the redshift range 0.1 < z < 1.2 yields 1,749 galaxy pairs. These data are supplemented by a local z=0-0.1 value for the galaxy pair fraction derived from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). After statistically correcting the COSMOS pair sample for chance line-of-sight superpositions, the evolution in the pair fraction is fit by a power law \propto (1+z)^{n=3.1 \pm 0.1}. If this strongly evolving pair fraction continues out to higher redshift, ~ 50% of all luminous galaxies at z ~ 2 are in close pairs. This clearly signifies that galaxy mergers are a very significant and possibly dominant mechanism for galaxy evolution during the epoch of galaxy formation at z=1 to 3., Comment: 22 pages including 4 figures and 2 tables. Accepted for publication in the ApJS COSMOS special issue. For the high resolution version of figure 4, see: http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/~jeyhan/pairs/
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- 2007
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153. Multi-epoch VLBA observations of 3C 66A
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Cai, H. -B., Shen, Z. -Q., Sudou, H., Shang, L. -L., Iguchi, S., Murata, Y., Taniguchi, Y., Wakamatsu, K., and Takaba, H.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of six-epoch Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) observations of 3C~66A. The high-resolution Very Long Baseline Interferometer (VLBI) maps obtained at multi-frequency (2.3, 8.4, and 22.2 GHz) simultaneously enabled us to identify the brightest compact component with the core. We find that the spectrum of the core can be reasonably fitted by the synchrotron self-absorption model. Our VLBA maps show that the jet of 3C~66A has two bendings at about 1.2 and 4 mas from the core. We also give possible identifications of our jet components with the components in previous VLBA observations by analysing their proper motions. We find consistent differences of the position from the core in one component between different frequencies at six epochs., Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, received 30 January 2007, accepted 22 March 2007
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- 2007
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154. The angular correlations of galaxies in the COSMOS field
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McCracken, H. J., Peacock, J. A., Guzzo, L., Capak, P., Porciani, C., Scoville, N., Aussel, H., Finoguenov, A., James, J. B., Kitzbichler, M. G., Koekemoer, A., Leauthaud, A., Fèvre, O. Le, Massey, R., Mellier, Y., Mobasher, B., Norberg, P., Rhodes, J., Sanders, D. B., Sasaki, S. S., Taniguchi, Y., Thompson, D. J., White, S. D. M., and El-Zant, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present measurements of the two-point galaxy angular correlation function w(\theta) in the COSMOS field. Independent determinations of w(\theta) as a function of magnitude limit are presented for both the HST ACS catalog and also for the ground-based data from Subaru and the CFHT. Despite having significantly different masks, these three determinations agree well. At bright magnitudes (IAB<22), our data generally match very well with existing measurements and with mock catalogs based on semi-analytic galaxy formation calculations of Kitzbichler and White from the Millennium Simulation. The exception is that our result is at the upper end of the expected cosmic variance scatter for \theta > 10 arcmin, which we attribute to a particularly rich structure known to exist at z~0.8. For fainter samples, however, the level of clustering is somewhat higher than reported by some previous studies: in all three catalogues we find w(\theta=1')~0.014 at a median IAB magnitude of 24. At these very faintest magnitudes, our measurements agree well with the latest determinations from the Canada-France Legacy Survey. This level of clustering is approximately double what is predicted by the semi-analytic catalogs (at all angles). The semi-analytic results allow an estimate of cosmic variance, which is too small to account for the discrepancy. We therefore conclude that the mean amplitude of clustering at this level is higher than previously estimated., Comment: Six pages, five figures. Accepted for publication in the ApJS COSMOS special issue, Sept. 2007
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- 2007
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155. The First Release COSMOS Optical and Near-IR Data and Catalog
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Capak, P., Aussel, H., Ajiki, M., McCracken, H. J., Mobasher, B., Scoville, N., Shopbell, P., Taniguchi, Y., Thompson, D., Tribiano, S., Sasaki, S., Blain, A. W., Brusa, M., Carilli, C., Comastri, A., Carollo, C. M., Cassata, P., Colbert, J., Ellis, R. S., Elvis, M., Giavalisco, M., Green, W., Guzzo, L., Hasinger, G., Ilbert, O., Impey, C., Jahnke, K., Kartaltepe, J., Kneib, J-P., Koda, J., Koekemoer, A., Komiyama, Y., Leauthaud, A., Lefevre, O., Lilly, S., Massey, R., Miyazaki, S., Murayama, T., Nagao, T., Peacock, J. A., Pickles, A., Porciani, C., Renzini, A., Rhodes, J., Rich, M., Salvato, M., Sanders, D. B., Scarlata, C., Schiminovich, D., Schinnerer, E., Scodeggio, M., Sheth, K., Shioya, Y., Tasca, L. A. M., Taylor, J. E., Yan, L., and Zamorani, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present imaging data and photometry for the COSMOS survey in 15 photometric bands between 0.3um and 2.4um. These include data taken on the Subaru 8.3m telescope, the KPNO and CTIO 4m telescopes, and the CFHT 3.6m telescope. Special techniques are used to ensure that the relative photometric calibration is better than 1% across the field of view. The absolute photometric accuracy from standard star measurements is found to be 6%. The absolute calibration is corrected using galaxy spectra, providing colors accurate to 2% or better. Stellar and galaxy colors and counts agree well with the expected values. Finally, as the first step in the scientific analysis of these data we construct panchromatic number counts which confirm that both the geometry of the universe and the galaxy population are evolving., Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures, 14 tables, Accepted to ApJS for COSMOS speciall issue
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- 2007
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156. Light quark masses from unquenched lattice QCD
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Collaborations, CP-PACS/JLQCD, Ishikawa, T., Aoki, S., Fukugita, M., Hashimoto, S., Ishikawa, K-I., Ishizuka, N., Iwasaki, Y., Kanaya, K., Kaneko, T., Kuramashi, Y., Okawa, M., Taniguchi, Y., Tsutsui, N., Ukawa, A., Yamada, N., and Yoshié, T.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We calculate the light meson spectrum and the light quark masses by lattice QCD simulation, treating all light quarks dynamically and employing the Iwasaki gluon action and the nonperturbatively O(a)-improved Wilson quark action. The calculations are made at the squared lattice spacings at an equal distance a^2~0.005, 0.01 and 0.015 fm^2, and the continuum limit is taken assuming an O(a^2) discretization error. The light meson spectrum is consistent with experiment. The up, down and strange quark masses in the \bar{MS} scheme at 2 GeV are \bar{m}=(m_{u}+m_{d})/2=3.55^{+0.65}_{-0.28} MeV and m_s=90.1^{+17.2}_{-6.1} MeV where the error includes statistical and all systematic errors added in quadrature. These values contain the previous estimates obtained with the dynamical u and d quarks within the error., Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, revtex4; v2: contents partly modified, published version
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- 2007
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157. The [OII]3727 Luminosity function and Star Formation Rate at z~1.2 in the COSMOS 2 Square-degree Field and the Subaru Deep Field
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Takahashi, M. I., Shioya, Y., Taniguchi, Y., Murayama, T., Ajiki, M., Sasaki, S. S., Koizumi, O., Nagao, T., Scoville, N. Z., Mobasher, B., Aussel, H., Capak, P., Carilli, C., Ellis, R. S., Garilli, B., Giavalisco, M., Guzzo, L., Hasinger, G., Impey, C., Kitzbichler, M. G., Koekemoer, A., Fevre, O. Le, Lilly, S. J., Maccagni, D., Renzini, A., Rich, M., Sanders, D. B., Schinnerer, E., Scodeggio, M., Shopbell, P., Smolcic, V., Tribiano, S., Ideue, Y., and Mihara, S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have carried out a wide-field imaging survey for [OII]3727 emitting galaxies at z~1.2 in the HST COSMOS 2 square degree field using the Suprime-Cam on the Subaru Telescope. The survey covers a sky area of 6700 arcmin^2 in the COSMOS field, and a redshift range between 1.17 and 1.20 (Delta_z = 0.03), corresponding to a survey volume of 5.56*10^5 Mpc^3. We obtain a sample of 3176 [OII] emitting galaxies with observed emission-line equivalent widths greater than 26 AA. Since our survey tends to sample brighter [OII]3727 emitting galaxies, we also analyze a sample of fainter [OII]3727 emitting galaxies found in the Subaru Deep Field (SDF). We find an extinction-corrected [OII] luminosity density of 10^{40.35^+0.08_-0.06} ergs s^-1 Mpc-3, corresponding to star formation rate density of 0.32^+0.06_-0.04 M_sun yr-1 Mpc^-3 in the COSMOS field at z~1.2. This is the largest survey for [OII]3727 emitters beyond z=1 currently available., Comment: 33 pages, 9 figures. to appear in the ApJ Supplement COSMOS Special Issue
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- 2007
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158. Lyman Alpha Emitters at Redshift 5.7 in the COSMOS Field
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Murayama, T., Taniguchi, Y., Scoville, N. Z., Ajiki, M., Sanders, D. B., Mobasher, B., Aussel, H., Capak, P., Koekemoer, A., Shioya, Y., Nagao, T., Carilli, C., Ellis, R. S., Garilli, B., Giavalisco, M., Kitzbichler, M. G., LeFevre, O., Maccagni, D., Schinnerer, E., Smolcic, V., Tribiano, S., Cimatti, A., Komiyama, Y., Miyazaki, S., Sasaki, S. S., Koda, J., and Karoji, H.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results from a narrow-band optical survey of a contiguous area of 1.95 deg^2, covered by the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS). Both optical narrow-band (lambda_c = 8150 AA and Delta_lambda = 120 AA) and broad-band (B, V, g', r', i', and z') imaging observations were performed with the Subaru prime-focus camera, Suprime-Cam on the Subaru Telescope. We provide the largest contiguous narrow-band survey, targetting Ly alpha emitters (LAEs) at z~5.7. We find a total of 119 LAE candidates at z~5.7. Over the wide-area covered by this survey, we find no strong evidence for large scale clustering of LAEs. We estimate a star formation rate (SFR) density of ~7*10^-4 M_sun yr^-1 Mpc^-3 for LAEs at z~5.7, and compare it with previous measurements., Comment: 26 pages, 19 figures. to appear in the ApJ Supplement COSMOS Special Issue
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- 2007
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159. The redshift evolution of early-type galaxies in COSMOS: Do massive early-type galaxies form by dry mergers?
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Scarlata, C., Carollo, C. M., Lilly, S. J., Feldmann, R., Kampczyk, P., Renzini, A., Cimatti, A., Halliday, C., Daddi, E., Sargent, M. T., Koekemoer, A., Scoville, N., Kneib, J-P., Leauthaud, A., Massey, R., Rhodes, J., Tasca, L., Capak, McCracken, H. J., Mobasher, B., Taniguchi, Y., Thompson, D., Ajiki, M., Aussel, H., Murayama, T., Sanders, D. B., Sasaki, S., Shioya, Y., and Takahashi, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
ABRIDGED: We study the evolution since z~1 of the rest-frame B luminosity function of the early-type galaxies (ETGs) in ~0.7 deg^2 in the COSMOS field. In order to identify ALL progenitors of local ETGs we construct the sample of high-z galaxies using two complementary criteria: (i) A morphological selection based on the Zurich Estimator of Structural Types, and (ii) A photometric selection based on the galaxy properties in the (U-V)-M_V color-magnitude diagram. We furthermore constrain both samples so as to ensure that the selected progenitors of ETGs are compatible with evolving into systems which obey the mu_B-r_{hl} Kormendy relation. Assuming the luminosity evolution derived from studies of the fundamental plane for high-z ETGs, our analysis shows no evidence for a decrease in the number density of the most massive ETGs out to z~ 0.7: Both the morphologically- and the photometrically-selected sub-samples show no evolution in the number density of bright (~L>2.5L*) ETGs. Allowing for different star formation histories, and cosmic variance, we estimate a maximum decrease in the number density of massive galaxies at that redshift of ~30%. We observe, however, in both the photometrical and morphological samples, a deficit of up to ~2-3 of fainter ETGs over the same cosmic period. Our results argue against a significant contribution of recent dissipationless ``dry'' mergers to the formation of the most massive ETGs. We suggest that the mass growth in low luminosity ETGs can be explained with a conversion from z~0.7 to z=0 of blue, irregular and disk galaxies into low- and intermediate-mass ``red'' ETGs, possibly also through gas rich mergers., Comment: Replaced with accepted version (ApJ COSMOS special issue)
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- 2007
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160. The Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS): The morphological content and enviromental dependence of the galaxy color-magnitude relation at z~0.7
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Cassata, P., Guzzo, L., Franceschini, A., Scoville, N., Capak, P., Ellis, R. S., Koekemoer, A., McCracken, H. J., Mobasher, B., Renzini, A., Ricciardelli, E., Scodeggio, M., Taniguchi, Y., and Thompson, D.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the enviromental dependence and the morphological composition of the galaxy color-magnitude diagram at z~0.7, using a pilot sub-sample of ~2000 galaxies from the COSMOS surve, with I_AB<24, photometric redshift within 0.61
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- 2007
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161. The Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS): a large-scale structure at z=0.73 and the relation of galaxy morphologies to local environment
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Guzzo, L., Cassata, P., Finoguenov, A., Massey, R., Scoville, N. Z., Capak, P., Ellis, R. S., Mobasher, B., Taniguchi, Y., Thompson, D., Ajiki, M., Aussel, H., Boehringer, H., Brusa, M., Calzetti, D., Comastri, A., Franceschini, A., Hasinger, G., Kasliwal, M. M., Kitzbichler, M. G., Kneib, J. -P., Koekemoer, A., Leauthaud, A., McCracken, H. J., Murayama, T., Nagao, T., Rhodes, J., Sanders, D. B., Sasaki, S., Shioya, Y., Tasca, L., and Taylor, J. E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have identified a large-scale structure at z~0.73 in the COSMOS field, coherently described by the distribution of galaxy photometric redshifts, an ACS weak-lensing convergence map and the distribution of extended X-ray sources in a mosaic of XMM observations. The main peak seen in these maps corresponds to a rich cluster with Tx= 3.51+0.60/-0.46 keV and Lx=(1.56+/-0.04) x 10^{44} erg/s ([0.1-2.4] keV band). We estimate an X-ray mass within $r500$ corresponding to M500~1.6 x 10^{14} Msun and a total lensing mass (extrapolated by fitting a NFW profile) M(NFW)=(6+/-3) x 10^15 Msun. We use an automated morphological classification of all galaxies brighter than I_AB=24 over the structure area to measure the fraction of early-type objects as a function of local projected density Sigma_10, based on photometric redshifts derived from ground-based deep multi-band photometry. We recover a robust morphology-density relation at this redshift, indicating, for comparable local densities, a smaller fraction of early-type galaxies than today. Interestingly, this difference is less strong at the highest densities and becomes more severe in intermediate environments. We also find, however, local "inversions'' of the observed global relation, possibly driven by the large-scale environment. In particular, we find direct correspondence of a large concentration of disk galaxies to (the colder side of) a possible shock region detected in the X-ray temperature map and surface brightness distribution of the dominant cluster. We interpret this as potential evidence of shock-induced star formation in existing galaxy disks, during the ongoing merger between two sub-clusters., Comment: 15 pages (emulateapj style), 16 figs (low res.); to appear in the ApJ Supplement COSMOS Special Issue. Low-resolution figures; full resolution version available at: http://www.astro.caltech.edu/~cosmos/publications/files/guzzo_0701482.pdf
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- 2007
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162. Deep GALEX Imaging of the HST/COSMOS Field: A First Look at the Morphology of z~0.7 Star-forming Galaxies
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Zamojski, M. A., Schiminovich, D., Rich, R. M., Mobasher, B., Koekemoer, A. M., Capak, P., Taniguchi, Y., Sasaki, S. S., McCracken, H. J., Mellier, Y., Bertin, E., Aussel, H., Sanders, D. B., Fevre, O. Le, Ilbert, O., Salvato, M., Thompson, D. J., Kartaltepe, J. S., Scoville, N., Barlow, T. A., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Martin, D. C., Morrisey, P., Neff, S. G., Seibert, M., Small, T., Wyder, T. K., Bianchi, L., Donas, J., Heckman, T. M., Lee, Y. -W., Madore, B. F., Milliard, B., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, B. Y., and Yi, S. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a study of the morphological nature of redshift z~0.7 star-forming galaxies using a combination of HST/ACS, GALEX and ground-based images of the COSMOS field. Our sample consists of 8,146 galaxies, 5,777 of which are detected in the GALEX near-ultraviolet band down to a limiting magnitude of 25.5 (AB). We make use of the UV to estimate star formation rates, correcting for the effect of dust using the UV-slope, and compute, from the ACS F814W images, the C,A,S,G,M20 morphological parameters for all objects in our sample. We observe a morphological bimodality in the galaxy population and show that it has a strong correspondence with the FUV - g color bimodality. We conclude that UV-optical color predominantly evolves concurrently with morphology. We observe many of the most star-forming galaxies to have morphologies approaching that of early-type galaxies, and interpret this as evidence that strong starburst events are linked to bulge growth and constitute a process through which galaxies can be brought from the blue to the red sequence while simultaneously modifying their morphology accordingly. We conclude that the red sequence has continued growing at z~<0.7. We also observe z~0.7 galaxies to have physical properties similar to that of local galaxies, except for higher star formation rates. Whence we infer that the dimming of star-forming galaxies is responsible for most of the evolution in the star formation rate density of the Universe since that redshift, although our data are also consistent with a mild number evolution. [abridged], Comment: 29 pages including 22 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJS COSMOS Special Issue. A copy of the paper with high resolution figures is available at http://www.astro.columbia.edu/~michel/galex_cosmos_paper.pdf
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- 2007
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163. The Spitzer Legacy Survey of the HST-ACS 2 sq. deg. COSMOS Field: survey strategy and first analysis
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Sanders, D. B., Salvato, M., Aussel, H., Ilbert, O., Scoville, N., Surace, J. A., Frayer, D. T., Sheth, K., Helou, G., Brooke, T., Bhattacharya, B., Yan, L., Kartaltepe, J., Barnes, J. E., Blain, A. W., Calzetti, D., Capak, P., Carilli, C., Carollo, C. M., Comastri, A., Daddi, E., Ellis, R. S., Elvis, M., Fall, M., Franceschini, A., Giavalisco, M., Hasinger, G., Impey, C., Koekemoer, A., Fevre, O. Le, Lilly, S., Liu, M. C., McCracken, H. J., Mobasher, B., Renzini, A., Rich, M., Schinnerer, E., Shopbell, P. L., Taniguchi, Y., Thompson, D. J., Urry, C. M., and Williams, J. P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Spitzer-COSMOS survey (S-COSMOS) is a Legacy program (Cycles 2+3) designed to carry out a uniform deep survey of the full 2 sq deg COSMOS field in all seven Spitzer bands (3.6, 4.5, 5.6, 8.0, 24.0, 70.0, 160.0 u). This paper describes the survey parameters, mapping strategy, data reduction procedures, achieved sensitivities to date, and the complete data set for future reference. We show that the observed infrared backgrounds in the S-COSMOS field are within 10% of the predicted background levels. The fluctuations in the background at 24u have been measured and do not show any significant contribution from cirrus, as expected. In addition, we report on the number of asteroid detections in the low galactic latitude COSMOS field. We use the Cycle 2 S-COSMOS data to determine preliminary number counts, and compare our results with those from previous Spitzer Legacy surveys (e.g. SWIRE, GOODS). The results from this "first analysis" confirm that the S-COSMOS survey will have sufficient sensitivity with IRAC to detect ~ L* disks and spheroids out to z ~ 3, and with MIPS to detect ultraluminous starbursts and AGN out to z ~3 at 24u and out to z ~1.5-2 at 70u and 160u., Comment: 21 pages including 4 tables and 9 figures. Accepted for Publication on ApJS COSMOS special Issue
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- 2007
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164. Large Structures and Galaxy Evolution in COSMOS at z < 1.1
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Scoville, N., Aussel, H., Benson, A., Blain, A., Calzetti, D., Capak, P., Ellis, R. S., El-Zant, A., Finoguenov, A., Giavalisco, M., Guzzo, L., Hasinger, G., Koda, J., Lefevre, O., Massey, R., McCracken, H. J., Mobasher, B., Renzini, A., Rhodes, J., Salvato, M., Sanders, D. B., Sasaki, S. S., Schinnerer, E., Sheth, K., Shopbell, P. L., Taniguchi, Y., Taylor, J. E., and Thompson, D. J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first identification of large-scale structures (LSS) at z $< 1.1$ in the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS). The structures are identified from adaptive smoothing of galaxy counts in the pseudo-3d space ($\alpha,\delta$,z) using the COSMOS photometric redshift catalog. The technique is tested on a simulation including galaxies distributed in model clusters and a field galaxy population -- recovering structures on all scales from 1 to 20\arcmin without {\it a priori} assumptions for the structure size or density profile. Our procedure makes {\bf no} {\it a priori} selection on galaxy spectral energy distribution (SED, for example the Red Sequence), enabling an unbiased investigation of environmental effects on galaxy evolution. The COSMOS photometric redshift catalog yields a sample of $1.5\times10^5$ galaxies with redshift accuracy, $\Delta z_{FWHM}/(1+z) \leq 0.1$ at z $< 1.1$ down to I$_{AB} \leq 25$ mag. Using this sample of galaxies, we identify 42 large-scale structures and clusters. abstract truncated for astroph 25 line limit -- see preprint, Comment: 72 pages with 29 pages of figures, for cosmos apj suppl special issue
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- 2006
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165. The XMM-Newton wide-field survey in the COSMOS field. IV: X-ray spectral properties of Active Galactic Nuclei
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Mainieri, V., Hasinger, G., Cappelluti, N., Brusa, M., Brunner, H., Civano, F., Comastri, A., Elvis, M., Finoguenov, A., Fiore, F., Gilli, R., Lehmann, I., Silverman, J., Tasca, L., Vignali, C., Zamorani, G., Schinnerer, E., Impey, C., Trump, J., Lilly, S., Maier, C., Griffiths, R. E., Miyaji, T., Capak, P., Koekemoer, A., Scoville, N., Shopbell, P., and Taniguchi, Y.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a detailed spectral analysis of point-like X-ray sources in the XMM-COSMOS field. Our sample of 135 sources only includes those that have more than 100 net counts in the 0.3-10 keV energy band and have been identified through optical spectroscopy. The majority of the sources are well described by a simple power-law model with either no absorption (76%) or a significant intrinsic, absorbing column (20%).As expected, the distribution of intrinsic absorbing column densities is markedly different between AGN with or without broad optical emission lines. We find within our sample four Type-2 QSOs candidates (L_X > 10^44 erg/s, N_H > 10^22 cm^-2), with a spectral energy distribution well reproduced by a composite Seyfert-2 spectrum, that demonstrates the strength of the wide field XMM/COSMOS survey to detect these rare and underrepresented sources., Comment: 16 pages, ApJS COSMOS Special Issue, 2007 in press. The full-resolution version is available at http://www.mpe.mpg.de/XMMCosmos/PAPERS/mainieri_cosmos.ps.gz
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- 2006
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166. The XMM-Newton wide-field survey in the COSMOS field: VI. Statistical properties of clusters of galaxies
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Finoguenov, A., Guzzo, L., Hasinger, G., Scoville, N. Z., Aussel, H., Boehringer, H., Brusa, M., Capak, P., Cappelluti, N., Comastri, A., Giodini, S., Griffiths, R. E., Impey, C., Koekemoer, A. M., Kneib, J. -P., Leauthaud, A., Fevre, O. Le, Lilly, S., Mainieri, V., Massey, R., McCracken, H. J., Mobasher, B., Murayama, T., Peacock, J. A., Sakelliou, I., Schinnerer, E., Silverman, J. D., Smolcic, V., Taniguchi, Y., Tasca, L., Taylor, J. E., Trump, J. R., and Zamorani, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of a search for galaxy clusters in the first 36 XMM-Newton pointings on the COSMOS field. We reach a depth for a total cluster flux in the 0.5-2 keV band of 3x10-15 ergs cm-2 s-1, having one of the widest XMM-Newton contiguous raster surveys, covering an area of 2.1 square degrees. Cluster candidates are identified through a wavelet detection of extended X-ray emission. Verification of the cluster candidates is done based on a galaxy concentration analysis in redshift slices of thickness of 0.1-0.2 in redshift, using the multi-band photometric catalog of the COSMOS field and restricting the search to z<1.3 and i_AB < 25. We identify 72 clusters and derive their properties based on the X-ray cluster scaling relations. A statistical description of the survey in terms of the cumulative log(N>S)-lg(S) distribution compares well with previous results, although yielding a somewhat higher number of clusters at similar fluxes. The X-ray luminosity function of COSMOS clusters matches well the results of nearby surveys, providing a comparably tight constraint on the faint end slope of alpha=1.93+/-0.04. For the probed luminosity range of 8x10+42 - 2x10+44 ergs s-1, our survey is in agreement with and adds significantly to the existing data on the cluster luminosity function at high redshifts and implies no substantial evolution at these luminosities to z=1.3., Comment: 15 pages, to appear in the COSMOS Special Issue, ApJS 2007. More information onf XMM-COSMOS project could be found at http://www.mpe.mpg.de/XMMCosmos/
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- 2006
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167. The XMM-Newton wide-field survey in the COSMOS field: III. optical identification and multiwavelength properties of a large sample of X-ray selected sources
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Brusa, M., Zamorani, G., Comastri, A., Hasinger, G., Cappelluti, N., Civano, F., Finoguenov, A., Mainieri, V., Salvato, M., Vignali, C., Elvis, M., Fiore, F., Gilli, R., Impey, C. D., Lilly, S. J., Mignoli, M., Silverman, J., Trump, J., Urry, C. M., Bender, R., Capak, P., Huchra, J. P., Kneib, J. P., Koekemoer, A., Leauthaud, A., Lehmann, I., Massey, R., Matute, I., McCarthy, P. J., McCracken, H. J., Rhodes, J., Scoville, N. Z., Taniguchi, Y., and Thompson, D.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
[ABRIGED] We present the optical identification of a sample of 695 X-ray sources detected in the first 1.3 deg^2 of the XMM-COSMOS survey, down to a 0.5-2 keV (2-10 keV) limiting flux of ~10^-15 erg cm-2 s-1 (~5x10^-15 erg cm^-2 s-1). We were able to associate a candidate optical counterpart to ~90% (626) of the X-ray sources, while for the remaining ~10% of the sources we were not able to provide a unique optical association due to the faintness of the possible optical counterparts (I_AB>25) or to the presence of multiple optical sources within the XMM-Newton error circles. We also cross-correlated the candidate optical counterparts with the Subaru multicolor and ACS catalogs and with the Magellan/IMACS, zCOSMOS and literature spectroscopic data; the spectroscopic sample comprises 248 objects (~40% of the full sample). Our analysis reveals that for ~80% of the counterparts there is a very good agreement between the spectroscopic classification, the morphological parameters as derived from ACS data, and the optical to near infrared colors. About 20% of the sources show an apparent mismatch between the morphological and spectroscopic classifications. All the ``extended'' BL AGN lie at redshift <1.5, while the redshift distribution of the full BL AGN population peaks at z~1.5. Our analysis also suggests that the Type 2/Type 1 ratio decreases towards high luminosities, in qualitative agreement with the results from X-ray spectral analysis and the most recent modeling of the X-ray luminosity function evolution., Comment: 17 pages, ApJS COSMOS Special Issue, 2007 in press. Full resolution version is available at http://www.mpe.mpg.de/XMMCosmos/PAPERS/
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168. A Potential Galaxy Threshing System in the Cosmos Field
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Sasaki, S. S., Taniguchi, Y., Scoville, N., Mobasher, B., Aussel, H., Sanders, D. B., Koekemoer, A., Ajiki, M., Komiyama, Y., Miyazaki, S., Kaifu, N., Karoji, H., Okamura, S., Arimoto, N., Ohta, K., Shioya, Y., Murayama, T., Nagao, T., Koda, J., Hainline, L., Renzini, A., Giavalisco, M., LeFevre, O., Impey, C., Elvis, M., Lilly, S., Rich, M., Schinnerer, E., and Sheth, K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the discovery of a new potential galaxy threshing system in the COSMOS 2 square degree field using the prime-focus camera, Suprime-Cam, on the 8.2 m Subaru Telescope. This system consists of a giant elliptical galaxy with $M_V \approx -21.6$ and a tidally disrupted satellite galaxy with $M_V \approx -17.7$ at a photometric redshift of $z \approx 0.08$. This redshift is consistent with the spectroscopic redshift of 0.079 for the giant elliptical galaxy obtained from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) archive. The luminosity masses of the two galaxies are $3.7 \times 10^{12} \cal{M}_{\odot}$ and $3.1 \times 10^{9} \cal{M}_{\odot}$, respectively. The distance between the two galaxies is greater than 100 kpc. The two tidal tails emanating from the satellite galaxy extend over 150 kpc. This system would be the second well-defined galaxy threshing system found so far., Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, accepted for the COSMOS special issue of ApJS
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169. Radio and millimeter properties of $z \sim 5.7$ Ly$\alpha$ emitters in the COSMOS field: limits on radio AGN, submm galaxies, and dust obscuration
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Carilli, C. L., Murayam, T., Wang, R., Schinnerer, E., Taniguchi, Y., Smolcic, V., Bertoldi, F., Ajiki, M., Nagao, T., Sasaki, S. S., Shioya, Y., Aguirre, J. E., Blain, A. W., Scoville, N., and Sanders, D. B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present observations at 1.4 and 250 GHz of the $z\sim 5.7$ Ly$\alpha$ emitters (LAE) in the COSMOS field found by Murayama et al.. At 1.4 GHz there are 99 LAEs in the lower noise regions of the radio field. We do not detect any individual source down to 3$\sigma$ limits of $\sim 30\mu$Jy beam$^{-1}$ at 1.4 GHz, nor do we detect a source in a stacking analysis, to a 2$\sigma$ limit of $2.5\mu$Jy beam$^{-1}$. At 250 GHz we do not detect any of the 10 LAEs that are located within the central regions of the COSMOS field covered by MAMBO ($20' \times 20'$) to a typical 2$\sigma$ limit of $S_{250} < 2$mJy. The radio data imply that there are no low luminosity radio AGN with $L_{1.4} > 6\times 10^{24}$ W Hz$^{-1}$ in the LAE sample. The radio and millimeter observations also rule out any highly obscured, extreme starbursts in the sample, ie. any galaxies with massive star formation rates $> 1500$ M$_\odot$ year$^{-1}$ in the full sample (based on the radio data), or 500 M$_\odot$ year$^{-1}$ for the 10% of the LAE sample that fall in the central MAMBO field. The stacking analysis implies an upper limit to the mean massive star formation rate of $\sim 100$ M$_\odot$ year$^{-1}$., Comment: 11 pages AAStex format 3 figures. ApJ COSMOS Special Issue. Changes: Added 'Note added in proof' to reflect nine new sources in the LAE sample
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170. Photometric Redshifts of Galaxies in COSMOS
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Mobasher, B., Capak, P., Scoville, N. Z., Dahlen, T., Salvato, M., Aussel, H., Thompson, D. J., Feldmann, R., Tasca, L., Lefevre, O., Lilly, S., Carollo, C. M., Kartaltepe, J. S., McCracken, H., Mould, J., Renzini, A., Sanders, D. B., Shopbell, P. L., Taniguchi, Y., Ajiki, M., Shioya, Y., Contini, T., Giavalisco, M., Ilbert, O., Iovino, A., Brun, V. Le, Mainieri, V., Mignoli, M., and Scodeggio, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We measure photometric redshifts and spectral types for galaxies in the COSMOS survey. We use template fitting technique combined with luminosity function priors and with the option to simultaneously estimate dust extinction (i.e. E(B-V)) for each galaxy.Our estimated redshifts are accurate to i<25 and z~1.2. Using simulations with sampling and noise characteristics similar to those in COSMOS, the accuracy and reliability is estimated for the photometric redshifts as a function of the magnitude limits of the sample, S/N ratios and the number of bands used. From the simulations we find that the ratio of derived 95% confidence interval in the redshift probability distribution to the estimated photometric redshift (D95) can be used to identify and exclude the catastrophic failures in the photometric redshift estimates. We compare the derived redshifts with high-reliability spectroscopic redshifts for a sample of 868 normal galaxies with z < 1.2 from zCOSMOS. Considering different scenarios, depending on using prior, no prior and/or extinction, we compare the photometric and spectroscopic redshifts for this sample. This corresponds to an rms scatter of 0.031, with a small number of outliers (<2.5%). We also find good agreement (rms=0.10) between photometric and spectroscopic redshifts for Type II AGNs. We compare results from our photometric redshift procedure with three other independent codes and find them in excellent agreement. We show preliminary results, based on photometric redshifts for the entire COSMOS sample (to i < 25 mag.)., Comment: 38 pages; 14 Figures; 7 Tables. Accepted for Publication in ApJS. COSMOS Special Issue
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171. The stellar content of the COSMOS field as derived from morphological and SED based gtar/galaxy Separation
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Robin, A. C., Rich, R. M., Aussel, H., Capak, P., Tasca, L. A. M., Jahnke, K., Kakazu, Y., Kneib, J-P., Koekemoer, A., Leauthaud, A. C., Lilly, S., Mobasher, B., Scoville, N., Taniguchi, Y., and Thompson, D. J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the stellar content of the COSMOS two degree field, as derived from a rigorous star/galaxy separation approach developed for using stellar sources to define the point spread function variation map used in a study of weak galaxy lensing. The catalog obtained in one filter from the ACS (Advanced Camera for Survey on the Hubble Space Telescope) is cross-identified with ground based multi-wavelength catalogs. The classification is reliable to magnitude $F_{814W}=24$ and the sample is complete even fainter. We construct a color-magnitude diagram and color histograms and compare them with predictions of a standard model of population synthesis. We find features corresponding to the halo subdwarf main sequence turnoff, the thick disk, and the thin disk. This data set provides constraints on the thick disk and spheroid density laws and on the IMF at low mass. We find no evidence of a sharp spheroid edge out to this distance. We identify a blue population of white dwarfs with counts that agree with model predictions. We find a hint for a possible slight stellar overdensity at about 22-34 kpc but the data are not strong enough at present to claim detection of a stream feature in the halo (abridged)., Comment: 32 pages, 13 figures, accepted in APJ Suppl COSMOS special issue, replaced by larger figures. A full resolution figure preprint can be found at ftp://ftp.obs-besancon.fr/pub/outgoing/annie/star-cosmos.pdf
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172. The Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) -- Overview
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Scoville, N., Aussel, H., Brusa, M., Capak, P., Carollo, C. M., Elvis, M., Giavalisco, M., Guzzo, L., Hasinger, G., Impey, C., Kneib, J. -P., LeFevre, O., Lilly, S. J., Mobasher, B., Renzini, A., Rich, R. M., Sanders, D. B., Schinnerer, E., Schminovich, D., Shopbell, P., Taniguchi, Y., and Tyson, N. D.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) is designed to probe the correlated evolution of galaxies, star formation, active galactic nuclei (AGN) and dark matter (DM) with large-scale structure (LSS) over the redshift range z $> 0.5 $ to 6. The survey includes multi-wavelength imaging and spectroscopy from X-ray to radio wavelengths covering a 2 $\sq$\deg area, including HST imaging. Given the very high sensitivity and resolution of these datasets, COSMOS also provides unprecedented samples of objects at high redshift with greatly reduced cosmic variance, compared to earlier surveys. Here we provide a brief overview of the survey strategy, the characteristics of the major COSMOS datasets, and summarize the science goals., Comment: 22 pages, 3 figures
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173. COSMOS : Hubble Space Telescope Observations
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Scoville, N., Benson, A., Blain, A. W., Calzetti, D., Comastri, A., Capak, P., Carilli, C., Carlstrom, J. E., Carollo, C. M., Colbert, J., Daddi, E., Ellis, R. S., Elvis, M., Ewald, S. P., Fall, M., Franceschini, A., Giavalisco, M., Green, W., Griffiths, R. E., Guzzo, L., Hasinger, G., Impey, C., Kneib, J-P., Koda, J., Koekemoer, A., Lefevre, O., Lilly, S., Liu, C. T., McCracken, H. J., Massey, R., Mellier, Y., Miyazaki, S., Mobasher, B., Mould, J., Norman, C., Refregier, A., Renzini, A., Rhodes, J., Rich, M., Sanders, D. B., Schiminovich, D., Schinnerer, E., Scodeggio, M., Sheth, K., Shopbell, P. L., Taniguchi, Y., Tyson, N., Urry, C. M., Van Waerbeke, L., Vettolani, P., White, S. D. M., Yan, L., and Zamorani, G
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) was initiated with an extensive allocation (590 orbits in Cycles 12-13) using the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) for high resolution imaging. Here we review the characteristics of the HST imaging with the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) and parallel observations with NICMOS and WFPC2. A square field (1.8$\sq$\deg) has been imaged with single-orbit ACS I-F814W exposures with 50% completeness for sources 0.5\arcsec in diameter at I$_{AB} $ = 26.0 mag. The ACS imaging is a key part of the COSMOS survey, providing very high sensitivity and high resolution (0.09\arcsec FWHM, 0.05\arcsec pixels) imaging and detecting 1.2 million objects to a limiting magnitude of 26.5 (AB). These images yield resolved morphologies for several hundred thousand galaxies. The small HST PSF also provides greatly enhanced sensitivity for weak lensing investigations of the dark matter distribution., Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures -- to appear in COSMOS ApJ Suppl. special issue
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174. zCOSMOS: A Large VLT/VIMOS redshift survey covering 0 < z < 3 in the COSMOS field
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Lilly, S. J., Fevre, O. Le, Renzini, A., Zamorani, G., Scodeggio, M., Contini, T., Carollo, C. M., Hasinger, G., Kneib, J. -P., Iovino, A., Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mainieri, V., Mignoli, M., Silverman, J., Tasca, L. A. M., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Bottini, D., Capak, P., Caputi, K., Cimatti, A., Cucciati, O., Daddi, E., Feldmann, R., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Guzzo, L., Ilbert, O., Kampczyk, P., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Leauthaud, A., Borgne, J. -F. Le, McCracken, H. J., Marinoni, C., Pello, R., Ricciardelli, E., Scarlata, C., Vergani, D., Sanders, D. B., Schinnerer, E., Scoville, N., Taniguchi, Y., and members, other zCOSMOS team
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Astrophysics - Abstract
zCOSMOS is a large redshift survey that is being undertaken in the COSMOS field using 600 hours of observation with the VIMOS spectrograph on the 8-m VLT. The survey is designed to characterise the environments of COSMOS galaxies from the 100 kpc scales of galaxy groups up to the 100 Mpc scale of the cosmic web and to produce diagnostic information on galaxies and active galactic nuclei. The zCOSMOS survey consists of two parts: (a) zCOSMOS-bright, a magnitude-limited I-band IAB < 22.5 sample of about 20,000 galaxies with 0.1 < z < 1.2 covering the whole 1.7 deg2 COSMOS ACS field and designed to mimic the parameters of the 2dfGRS; and (b) zCOSMOS-deep, a survey of approximately 10,000 galaxies selected through colour-selection criteria to have 1.4 < z < 3.0, within the central 1 deg2. This paper describes the survey design and the construction of the target catalogues, and briefly outlines the observational program and the data pipeline. In the first observing season, spectra of 1303 zCOSMOS-bright targets and of 977 zCOSMOS-deep targets have been obtained. These are briefly analysed to demonstrate the characteristics that may be expected from zCOSMOS, and particularly zCOSMOS-bright, when it is finally completed between 2008-2009. The power of combining spectroscopic and photometric redshifts is demonstrated, especially in correctly identifying the emission line in single-line spectra and in determining which of the less reliable spectroscopic redshifts are correct and which are incorrect. Our zCOSMOS-deep spectra demonstrate the effectiveness of our selection techniques to isolate high redshift galaxies at 1.4 < z < 3.0 and of VIMOS to measure their redshifts using ultraviolet absorption lines., Comment: 24 pages plus 16 figures. Accepted, to appear in the ApJ Supplement COSMOS Special Issue
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175. The Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS): Subaru Observations of the HST COSMOS Field
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Taniguchi, Y., Scoville, N., Murayama, T., Sanders, D. B., Mobasher, B., Aussel, H., Capak, P., Ajiki, M., Miyazaki, S., Komiyama, Y., Shioya, Y., Nagao, T., Sasaki, S. S., Koda, J., Carilli, C., Giavalisco, M., Guzzo, L., Hasinger, G., Impey, C., LeFevre, O., Lilly, S., Renzini, A., Rich, M., Schinnerer, E., Shopbell, P., Kaifu, N., Karoji, H., Arimoto, N., Okamura, S., and Ohta, K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present deep optical imaging observations of 2 square degree area, covered by the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS), made by the prime-focus Camera (Supreme-Cam) on the 8.2m Subaru Telescope. Observations were done in six broad-band [B (4459.7 AA), g' (4723.1 AA), V (5483.8 AA), r' (6213.0 AA), i' (7640.8 AA), z' (8855.0 AA)], and one narrow-band (NB816) filters. A total of 10^6 galaxies were detected to i'~26.5 mag. These data, combined with observations at u* and K-band are used to construct the photometric catalogs for the COSMOS and to measure their photometric redshifts, multi-band spectral energy distributions, stellar masses and identification of high redshift candidates. This catalog provides multi-waveband data for scientific analysis of the COSMOS survey., Comment: 46 pages, 32 figures, accepted for the COSMOS special issue of ApJS
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176. COSMOS morphological classification with ZEST (the Zurich Estimator of Structural Types) and the evolution since z=1 of the Luminosity Function of early-, disk-, and irregular galaxies
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Scarlata, C., Carollo, C. M., Lilly, S. J., Sargent, M. T., Feldmann, R., Kampczyk, P., Porciani, C., Koekemoer, A., Scoville, N., Kneib, J-P., Leauthaud, A., Massey, R., Rhodes, J., Tasca, L., Capak, P., Maier, C., McCracken, H. J., Mobasher, B., Renzini, A., Taniguchi, Y., Thompson, D., Sheth, K., Ajiki, M., Aussel, H., Murayama, T., Sanders, D. B., Sasaki, S., Shioya, Y., and Takahashi, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
(ABRIDGED) Motivated by the desire to reliably and automatically classify structure of thousands of COSMOS galaxies, we present ZEST, the Zurich Estimator of Structural Types. To classify galaxy structure, ZEST uses: (i) Five non-parametric diagnostics: asymmetry, concentration, Gini coefficient, 2nd-order moment of the brightest 20% of galaxy pixels, and ellipticity; and (ii) The exponent n of single--Sersic fits to the 2D surface brightness distributions. To fully exploit the wealth of information while reducing the redundancy present in these diagnostics, ZEST performs a principal component (PC) Analysis. We use a sample of ~56,000 I<24 COSMOS galaxies to show that the first three PCs fully describe the key aspects of the galaxy structure, i.e., to calibrate a three-dimensional classification grid of axis PC_1, PC_2, and PC_3. We demonstrate the robustness of the ZEST grid on the z=0 sample of Frei et al. (1996). The ZEST classification breaks most of the degeneracy between different galaxy populations that affects morphological classifications based on only some of the diagnostics included in ZEST. As a first application, we present the evolution since z~1 of the Luminosity Functions of COSMOS galaxies of early, disk and irregular galaxies and, for disk galaxies, of different bulge-to-disk ratios. Overall, we find that the LF up to a redshift z=1 is consistent with a pure-luminosity evolution (of about 0.95 magnitudes at z \~0.7). We highlight however two trends, that are in general agreement with a down-sizing scenario for galaxy formation: (1.) A deficit of a factor of about two at z~0.7 of MB>-20.5 structurally--classified early--type galaxies; and (2.) An excess of a factor of about three, at a similar redshift, of irregular galaxies., Comment: Accepted for publication in the ApJ COSMOS special issue. A version with high resolution figures is available at http://www.exp-astro.phys.ethz.ch/scarlata/papers/ApJS_ZEST.pdf
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177. Simulating the COSMOS: The fraction of merging galaxies at high redshift
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Kampczyk, P., Lilly, S. J., Carollo, C. M., Scarlata, C., Feldmann, R., Koekemoer, A., Leauthaud, A., Taniguchi, Y., and Capak, P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Simulations of nearby (0.015 < z < 0.025) SDSS galaxies have been used to reproduce as accurately as possible the appearance that they would have on COSMOS ACS images if they had been observed at z ~ 0.7 and z ~ 1.2. By adding the SDSS galaxies to random locations in the COSMOS images, we simulate the effects of chance superpositions of high redshift galaxies with unrelated foreground or background objects. We have used these simulated images, together with those of real COSMOS galaxies at these same redshifts, to undertake a "blind" morphological classification of galaxies to identify those that appear to be undergoing mergers and thus to estimate the change in merger fraction with redshift. We find that real mergers are harder to recognize at high redshift, and also that the chance superposition of unrelated galaxies often produces the appearance of mergers where in reality none exists. In particular, we estimate that 1.5 - 2.0% of objects randomly added to ACS images are misclassified as mergers due to projection with unrelated objects, and as a result, that 40% of the apparent mergers in COSMOS at z=0.7 are likely to be spurious. We find that the fraction of galaxies undergoing mergers increases as (1+z)^3.8+/-1.2 to z ~ 0.7 and that this trend appears to continue to z = 1.2. Merger candidates at z ~ 0.7 are bluer than the parent population, especially when the statistical effects of the chance projections are accounted for. Merger candidates are more asymmetric than the population as a whole, and are often associated with irregular morphology. Nevertheless, the majority (~60%) of the merger candidates appear to be associated with spiral galaxies although in this case we cannot correct for the effects of chance projections., Comment: 24 pages, 7 figures; accepted for publication in the ApJ
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178. A wide angle tail radio galaxy in the COSMOS field: evidence for cluster formation
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Smolcic, V., Schinnerer, E., Finoguenov, A., Sakelliou, I., Carilli, C. L., Botzler, C. S., Brusa, M., Scoville, N., Ajiki, M., Capak, P., Guzzo, L., Hasinger, G., Impey, C., Jahnke, K., Kartaltepe, J. S., McCracken, H. J., Mobasher, B., Murayama, T., Sasaki, S. S., Shioya, Y., Taniguchi, Y., and Trump, J. R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have identified a complex galaxy cluster system in the COSMOS field via a wide angle tail (WAT) radio galaxy consistent with the idea that WAT galaxies can be used as tracers of clusters. The WAT galaxy, CWAT-01, is coincident with an elliptical galaxy resolved in the HST-ACS image. Using the COSMOS multiwavelength data set, we derive the radio properties of CWAT-01 and use the optical and X-ray data to investigate its host environment. The cluster hosting CWAT-01 is part of a larger assembly consisting of a minimum of four X-ray luminous clusters within ~2 Mpc distance. We apply hydrodynamical models that combine ram pressure and buoyancy forces on CWAT-01. These models explain the shape of the radio jets only if the galaxy's velocity relative to the intra-cluster medium (ICM) is in the range of about 300-550 km/s which is higher than expected for brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs) in relaxed systems. This indicates that the CWAT-01 host cluster is not relaxed, but is possibly dynamically young. We argue that such a velocity could have been induced through subcluster merger within the CWAT-01 parent cluster and/or cluster-cluster interactions. Our results strongly indicate that we are witnessing the formation of a large cluster from an assembly of multiple clusters, consistent with the hierarchical scenario of structure formation. We estimate the total mass of the final cluster to be approximately 20% of the mass of the Coma cluster., Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures; accepted for publication in ApJS, COSMOS special issue; added color figure (Fig. 13) which was previously unavailable
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179. Kaon $B$-parameters for Generic $\Delta S=2$ Four-Quark Operators in Quenched Domain Wall QCD
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Collaboration, CP-PACS, Nakamura, Y., Aoki, S., Fukugita, M., Ishizuka, N., Iwasaki, Y., Kanaya, K., Kuramashi, Y., Noaki, J., Okawa, M., Taniguchi, Y., Ukawa, A., and Yoshie, T.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We present a study of $B$-parameters for generic $\Delta S=2$ four-quark operators in domain wall QCD. Our calculation covers all the $B$-parameters required to study the neutral kaon mixing in the standard model (SM) and beyond it. We evaluate one-loop renormalization factors of the operators employing the plaquette and Iwasaki gauge actions. Numerical simulations are carried out in quenched QCD with both gauge actions on $16^3\times 32\times 16$ and $24^3\times 32\times 16$ at the lattice spacing $1/a\approx 2$GeV. We investigate the relative magnitudes of the non-SM $B$-parameters to the SM one, which are compared with the previous results obtained with the overlap and the clover quark actions., Comment: 7 pages, talk presented at Lattice2006 (Electroweak Decays and Mixing), PoS format
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180. 2+1 Flavor Lattice QCD with Luescher's Domain-Decomposed HMC Algorithm
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Collaboration, PACS-CS, Kuramashi, Y., Aoki, S., Ishikawa, K. -I., Ishikawa, T., Ishizuka, N., Kanaya, K., Tsutsui, N., Okawa, M., Taniguchi, Y., Ukawa, A., and Yoshie, T.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We report on a study of 2+1 flavor lattice QCD with the $O(a)$-improved Wilson quarks on a $16^3\times 32$ lattice at the lattice spacing $1/a\approx 2$GeV employing Luescher's domain-decomposed HMC(LDDHMC) algorithm. This is dedicated to a preliminary study for the PACS-CS project which plans to complete the Wilson-clover $N_f=2+1$ program lowering the up-down quark masses close to the physical values as much as possible. We focus on three issues: (i) how light quark masses we can reach with LDDHMC, (ii) efficiency of the algorithm compared with the conventional HMC, (iii) parameter choice for the production runs on PACS-CS., Comment: 7 pages, talk presented at Lattice2006 (Algorithm), PoS format
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181. 2+1 flavor light hadron spectrum and quark masses with the O(a) improved Wilson-clover quark formalism
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Collaborations, CP-PACS/JLQCD, Ishikawa, T., Aoki, S., Fukugita, M., Hashimoto, S., Ishikawa, K. -I., Ishizuka, N., Iwasaki, Y., Kanaya, K., Kaneko, T., Kuramashi, Y., Okawa, M., Taniguchi, Y., Tsutsui, N., Ukawa, A., Yamada, N., and Yoshié, T.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We present a summary of results of the joint CP-PACS and JLQCD project toward a 2+1 flavor full QCD simulation with the O(a)-improved Wilson quark formalism and the Iwasaki gauge action. Configurations were generated during 2002-2005 at three lattice spacings, a~0.076, 0.100 and 0.122 fm, keeping the physical volume constant at (2.0fm)^3. Up and down quark masses are taken in the range m_{PS}/m_V~0.6-0.78. We have completed the analysis for the light meson spectrum and quark masses in the continuum limit using the full configuration set. The predicted meson masses reproduce experimental values in the continuum limit at a 1% level. The average up and down, and strange quark masses turn out to be m_{ud}^{\bar{MS}}(\mu=2 GeV)=3.50(14)({}^{+26}_{-15}) MeV and m_s^{\bar{MS}}(\mu=2 GeV)=91.8(3.9)({}^{+6.8}_{-4.1}) MeV. We discuss our future strategy toward definitive results on hadron spectroscopy with the Wilson-clover formalism., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, talk presented at Lattice2006 (Hadron Spectroscopy), PoS format (v3: typos corrected)
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182. An application of the UV-filtering preconditioner to the Polynomial Hybrid Monte Carlo algorithm
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Collaboration, PACS-CS, Ishikawa, K-I., Aoki, S., Ishikawa, T., Ishizuka, N., Kanaya, K., Kuramashi, Y., Okawa, M., Taniguchi, Y., Ukawa, A., and Yoshie, T.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We apply the UV-filtering preconditioner, previously used to improve the Multi-Boson algorithm, to the Polynomial Hybrid Monte Carlo (UV-PHMC) algorithm. The performance test for the algorithm is given for the plaquette gauge action and the $O(a)$-improved Wilson action at $\beta=5.2, c_{\mathrm{sw}}=2.02, M_{\pi}/M_{\rho}\sim 0.8$ and 0.7 on a $16^3\times 48$ lattice. We find that the UV-filtering reduces the magnitude of the molecular dynamics force from the pseudo fermion by a factor 3 by tuning the UV-filter parameter. Combining with the multi-time scale molecular dynamics integrator we achieve a factor 2 improvement., Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, talk presented at Lattice2006 (Algorithm), PoS format; v2 references added
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183. An estimate of the eta and eta-prime meson masses in Nf=2+1 lattice QCD
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CP-PACS, Collaborations, JLQCD, Aoki, S., Fukugita, M., Ishikawa, K. -I., Ishikawa, T., Ishizuka, N., Iwasaki, Y., Kanaya, K., Kuramashi, Y., Okawa, M., Taniguchi, Y., Ukawa, A., Yamada, N., and Yoshie, T.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
Masses of the eta and eta-prime mesons are estimated in Nf=2+1 lattice QCD with the non-perturbatively O(a) improved Wilson quark action and the Iwasaki RG-improved gluon action, using CP-PACS/JLQCD configurations on a 16^3 x 32 lattice at beta=1.83 (lattice spacing is 0.122 fm). We apply a stochastic noise estimator technique combined with smearing method to evaluate correlators among flavor SU(2) singlet pseudoscalar operators and strange pseudoscalar operators for 10 combinations of up/down and strange quark masses. The correlator matrix is then diagonalized to identify signals for mass eigenstates. Masses of the ground state and the first excited state extrapolated to the physical point are m_eta= 0.545(16) GeV and m_eta-prime= 0.871(46) GeV, being close to the experimental values of the eta and eta-prime masses., Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, talk presented at Lattice2006 (Hadron Spectroscopy)
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- 2006
184. The Zurich Extragalactic Bayesian Redshift Analyzer (ZEBRA) and its first application: COSMOS
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Feldmann, R., Carollo, C. M., Porciani, C., Lilly, S. J., Capak, P., Taniguchi, Y., Fevre, O. Le, Renzini, A., Scoville, N., Ajiki, M., Aussel, H., Contini, T., McCracken, H., Mobasher, B., Murayama, T., Sanders, D., Sasaki, S., Scarlata, C., Scodeggio, M., Shioya, Y., Silverman, J., Takahashi, M., Thompson, D., and Zamorani, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present ZEBRA, the Zurich Extragalactic Bayesian Redshift Analyzer. The current version of ZEBRA combines and extends several of the classical approaches to produce accurate photometric redshifts down to faint magnitudes. In particular, ZEBRA uses the template-fitting approach to produce Maximum Likelihood and Bayesian redshift estimates based on: (1.) An automatic iterative technique to correct the original set of galaxy templates to best represent the SEDs of real galaxies at different redshifts; (2.) A training set of spectroscopic redshifts for a small fraction of the photometric sample; and (3.) An iterative technique for Bayesian redshift estimates, which extracts the full two-dimensional redshift and template probability function for each galaxy. We demonstrate the performance of ZEBRA by applying it to a sample of 866 I_AB <= 22.5 COSMOS galaxies with available u*, B, V, g', r', i', z' and K_s photometry and zCOSMOS spectroscopic redshifts in the range 0 < z < 1.3. Adopting a 5-sigma-clipping that excludes less than 10 galaxies, both the Maximum Likelihood and Bayesian estimates for this sample have an accuracy dz/1+z better than 0.03. Similar accuracies are recovered using mock galaxies., Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, some figures with reduced resolution, a high-resolution version can be obtained at http://www.exp-astro.phys.ethz.ch/ZEBRA/, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2006
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185. The evolution of the number density of large disk galaxies in COSMOS
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Sargent, M. T., Carollo, C. M., Lilly, S. J., Scarlata, C., Feldmann, R., Kampczyk, P., Koekemoer, A. M., Scoville, N., Kneib, J. -P., Leauthaud, A., Massey, R., Rhodes, J., Tasca, L. A. M., Capak, P., McCracken, H. J., Porciani, C., Renzini, A., Taniguchi, Y., Thompson, D. J., and Sheth, K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We study a sample of approximately 16,500 galaxies with I_AB <= 22.5 in the COSMOS field. Structural information on the galaxies is derived by fitting single Sersic models to their two-dimensional surface brightness distributions. We investigate the evolution of the number density of disk galaxies larger than 5 kpc between redshift z~1 and the present epoch. To this end, we use the measurements of the half-light radii to construct, as a function of redshift, the size function of both the total disk galaxy population and of disk galaxies split in four bins of bulge-to-disk ratio. Furthermore, we use a selected sample of roughly 1800 SDSS galaxies to calibrate our results with respect to the local universe. We find that: (i) The number density of disk galaxies with intermediate sizes (r_{1/2}~5-7 kpc) remains nearly constant from z~1 to today. (ii) The number density of the largest disks (r_{1/2}>7 kpc) decreases by a factor of about two out to z~1. (iii) There is a constancy in the number density of large bulgeless disks out to z~1; the deficit of large disks at early epochs seems to arise from a smaller number of bulged disks. Our results indicate that the bulk of the large disk galaxy population has completed its growth by z~1, and support the hypothesis that secular evolution processes produce - or at least add stellar mass to - the bulge components of disk galaxies., Comment: Accepted for publication in the ApJ COSMOS special issue. A version with figures in higher resolution is available at http://www.exp-astro.phys.ethz.ch/sargent/manuscripts/ApJS_sizes.pdf
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- 2006
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186. Deep GEMINI GMOS-IFU spectroscopy of BAL QSOs: I. Decoupling the BAL, QSO, starburst, NLR, supergiant bubbles and galactic wind in Mrk 231
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Lipari, S., Sanchez, S. F., Bergmann, M., Terlevich, R., Garcia-Lorenzo, B., Punsly, B., Mediavilla, E., Taniguchi, Y., Ajiki, M., Zheng, W., Acosta, J., and Jahnke, K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In this work we present the first results of a study of BAL QSOs (at low and high redshift), based on very deep Gemini GMOS integral field spectroscopy. In particular, the results obtained for the nearest BAL IR QSO Mrk 231 are presented. Very deep three-dimensional spectra and maps clearly show that the BAL systems I and II are extended (reaching 1.4-1.6" = 1.2-1.3 kpc, from the nucleus) and clearly elongated at the position angle close to the radio jet PA. Which suggest that the BAL systems I and II are both associated with the radio jet, and supporting the bipolar jet-wind model for some BALs. For the nuclear region of Mrk 231, the QSO and host-galaxy components were modelled, using a new technique of decoupling 3D spectra. From this study, the following main results were found: (i) in the pure host galaxy spectrum an extreme nuclear starburst component was clearly observed, mainly as a very strong increase in the flux, at the blue wavelengths; (ii) the BAL system I is observed in the spectrum of the host galaxy; (iii) in the clean/pure QSO emission spectrum, only broad lines were detected. 3D GMOS individual spectra (specially in the IR Ca II triplet) and maps confirm the presence of an extreme and young nuclear starburst (8 < age < 15 Myr), which was detected mainly in a ring or toroid with a radius r = 0.3" = 200 pc, around the very nucleus. The physical properties of the four expanding nuclear bubbles were analysed, using the GMOS 3D spectra and maps. These results suggest that an important part of the nuclear NLR is generated by the OF process and the associated low velocity ionizing shocks., Comment: 51 pages, 20 figures, Submitted MNRAS
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- 2006
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187. The End of the Reionization Epoch Probed by Ly-alpha Emitters at z=6.5 in the Subaru Deep Field
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Kashikawa, N., Shimasaku, K., Malkan, M. A., Doi, M., Matsuda, Y., Ouchi, M., Taniguchi, Y., Ly, C., Nagao, T., Iye, M., Motohara, K., Murayama, T., Murozono, K., Nariai, K., Ohta, K., Okamura, S., Sasaki, T., Shioya, Y., and Umemura, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report an extensive search for Lyman-alpha emitters (LAEs) at z=6.5 in the Subaru Deep Field. Subsequent spectroscopy with Subaru and Keck identified eight more LAEs, giving a total of 17 spectroscopically confirmed LAEs at z=6.5. Based on this spectroscopic sample of 17, complemented by a photometric sample of 58 LAEs, we have derived a more accurate Lyman-alpha luminosity function of LAEs at z=6.5, which reveals an apparent deficit at the bright end of ~0.75 mag fainter L*, compared with that observed at z=5.7. The difference in the LAE luminosity functions between z=5.7 and 6.5 is significant at the 3-sigma level, which is reduced to 2-sigma when cosmic variance is taken into account. This result may imply that the reionization of the universe has not been completed at z=6.5. We found that the spatial distribution of LAEs at z=6.5 was homogeneous over the field. We discuss the implications of these results for the reionization of the universe., Comment: To appear in APJ vol.648. Only minor corrections have been made. Black&White version is available at http://zone.mtk.nao.ac.jp/~kashik/sdf/z6p5lae/paper/sdf_z6p5lae_bw.pdf
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- 2006
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188. Ly Alpha Emitters at z=5.7 in the Subaru Deep Field
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Shimasaku, K., Kashikawa, N., Doi, M., Ly, C., Malkan, M. A., Matsuda, Y., Ouchi, M., Hayashino, T., Iye, M., Motohara, K., Murayama, T., Nagao, T., Ohta, K., Okamura, S., Sasaki, T., Shioya, Y., and Taniguchi, Y.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the properties of Ly Alpha emitters (LAEs) at z = 5.7 in the Subaru Deep Field. A photometric sample of 89 LAE candidates is constructed from narrow-band (NB816) data down to NB816 = 26.0 (AB) in a continuous 725 arcmin^2 area. Spectra of 39 objects satisfying the photometric selection criteria for LAEs were obtained with Subaru and Keck II Telescopes, among which 28 were confirmed LAEs, one was a nearby galaxy, and eight were unclassified. We also obtained spectra of another 24 NB816-excess objects in the field, identifying six additional LAEs. We find that the Ly Alpha luminosity function derived from the photometric sample is reproduced well by a Schechter function with L* = (7.9+3.0-2.2) x 10^42 erg/s and phi* = (6.3+3.0-2.0) x 10^-4 Mpc^-3 for alpha = -1.5 (fixed) over the whole luminosity range of L ~= 3x10^42 - 3x10^43 erg/s. We then measure rest-frame Ly Alpha equivalent widths (EWs) for the confirmed LAEs, to find that the median among the 28 objects satisfying the photometric selection criteria is W_0^i = 233 A. We infer that 30% - 40% of LAEs at z=5.7 exceed W_0^i = 240 A. These large-EW objects probably cannot be accounted for by ordinary star-forming populations with a Salpeter IMF. We also find that LAEs with fainter far-UV luminosities have larger EWs. Finally, we derive the far-UV luminosity function of LAEs down to M_UV ~= -19.6 using the photometric sample, and compare it with that of Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs). We find that as high as about 80% of LBGs at z ~ 6 have W_0^i >= 100 A, in sharp contrast to lower-z counterparts., Comment: 23 pages, 20 figs, accepted for PASJ, a high resolution version of Figs.7,8 is available at http://hikari.astron.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~shima/z57LAE/
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- 2006
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189. Downsizing of Star-Forming Galaxies by Gravitational Processes
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Mouri, H. and Taniguchi, Y.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
There is observed a trend that a lower mass galaxy forms stars at a later epoch. This downsizing of star-forming galaxies has been attributed to hydrodynamical or radiative feedback processes that regulate star formation. However, here we explain the downsizing by gravitational processes alone, in the bottom-up scenario where galaxies evolve from subgalactic-scale objects. Within a region of the initial density field that is to evolve into a lower mass galaxy, subgalactic-scale fluctuation is of a smaller amplitude. The formation of subgalactic-scale objects, i.e., gravitational collapse of the subgalactic-scale fluctuation, and the subsequent onset of star formation accordingly occur at a later epoch for a lower mass galaxy. As a function of galaxy mass, we calculate the peak epoch of formation of subgalactic-scale objects. The peak epoch is consistent with the peak epoch of star formation derived from observations. [abridged], Comment: 4 pages, to appear in Astronomy and Astrophysics (Research Note)
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- 2006
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190. Large-scale Filamentary Structure around the Protocluster at Redshift z=3.1
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Matsuda, Y., Yamada, T., Hayashino, T., Tamura, H., Yamauchi, R., Murayama, T., Nagao, T., Ohta, K., Okamura, S., Ouchi, M., Shimasaku, K., Shioya, Y., and Taniguchi, Y.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of a large-scale coherent filamentary structure of Lyman alpha emitters in a redshift space at z=3.1. We carried out spectroscopic observations to map the three dimensional structure of the belt-like feature of the Lyman alpha emitters discovered by our previous narrow-band imaging observations centered on the protocluster at z=3.1. The feature was found to consist of at least three physical filaments connecting with each other. The result is in qualitative agreement with the prediction of the 'biased' galaxy-formation theories that galaxies preferentially formed in large-scale filamentary or sheet-like mass overdensities in the early Universe. We also found that the two known giant Lyman alpha emission-line nebulae showing high star-formation activities are located near the intersection of these filaments, which presumably evolves into a massive cluster of galaxies in the local Universe. This may suggest that massive galaxy formation occurs at the characteristic place in the surrounding large-scale structure at high redshift., Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
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- 2005
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191. Early Stage of Galaxy Formation
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Taniguchi, Y., Nagao, T., Ajiki, M., Shioya, Y., Sasaki, S. S., and Murayama, T.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We discuss on the early stage of galaxy formation based on recent deep surveys for very high-redshift galaxies, mostly beyond redshift of 6. These galaxies are observed to be strong Lyman$\alpha$ emitters, indicating bursts of massive star formation in them. The fraction of such star-forming system appears to increase with increasing redshift. On the other hand, the star formation rate density derived from Lyman$\alpha$ emitters tends to decrease with increasing redshift. It is thus suggested that the major epoch of initial starbursts may occur around $z \sim$ 6 -- 7. In order to understand the early stage of galaxy formation, new surveys for galaxies beyond redshift of 7 will be important in near future., Comment: 4 pages with 1 table, Invited Review Talk presented at IAU The 9th Asian Pacific Regional Meeting
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- 2005
192. The PACS-CS Project
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Collaboration, PACS-CS, Aoki, S., Ishikawa, K. -I., Ishikawa, T., Ishizuka, N., Kanaya, K., Kuramashi, Y., Okawa, M., Sasaki, K., Taniguchi, Y., Tsutsui, N., Ukawa, A., and Yoshie, T.
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High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We describe our plan to develop a large-scale cluster system with a peak speed of 14.3Tflops for lattice QCD at the Center for Computational Sciences, University of Tsukuba, as a successor to the current 0.6Tflops CP-PACS computer. The system consist of 2560 nodes connected by a 16x16x10 three-dimensional hyper crossbar network. Each node has a single low-voltage 2.8GHz Xeon processor and 2GBytes of memory with 6.4GBytes/sec bandwidth, and 160 GBytes of disk in RAID1 mode. The network link in each of the three directions is made of dual Gigabit Ethernet with the peak throughput of 250MByte/sec. Hence each node has an aggregate network bandwidth of 750MByte/sec. The system will run under Linux and SCore, and an extension of the PM driver is developed for the network. The system will be developed jointly with Hitachi Limited. The installation is scheduled in the first quarter of Japanese Fiscal 2006 (April-June 2006) and the start of operation is expected in July 2006., Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, talk presented at Lattice2005 (Algorithm and Machines)
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- 2005
193. Light hadron spectrum and quark masses in 2+1 flavor QCD
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CP-PACS, Collaborations, JLQCD, Ishikawa, T., Aoki, S., Bär, O., Fukugita, M., Hashimoto, S., Ishikawa, K. -I., Ishizuka, N., Iwasaki, Y., Kanaya, K., Kaneko, T., Kuramashi, Y., Okawa, M., Taniguchi, Y., Tsutsui, N., Ukawa, A., and Yoshié, T.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
CP-PACS and JLQCD collaborations are carrying out a joint project of the 2+1 flavor full QCD simulation. Gauge configurations are generated for the non-perturbatively $O(a)$-improved Wilson quark action and the Iwasaki gauge action using PHMC algorithm at three lattice spacings, $a\sim 0.076$, 0.010 and 0.122 fm, with a fixed physical volume $(2.0 fm)^3$. We present analysis for the light meson spectrum and quark masses in the continuum limit, which are determined using data obtained from the simulations at the two coarser lattices. Our simulations reproduce experimental values of meson masses. The ud and strange quark masses turn out to be $m_{ud}^{\bar{MS}}(\mu=2 GeV)=3.34(23) MeV$ and $m_s^{\bar{MS}}(\mu=2 GeV)=86.7(5.9) MeV$. We also show preliminary results at our finest lattice spacing for which simulations are still being continued., Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, talk presented at Lattice2005 (Hadron Spectrum and quark masses)
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- 2005
194. Nonperturbative $O(a)$ improvement of the Wilson quark action with the RG-improved gauge action using the Schr\'odinger functional method
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CP-PACS, Collaborations, JLQCD, Aoki, S., Fukugita, M., Hashimoto, S., Ishikawa, K-I., Ishizuka, N., Iwasaki, Y., Kanaya, K., Kaneko, T., Kuramashi, Y., Okawa, M., Takeda, S., Taniguchi, Y., Tsutsui, N., Ukawa, A., Yamada, N., and Yoshié, T.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We perform a nonperturbative determination of the $O(a)$-improvement coefficient $c_{\rm SW}$ and the critical hopping parameter $\kappa_c$ for $N_f$=3, 2, 0 flavor QCD with the RG-improved gauge action using the Schr\"odinger functional method. In order to interpolate $c_{\rm SW}$ and $\kappa_c$ as a function of the bare coupling, a wide range of $\beta$ from the weak coupling region to the moderately strong coupling points used in large-scale simulations is studied. Corrections at finite lattice size of $O(a/L)$ turned out to be large for the RG-improved gauge action, and hence we make the determination at a size fixed in physical units using a modified improvement condition. This enables us to avoid $O(a)$ scaling violations which would remain in physical observables if $c_{\rm SW}$ determined for a fixed lattice size $L/a$ is used in numerical simulations., Comment: 27 pages, 5 figures. Version appearing in PRD. \beta dependence of c_sw and kappa_c in two flavor QCD is reanalyzed with a different fit form while no change is made in the quenched and three-flavor QCD
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- 2005
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195. A submm survey of Lyman-alpha haloes in the SA22 protocluster at z=3.1
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Geach, J. E., Matsuda, Y., Smail, Ian, Chapman, S. C., Yamada, T., Ivison, R. J., Hayashino, T., Ohta, K., Shioya, Y., and Taniguchi, Y.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results from a submm survey of a sample of 23 giant Lya emitting nebulae in the overdensity at z=3.09 in the SA22 field. These objects, which have become known as Lya Blobs (LABs) have a diverse range of morphology and surface brightness, but the nature of their power source is unclear - with cooling flows and/or AGN/starburst ionised winds being possibilities. Using the SCUBA submm camera we measure the 850um flux of a sample of LABs, detecting four LABs at >3.5sigma individually, and a modest statistical detection of the full sample at about 3mJy. These fluxes correspond to bolometric luminosities in the ultraluminous regime, with star-formation rates of about 1e3 Msun/yr. We show there is a trend between Lya luminosity and bolometric output, which suggests that a galactic scale superwind generated from starbursts of age 10-100Myr may be responsible for the Lya emission. We estimate the star-formation rate density in SA22 to be >3 Msun/yr/Mpc^3 - greater than the field at this epoch, and note that there are now 7 submm galaxies in the SA22 structure, making this region the richest association of these intensely active galaxies. Finally we suggest that Lya haloes may be a common feature of the submm population in general, and have an important role in the heating and enrichment of the intergalactic medium., Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, resubmitted to MNRAS after referee's report
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- 2005
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196. Spectroscopy of i-Dropout Galaxies with an NB921-Band Depression in the Subaru Deep Field
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Nagao, T., Kashikawa, N., Malkan, M. A., Murayama, T., Taniguchi, Y., Shimasaku, K., Motohara, K., Ajiki, M., Shioya, Y., Ohta, K., Okamura, S., and Iye, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report new spectroscopy of two star-forming galaxies with strong Ly_alpha emission at z=6.03 and z=6.04 in the Subaru Deep Field. These two objects are originally selected as i'-dropouts (i'-z' > 1.5) showing an interesting photometric property, the ``NB921 depression''. The NB921-band (centered at 9196A) magnitude is significantly depressed with respect to the z'-band magnitude. The optical spectra of these two objects exhibit asymmetric emission-lines at lambda_obs ~ 8540A and ~ 8560A, suggesting that these objects are Ly_alpha emitters at z~6. The rest-frame equivalent widths of the Ly_alpha emission of the two objects are 94A and 236A; the latter one is the Ly_alpha emitter with the largest Ly_alpha equivalent width at z > 6 ever spectroscopically confirmed. The spectroscopically measured Ly_alpha fluxes of these two objects are consistent with the interpretation that the NB921 depression is caused by the contribution of the strong Ly_alpha emission to the z'-band flux. Most of the NB921-depressed i'-dropout objects are thought to be strong Ly_alpha emitters at 6.0 < z < 6.5; Galactic L and T dwarfs and NB921-dropout galaxies at z > 6.6 do not dominate the NB921-depressed i'-dropout sample. Thus the NB921-depression method is very useful for finding high-z Ly_alpha emitters with a large Ly_alpha equivalent width over a large redshift range, 6.0 < z < 6.5. Although the broadband-selected sample at z ~ 3 contains only a small fraction of objects with a Ly_alpha equivalent width larger than 100A, the i'-dropout sample of the Subaru Deep Field contains a much larger fraction of such strong Ly_alpha emitters. This may imply a strong evolution of the Ly_alpha equivalent width from z > 6 to z ~ 3., Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, to appear in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2005
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197. Hierarchical Object Formation in the Peculiar Velocity Field
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Mouri, H. and Taniguchi, Y.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Using the initial peculiar velocity field, we analytically study the hierarchical formation of gravitationally bound objects. The field is smoothed over a scale that corresponds to the mass of a given class of objects. Through the Zel'dovich approximation, the smoothed field determines how the objects cluster together to form a new class of more massive objects. The standard cosmological parameters lead to the evolution of primordial clouds with 10^6 M(sun) -> galaxies with 10^12 M(sun) -> clusters of galaxies with 10^15 M(sun) -> superclusters of galaxies with 10^16 M(sun). The epochs obtained for the formation of these classes of objects are consistent with observations., Comment: 16 pages; This version corrects errors in equations and figures of the published version; The errors are also corrected in the erratum (ApJ, 659, 1792 [2007])
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- 2005
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198. Optical identification of ISO far-infrared sources in the Lockman Hole using a deep VLA 1.4 GHz continuum survey
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Oyabu, S., Yun, Min S., Murayama, T., Sanders, D. B., Kawara, K., Taniguchi, Y., Veilleux, H. S., Okuda, H., Matsuhara, H., Cowie, L. L., Sato, Y., Wakamatsu, K., and Sofue, Y.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
By exploiting the far-infrared(FIR) and radio correlation, we have performed the Likelihood-Ratio analysis to identify optical counterparts to the far-infrared sources in the Lockman Hole. Using the likelihood ratio analysis and the associated reliability, 44 FIR sources have been identified with radio sources. Redshifts have been obtained for 29 out of 44 identified sources. One hyper-luminous infrared galaxy (HyLIRG) with and four ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) are identified in our sample. The space density of the FIR sources at z = 0.3-0.6 is 4.6\times 10^{-5}Mpc^{-3}, implying a rapid evolution of the ULIRG population. Most of \ISO FIR sources have their FIR-radio ratios similar to star-forming galaxies ARP 220 and M82. At least seven of our FIR sources show evidence for the presence of an active galactic nucleus (AGN) in optical emission lines, radio continuum excess, or X-ray activity. Three out of five (60%) of the ULIRG/HyLIRGs are AGN galaxies. Five of the seven AGN galaxies are within the ROSAT X-ray survey field, and two are within the XMM-Newton survey fields. X-ray emission has been detected in only one source, 1EX030, which is optically classified as a quasar. The non-detection in the XMM-Newton 2-10 keV band suggests a very thick absorption obscuring the central source of the two AGN galaxies. Several sources have an extreme FIR luminosity relative to the optical R-band, L(90\mu\mathrm{m})/L(R) > 500, which is rare even among the local ULIRG population. While source confusion or blending might offer an explanation in some cases, they may represent a new population of galaxies with an extreme activity of star formation in an undeveloped stellar system -- i.e., formation of bulges or young ellipticals., Comment: 55 pages, 16 figures. To appear in AJ
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- 2005
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199. The Subaru Deep Field: The Optical Imaging Data
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Kashikawa, N., Shimasaku, K., Yasuda, N., Ajiki, M., Akiyama, M., Ando, H., Aoki, K., Doi, M., Fujita, S. S., Furusawa, H., Hayashino, T., Iwamuro, F., Iye, M., Karoji, H., Kobayashi, N., Kodaira, K., Kodama, T., Komiyama, Y., Matsuda, Y., Miyazaki, S., Mizumoto, Y., Morokuma, T., Motohara, K., Murayama, T., Nagao, T., Nariai, K., Ohta, K., Okamura, S., Ouchi, M., Sasaki, T., Sato, Y., Sekiguchi, K., Shioya, Y., Tamura, H., Taniguchi, Y., Umemura, M., Yamada, T., and Yoshida, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The Subaru Deep Field (SDF) project is a program of Subaru Observatory to carry out a deep galaxy survey over a blank field as large as 34'x27'. The program consists of very deep multi-band optical imaging, near infrared imaging for smaller portions of the field and follow-up optical spectroscopy. Major scientific goals of the project are to construct large samples of Lyman-break galaxies at z~4-5 and Lyman alpha emitters at z~5.7 and 6.6, and to make detailed studies these very high-redshift galaxy populations. In this paper, we describe the optical imaging observations and data reduction, presenting mosaicked images and object catalogs in seven bandpasses.The optical imaging was made through five broad-band filters, B, V, R, i', z', and two narrow-band filters, NB816 (lambda_c=8150A) and NB921 (lambda_c=9196A) with almost 10 hours long integrations for each band. The limiting magnitudes measured at 3-sigma on a 2" aperture are B=28.45, V=27.74, R=27.80, i'=27.43, z'=26.62, NB816=26.63, and NB921=26.54 in the AB system. The object catalog constructed for each of the seven bands contains more than 10^5 objects. The galaxy number counts corrected for detection incompleteness and star count contribution are found to be consistent with previous results in the literature. The mosaicked images and catalogs of all the bands have been made open to the public on Oct. 1, 2004 on the SDF project website at http://soaps.naoj.org/sdf/., Comment: 18 pages, 10figures, accepted for publication in PASJ, and see also http://step.mtk.nao.ac.jp/sdf/ [Japan site], http://soaps.naoj.org/sdf/ [US site]
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- 2004
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200. A scaling study of the step scaling function of quenched QCD with improved gauge actions
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Collaboration, CP-PACS, Takeda, S., Aoki, S., Fukugita, M., Ishikawa, K-I., Ishizuka, N., Iwasaki, Y., Kanaya, K., Kaneko, T., Kuramashi, Y., Okawa, M., Taniguchi, Y., Ukawa, A., and Yoshié, T.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Lattice - Abstract
We study the scaling behavior of the step scaling function for SU(3) gauge theory, employing the Iwasaki gauge action and the Luescher-Weisz gauge action. In particular, we test the choice of boundary counter terms and apply a perturbative procedure for removal of lattice artifacts for the simulation results in the extrapolation procedure. We confirm the universality of the step scaling functions at both weak and strong coupling regions. We also measure the low energy scale ratio with the Iwasaki action, and confirm its universality., Comment: 3 pages. Parallel talk presented at Lattice2004(improved), Fermilab, June 21-26, 2004
- Published
- 2004
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