877 results on '"Geller, Margaret J."'
Search Results
252. STRONG GRAVITATIONAL LENSING AS A TOOL TO INVESTIGATE THE STRUCTURE OF JETS AT HIGH ENERGIES
- Author
-
Barnacka, Anna, primary, Geller, Margaret J., additional, Dell'antonio, Ian P., additional, and Benbow, Wystan, additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
253. MMT HYPERVELOCITY STAR SURVEY. III. THE COMPLETE SURVEY
- Author
-
Brown, Warren R., primary, Geller, Margaret J., additional, and Kenyon, Scott J., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
254. COMPARISON OF GALAXY CLUSTERS SELECTED BY WEAK-LENSING, OPTICAL SPECTROSCOPY, AND X-RAYS IN THE DEEP LENS SURVEY F2 FIELD
- Author
-
Starikova, Svetlana, primary, Jones, Christine, additional, Forman, William R., additional, Vikhlinin, Alexey, additional, Kurtz, Michael J., additional, Geller, Margaret J., additional, Fabricant, Daniel G., additional, Murray, Stephen S., additional, and Dell'Antonio, Ian P., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
255. REDUCING SYSTEMATIC ERROR IN WEAK LENSING CLUSTER SURVEYS
- Author
-
Utsumi, Yousuke, primary, Miyazaki, Satoshi, additional, Geller, Margaret J., additional, Dell'Antonio, Ian P., additional, Oguri, Masamune, additional, Kurtz, Michael J., additional, Hamana, Takashi, additional, and Fabricant, Daniel G., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
256. Tidally-Triggered Star Formation in Close Pairs of Galaxies 2: Constraints on Burst Strengths and Ages
- Author
-
Gillespie, Elizabeth Barton, Geller, Margaret J., and Kenyon, Scott J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
Galaxy-galaxy interactions rearrange the baryons in galaxies and trigger substantial star formation; the aggregate effects of these interactions on the evolutionary histories of galaxies in the Universe are poorly understood. We combine B and R-band photometry and optical spectroscopy to estimate the strengths and timescales of bursts of triggered star formation in the centers of 190 galaxies in pairs and compact groups. Based on an analysis of the measured colors and EW(H-alpha), we characterize the pre-existing and triggered populations separately. The best-fitting burst scenarios assume stronger reddening corrections for line emission than for the continuum and continuous star formation lasting for \gtrsim a hundred Myr. The most realistic scenarios require an initial mass function that is deficient in the highest-mass stars. The color of the pre-existing stellar population is the most significant source of uncertainty. Triggered star formation contributes substantially (probably >= 50%) to the R-band flux in the central regions of several galaxies; tidal tails do not necessarily accompany this star formation. Many of the galaxies in our sample have bluer centers than outskirts, suggesting that pre- or non-merger interactions may lead to evolution along the Hubble sequence. These objects would appear blue and compact at higher redshifts; the older, redder outskirts of the disks would be difficult to detect. Our data indicate that galaxies with larger separations on the sky contain weaker, and probably older, bursts of star formation on average. However, confirmation of these trends requires further constraints on the colors of the older stellar populations and on the reddening for individual galaxies., 22 pages, 24 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
- Published
- 2002
257. Discovery of Nine Intermediate Redshift Compact Quiescent Galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
- Author
-
Damjanov, Ivana, Chilingarian, Igor, Hwang, Ho Seong, Geller, Margaret J., Damjanov, Ivana, Chilingarian, Igor, Hwang, Ho Seong, and Geller, Margaret J.
- Abstract
We identify nine galaxies with dynamical masses of M_dyn>10^10 M_sol as photometric point sources, but with redshifts between z=0.2 and z=0.6, in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) spectro-photometric database. All nine galaxies have archival Hubble Space Telescope (HST) images. Surface brightness profile fitting confirms that all nine galaxies are extremely compact (with circularized half-light radii between 0.4 and 6.6 kpc and the median value of 0.74 kpc) for their velocity dispersion (110
1 galaxies and the other eight objects follow the high-redshift dynamical size-mass relation., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letters - Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
258. The Origin of HVS17, an Unbound Main Sequence B Star at 50 kpc
- Author
-
Brown, Warren R., Cohen, Judith G., Geller, Margaret J., Kenyon, Scott J., Brown, Warren R., Cohen, Judith G., Geller, Margaret J., and Kenyon, Scott J.
- Abstract
We analyze Keck ESI spectroscopy of HVS17, a B-type star traveling with a Galactic rest frame radial velocity of +445 km/s in the outer halo of the Milky Way. HVS17 has the projected rotation of a main sequence B star and is chemically peculiar, with solar iron abundance and sub-solar alpha abundance. Comparing measured T_eff and logg with stellar evolution tracks implies that HVS17 is a 3.91 +-0.09 Msun, 153 +-9 Myr old star at a Galactocentric distance of r=48.5 +-4.6 kpc. The time between its formation and ejection significantly exceeds 10 Myr and thus is difficult to reconcile with any Galactic disk runaway scenario involving massive stars. The observations are consistent, on the other hand, with a hypervelocity star ejection from the Galactic center. We show that Gaia proper motion measurements will easily discriminate between a disk and Galactic center origin, thus allowing us to use HVS17 as a test particle to probe the shape of the Milky Way's dark matter halo., Comment: 6 pages, ApJ accepted
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
259. Dust Properties of Local Dust-Obscured Galaxies with the Submillimeter Array
- Author
-
Hwang, Ho Seong, Andrews, Sean M., Geller, Margaret J., Hwang, Ho Seong, Andrews, Sean M., and Geller, Margaret J.
- Abstract
We report Submillimeter Array (SMA) observations of the 880 \mu m dust continuum emission for four dust-obscured galaxies (DOGs) in the local universe. Two DOGs are clearly detected with S_\nu(880 \mu m)=10-13 mJy and S/N>5, but the other two are not detected with 3{\sigma} upper limits of S_\nu(880 \mu m)=5-9 mJy. Including an additional two local DOGs with submillimeter data from the literature, we determine the dust masses and temperatures for six local DOGs. The infrared luminosities and dust masses for these DOGs are in the range 1.2-4.9x10^{11} (L_sun) and 4-14x10^{7} (M_sun), respectively. The dust temperatures derived from a two-component modified blackbody function are 23-26 K and 60-124 K for the cold and warm dust components, respectively. Comparison of local DOGs with other infrared luminous galaxies with submillimeter detections shows that the dust temperatures and masses do not differ significantly among these objects. Thus, as argued previously, local DOGs are not a distinctive population among dusty galaxies, but simply represent the high-end tail of the dust obscuration distribution., Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. To appear in ApJ
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
260. Measuring Galaxy Velocity Dispersions with Hectospec
- Author
-
Fabricant, Daniel, Chilingarian, Igor, Hwang, Ho Seong, Kurtz, Michael J., Geller, Margaret J., Fabricant, Daniel, Chilingarian, Igor, Hwang, Ho Seong, Kurtz, Michael J., and Geller, Margaret J.
- Abstract
We describe a robust technique based on the ULySS IDL code for measuring velocity dispersions of galaxies observed with the MMT's fiber-fed spectrograph, Hectospec. This procedure is applicable to all Hectospec spectra having a signal-to-noise >5 and weak emission lines. We estimate the internal error in the Hectospec velocity dispersion measurements by comparing duplicate measurements of 171 galaxies. For a sample of 984 galaxies with a median z=0.10, we compare velocity dispersions measured by Hectospec through a 1.5 arcsec diameter optical fiber with those measured by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and Baryon Oscillation Spectral Survey (BOSS) through 3 arcsec and 2 arcsec diameter optical fibers, respectively. The systematic differences between the Hectospec and the SDSS/BOSS measurements are <7% for velocity dispersions between 100 and 300 km/s, the differences are no larger than the differences among the three BOSS velocity dispersion reductions. We analyze the scatter about the fundamental plane and find no significant redshift dependent systematics in our velocity dispersion measurements to z~0.6. This analysis also confirms our estimation of the measurement errors. In one hour in good conditions, we demonstrate that we achieve 30 km/s velocity dispersion errors for galaxies with an SDSS r fiber magnitude of 21., Comment: 8 figures
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
261. Reducing Systematic Error in Cluster Scale Weak Lensing
- Author
-
Utsumi, Yousuke, Miyazaki, Satoshi, Geller, Margaret J., Dell'Antonio, Ian P., Oguri, Masamune, Kurtz, Michael J., Hamana, Takashi, Fabricant, Daniel G., Utsumi, Yousuke, Miyazaki, Satoshi, Geller, Margaret J., Dell'Antonio, Ian P., Oguri, Masamune, Kurtz, Michael J., Hamana, Takashi, and Fabricant, Daniel G.
- Abstract
Weak lensing provides an important route toward collecting samples of clusters of galaxies selected by mass. Subtle systematic errors in image reduction can compromise the power of this technique. We use the B-mode signal to quantify this systematic error and to test methods for reducing this error. We show that two procedures are efficient in suppressing systematic error in the B-mode: (1) refinement of the mosaic CCD warping procedure to conform to absolute celestial coordinates and (2) truncation of the smoothing procedure on a scale of 10$^{\prime}$. Application of these procedures reduces the systematic error to 20% of its original amplitude. We provide an analytic expression for the distribution of the highest peaks in noise maps that can be used to estimate the fraction of false peaks in the weak lensing $\kappa$-S/N maps as a function of the detection threshold. Based on this analysis we select a threshold S/N = 4.56 for identifying an uncontaminated set of weak lensing peaks in two test fields covering a total area of $\sim 3$deg$^2$. Taken together these fields contain seven peaks above the threshold. Among these, six are probable systems of galaxies and one is a superposition. We confirm the reliability of these peaks with dense redshift surveys, x-ray and imaging observations. The systematic error reduction procedures we apply are general and can be applied to future large-area weak lensing surveys. Our high peak analysis suggests that with a S/N threshold of 4.5, there should be only 2.7 spurious weak lensing peaks even in an area of 1000 deg$^2$ where we expect $\sim$ 2000 peaks based on our Subaru fields., Comment: 30 pages, Submitted to Astrophysical Journal
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
262. Dust-Obscured Galaxies in the Local Universe
- Author
-
Hwang, Ho Seong, Geller, Margaret J., Hwang, Ho Seong, and Geller, Margaret J.
- Abstract
We use Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), AKARI, and Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) data to select local analogs of high-redshift (z~2) dust obscured galaxies (DOGs). We identify 47 local DOGs with S_{12\mu m}/S_{0.22 \mu m}>892 and S_{12\mu m}>20 mJy at 0.05
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
263. The slow flow model of dust efflux in local star-forming galaxies
- Author
-
Zahid, H J, Torrey, Paul, Kudritzki, Rolf-Peter, Kewley, Lisa, Dave, R, Geller, Margaret J, Zahid, H J, Torrey, Paul, Kudritzki, Rolf-Peter, Kewley, Lisa, Dave, R, and Geller, Margaret J
- Abstract
We develop a dust efflux model of radiation pressure acting on dust grains which successfully reproduces the relation between stellar mass, dust opacity and star formation rate observed in local star-forming galaxies. The dust content of local star-formin
- Published
- 2013
264. The chemical evolution of star-forming galaxies over the last 11 billion years
- Author
-
Zahid, H J, Geller, Margaret J, Kewley, Lisa, Hwang, Ho Seong, Fabricant, Dan, Kurtz, Michael J, Zahid, H J, Geller, Margaret J, Kewley, Lisa, Hwang, Ho Seong, Fabricant, Dan, and Kurtz, Michael J
- Abstract
We calculate the stellar mass-metallicity relation at five epochs ranging to z ∼ 2.3. We quantify evolution in the shape of the mass-metallicity relation as a function of redshift; the mass-metallicity relation flattens at late times. There is an empiri
- Published
- 2013
265. V and R-band Galaxy Luminosity Functions and Low Surface Brightness Galaxies in the Century Survey
- Author
-
Brown, Warren R., Geller, Margaret J., Fabricant, Daniel G., and Kurtz, Michael J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Abstract
We use 64 square degrees of deep V and R CCD images to measure the local V and R band luminosity function of galaxies. The V_0, 20 pages, includes 20 figures, accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal
- Published
- 2001
266. The LX-sigma Relation for Galaxies and Clusters of Galaxies
- Author
-
Mahdavi, Andisheh and Geller, Margaret J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We demonstrate that individual elliptical galaxies and clusters of galaxies form a continuous X-ray luminosity---velocity dispersion (LX-sigma) relation. Our samples of 280 clusters and 57 galaxies have LX ~ sigma^4.4 and LX ~ sigma^10, respectively. This unified LX - sigma relation spans 8 orders of magnitude in LX and is fully consistent with the observed and theoretical luminosity---temperature scaling laws. Our results support the notion that galaxies and clusters of galaxies are the luminous tracers of similar dark matter halos., Comment: 11 pages, including 2 tables and 2 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters; the Letters version excludes Table 1, which is available in ASCII format at http://tdc-www.harvard.edu/lxsigma
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
267. H-Band and Spectroscopic Properties of Abell 1644
- Author
-
Tustin, Aaron W., Geller, Margaret J., Kenyon, Scott J., and Diaferio, Antonaldo
- Subjects
Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Abstract
We discuss H-band (1.65 micrometer) near-infrared photometry of the central 3x3h^{-2} Mpc^2 of Abell 1644 to a limiting M_H~M^*_H+3 (throughout this paper H_0=100 h km s^{-1} Mpc^{-1}). There are 861 galaxies in the photometric survey region. We also measured radial velocities of 155 galaxies; 141 of these are cluster members within 2.44 h^{-1} Mpc of the cluster center. The cluster velocity dispersion of sigma~1000 km s^{-1} remains constant out to the limiting radius. We find no evidence for substructure in the cluster. The cluster mass within R=2.4 h^{-1} Mpc is 7.6+-1.3x10^{14} h^{-1} M_\odot. We compute the cluster luminosity function; the Schechter parameters \alpha=-1.14\pm0.08 and M^*_H=-24.3\pm0.2 (with h=0.5) agree well with other H-band luminosity functions. From the virial theorem and the caustic method we compute one of the first mass-to-light ratios at H; the result is M/L_H=82-127 h M_\odot/L_\odot within 1.5 h^{-1} Mpc. This ratio corresponds to 374-579 h M_\odot/L_\odot at R. The agreement of our IR measurement with previous $M/L$ determinations indicates that at low redshift dust and young stellar populations may produce only negligible systematic errors in optical mass-to-light ratios., Comment: 30 pages, 12 figures, 2 tables. Revised version (2 figures removed; discussion of background expanded; other minor corrections). Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
268. Measuring the Mass Distribution in Galaxy Clusters
- Author
-
Geller, Margaret J., Diaferio, Antonaldo, Serra, Kenneth J. Rines. Ana Laura, Geller, Margaret J., Diaferio, Antonaldo, and Serra, Kenneth J. Rines. Ana Laura
- Abstract
Cluster mass profiles are tests of models of structure formation. Only two current observational methods of determining the mass profile, gravitational lensing and the caustic technique, are independent of the assumption of dynamical equilibrium. Both techniques enable determination of the extended mass profile at radii beyond the virial radius. For 19 clusters, we compare the mass profile based on the caustic technique with weak lensing measurements taken from the literature. This comparison offers a test of systematic issues in both techniques. Around the virial radius, the two methods of mass estimation agree to within about 30%, consistent with the expected errors in the individual techniques. At small radii, the caustic technique overestimates the mass as expected from numerical simulations. The ratio between the lensing profile and the caustic mass profile at these radii suggests that the weak lensing profiles are a good representation of the true mass profile. At radii larger than the virial radius, the lensing mass profile exceeds the caustic mass profile possibly as a result of contamination of the lensing profile by large-scale structures within the lensing kernel. We highlight the case of the closely neighboring clusters MS0906+11 and A750 to illustrate the potential seriousness of contamination of the the weak lensing signal by unrelated structures., Comment: 35 pages, 13 figures, 2 tables, submitted to ApJ
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
269. Measuring the Ultimate Mass of Galaxy Clusters: Redshifts and Mass Profiles from the Hectospec Cluster Survey (HeCS)
- Author
-
Rines, Kenneth, Geller, Margaret J., Diaferio, Antonaldo, Kurtz, Michael J., Rines, Kenneth, Geller, Margaret J., Diaferio, Antonaldo, and Kurtz, Michael J.
- Abstract
The infall regions of galaxy clusters represent the largest gravitationally bound structures in a $\Lambda$CDM universe. Measuring cluster mass profiles into the infall regions provides an estimate of the ultimate mass of these haloes. We use the caustic technique to measure cluster mass profiles from galaxy redshifts obtained with the Hectospec Cluster Survey (HeCS), an extensive spectroscopic survey of galaxy clusters with MMT/Hectospec. We survey 58 clusters selected by X-ray flux at 0.1$<$$z$$<$0.3. The survey includes 21,314 unique MMT/Hectospec redshifts for individual galaxies; 10,275 of these galaxies are cluster members. For each cluster we acquired high signal-to-noise spectra for $\sim 200$ cluster members and a comparable number of foreground/background galaxies. The cluster members trace out infall patterns around the clusters. The members define a very narrow red sequence. The velocity dispersions decline with radius; we demonstrate that the determination of the velocity dispersion is insensitive to the inclusion of bluer members (a small fraction of the cluster population). We apply the caustic technique to define membership and estimate the mass profiles to large radii. The ultimate halo mass of clusters (the mass that remains bound in the far future of a $\Lambda$CDM universe) is on average (1.99$\pm$0.11)$M_{200}$, a new observational cosmological test in essential agreement with simulations. Summed profiles binned in $M_{200}$ and in $L_X$ demonstrate that the predicted NFW form of the density profile is a remarkably good representation of the data in agreement with weak lensing results extending to large radius. The concentration of these summed profiles is also consistent with theoretical predictions., Comment: revised to match version published in ApJ
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
270. SHELS: Optical Spectral Properties of WISE 22 \mu m-selected Galaxies
- Author
-
Hwang, Ho Seong, Geller, Margaret J., Kurtz, Michael J., Dell'Antonio, Ian P., Fabricant, Daniel G., Hwang, Ho Seong, Geller, Margaret J., Kurtz, Michael J., Dell'Antonio, Ian P., and Fabricant, Daniel G.
- Abstract
We use a dense, complete redshift survey, the Smithsonian Hectospec Lensing Survey (SHELS), covering a 4 square degree region of a deep imaging survey, the Deep Lens Survey (DLS), to study the optical spectral properties of Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) 22 \mu m-selected galaxies. Among 507 WISE 22 \mu m-selected sources with (S/N)_{22\mu m}>3 (\simS_{22\mu m}>2.5 mJy), we identify the optical counterparts of 481 sources (\sim98%) at R<25.2 in the very deep, DLS R-band source catalog. Among them, 337 galaxies at R<21 have SHELS spectroscopic data. Most of these objects are at z<0.8. The infrared (IR) luminosities are in the range 4.5x10^8 (L_sun) < L_{IR} < 5.4x10^{12} (L_sun). Most 22 \mu m-selected galaxies are dusty star-forming galaxies with a small (<1.5) 4000 \AA break. The stacked spectra of the 22 \mu m-selected galaxies binned in IR luminosity show that the strength of the [O III] line relative to H\beta grows with increasing IR luminosity. The optical spectra of the 22 \mu m-selected galaxies also show that there are some (\sim2.8%) unusual galaxies with very strong [Ne III] \lambda 3869, 3968 emission lines that require hard ionizing radiation such as AGN or extremely young massive stars. The specific star formation rates (sSFRs) derived from the 3.6 and 22 \mu m flux densities are enhanced if the 22 \mu m-selected galaxies have close late-type neighbors. The sSFR distribution of the 22 \mu m-selected galaxies containing active galactic nuclei (AGNs) is similar to the distribution for star-forming galaxies without AGNs. We identify 48 dust-obscured galaxy (DOG) candidates with large (\gtrsim1000) mid-IR to optical flux density ratio. The combination of deep photometric and spectroscopic data with WISE data suggests that WISE can probe the universe to z\sim2., Comment: 18 pages, 17 figures. To appear in ApJ
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
271. The Nature of Hypervelocity Stars and the Time Between Their Formation and Ejection
- Author
-
Brown, Warren R., Cohen, Judith G., Geller, Margaret J., Kenyon, Scott J., Brown, Warren R., Cohen, Judith G., Geller, Margaret J., and Kenyon, Scott J.
- Abstract
We obtain Keck HIRES spectroscopy of HVS5, one of the fastest unbound stars in the Milky Way halo. We show that HVS5 is a 3.62 +- 0.11 Msun main sequence B star at a distance of 50 +- 5 kpc. The difference between its age and its flight time from the Galactic center is 105 +-18(stat)+-30(sys) Myr; flight times from locations elsewhere in the Galactic disk are similar. This 10^8 yr `arrival time' between formation and ejection is difficult to reconcile with any ejection scenario involving massive stars that live for only 10^7 yr. For comparison, we derive arrival times of 10^7 yr for two unbound runaway B stars, consistent with their disk origin where ejection results from a supernova in a binary system or dynamical interactions between massive stars in a dense star cluster. For HVS5, ejection during the first 10^7 yr of its lifetime is ruled out at the 3-sigma level. Together with the 10^8 yr arrival times inferred for three other well-studied hypervelocity stars (HVSs), these results are consistent with a Galactic center origin for the HVSs. If the HVSs were indeed ejected by the central black hole, then the Galactic center was forming stars ~200 Myr ago, and the progenitors of the HVSs took ~100 Myr to enter the black hole's loss cone., Comment: 6 pages, accepted to ApJ Letters
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
272. A WISE View of a Nearby Supercluster A2199
- Author
-
Hwang, Ho Seong, Geller, Margaret J., Diaferio, Antonaldo, Rines, Kenneth J., Hwang, Ho Seong, Geller, Margaret J., Diaferio, Antonaldo, and Rines, Kenneth J.
- Abstract
We use Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) data covering the entire region (~130 deg^2) of the A2199 supercluster at z=0.03 to study the mid-infrared (MIR) properties of supercluster galaxies. We identify a `MIR star-forming sequence' in the WISE [3.4]-[12] color-12 \mu m luminosity diagram, consisting of late-type, star-forming galaxies. At a fixed star formation rate (SFR), the MIR-detected galaxies at 22 \mu m or 12 \mu m tend to be more metal rich and to have higher surface brightness than those without MIR detection. Using these MIR-detected galaxies, we construct the IR luminosity function (LF) and investigate its environmental dependence. Both total IR (TIR) and 12 \mu m LFs are dominated by late-type, star-forming galaxies. The contribution of active galactic nuclei (AGN)-host galaxies increases with both TIR and 12 \mu m luminosities. The contribution of early-type galaxies to the 12 \mu m LFs increases with decreasing luminosity. The faint-end slope of the TIR LFs does not change with environment, but the change of faint-end slope in the 12 \mu m LFs with the environment is significant: there is a steeper faint-end slope in the cluster core than in the cluster outskirts. This steepening results primarily from the increasing contribution of early-type galaxies toward the cluster. These galaxies are passively evolving, and contain old stellar populations with weak MIR emission from the circumstellar dust around asymptotic giant branch stars., Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures. To appear in ApJ
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
273. Binary Disruption by Massive Black Holes: Hypervelocity Stars, S Stars, and Tidal Disruption Events
- Author
-
Bromley, Benjamin C., Kenyon, Scott J., Geller, Margaret J., Brown, Warren R., Bromley, Benjamin C., Kenyon, Scott J., Geller, Margaret J., and Brown, Warren R.
- Abstract
We examine whether disrupted binary stars can fuel black hole growth. In this mechanism, tidal disruption produces a single hypervelocity star (HVS) ejected at high velocity and a former companion star bound to the black hole. After a cluster of bound stars forms, orbital diffusion allows the black hole to accrete stars by tidal disruption at a rate comparable to the capture rate. In the Milky Way, HVSs and the S star cluster imply similar rates of 10^{-5}--10^{-3} yr^{-1} for binary disruption. These rates are consistent with estimates for the tidal disruption rate in nearby galaxies and imply significant black hole growth from disrupted binaries on 10 Gyr time scales., Comment: ApJ Letters, accepted; 13 pages, including 3 figures
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
274. MMT Hypervelocity Star Survey. II. Five New Unbound Stars
- Author
-
Brown, Warren R., Geller, Margaret J., Kenyon, Scott J., Brown, Warren R., Geller, Margaret J., and Kenyon, Scott J.
- Abstract
We present the discovery of five new unbound hypervelocity stars (HVSs) in the outer Milky Way halo. Using a conservative estimate of Galactic escape velocity, our targeted spectroscopic survey has now identified 16 unbound HVSs as well as a comparable number of HVSs ejected on bound trajectories. A Galactic center origin for the HVSs is supported by their unbound velocities, the observed number of unbound stars, their stellar nature, their ejection time distribution, and their Galactic latitude and longitude distribution. Other proposed origins for the unbound HVSs, such as runaway ejections from the disk or dwarf galaxy tidal debris, cannot be reconciled with the observations. An intriguing result is the spatial anisotropy of HVSs on the sky, which possibly reflects an anisotropic potential in the central 10-100 pc region of the Galaxy. Further progress requires measurement of the spatial distribution of HVSs over the southern sky. Our survey also identifies seven B supergiants associated with known star-forming galaxies; the absence of B supergiants elsewhere in the survey implies there are no new star-forming galaxies in our survey footprint to a depth of 1-2 Mpc., Comment: 10 pages, submitted to ApJ
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
275. CLASH: Precise New Constraints on the Mass Profile of Abell 2261
- Author
-
Coe, Dan, Umetsu, Keiichi, Zitrin, Adi, Donahue, Megan, Medezinski, Elinor, Postman, Marc, Carrasco, Mauricio, Anguita, Timo, Geller, Margaret J., Rines, Kenneth J., Diaferio, Antonaldo, Kurtz, Michael J., Bradley, Larry, Koekemoer, Anton, Zheng, Wei, Nonino, Mario, Molino, Alberto, Mahdavi, Andisheh, Lemze, Doron, Infante, Leopoldo, Ogaz, Sara, Melchior, Peter, Host, Ole, Ford, Holland, Grillo, Claudio, Rosati, Piero, Jiménez-Teja, Yolanda, Moustakas, John, Broadhurst, Tom, Ascaso, Begoña, Lahav, Ofer, Bartelmann, Matthias, Benítez, Narciso, Bouwens, Rychard, Graur, Or, Graves, Genevieve, Jha, Saurabh, Jouvel, Stephanie, Kelson, Daniel, Moustakas, Leonidas, Maoz, Dan, Meneghetti, Massimo, Merten, Julian, Riess, Adam, Rodney, Steve, Seitz, Stella, Coe, Dan, Umetsu, Keiichi, Zitrin, Adi, Donahue, Megan, Medezinski, Elinor, Postman, Marc, Carrasco, Mauricio, Anguita, Timo, Geller, Margaret J., Rines, Kenneth J., Diaferio, Antonaldo, Kurtz, Michael J., Bradley, Larry, Koekemoer, Anton, Zheng, Wei, Nonino, Mario, Molino, Alberto, Mahdavi, Andisheh, Lemze, Doron, Infante, Leopoldo, Ogaz, Sara, Melchior, Peter, Host, Ole, Ford, Holland, Grillo, Claudio, Rosati, Piero, Jiménez-Teja, Yolanda, Moustakas, John, Broadhurst, Tom, Ascaso, Begoña, Lahav, Ofer, Bartelmann, Matthias, Benítez, Narciso, Bouwens, Rychard, Graur, Or, Graves, Genevieve, Jha, Saurabh, Jouvel, Stephanie, Kelson, Daniel, Moustakas, Leonidas, Maoz, Dan, Meneghetti, Massimo, Merten, Julian, Riess, Adam, Rodney, Steve, and Seitz, Stella
- Abstract
We precisely constrain the inner mass profile of Abell 2261 (z=0.225) for the first time and determine this cluster is not "over-concentrated" as found previously, implying a formation time in agreement with {\Lambda}CDM expectations. These results are based on strong lensing analyses of new 16-band HST imaging obtained as part of the Cluster Lensing and Supernova survey with Hubble (CLASH). Combining this with revised weak lensing analyses of Subaru wide field imaging with 5-band Subaru + KPNO photometry, we place tight new constraints on the halo virial mass M_vir = 2.2\pm0.2\times10^15 M\odot/h70 (within r \approx 3 Mpc/h70) and concentration c = 6.2 \pm 0.3 when assuming a spherical halo. This agrees broadly with average c(M,z) predictions from recent {\Lambda}CDM simulations which span 5 <~
<~ 8. Our most significant systematic uncertainty is halo elongation along the line of sight. To estimate this, we also derive a mass profile based on archival Chandra X-ray observations and find it to be ~35% lower than our lensing-derived profile at r2500 ~ 600 kpc. Agreement can be achieved by a halo elongated with a ~2:1 axis ratio along our line of sight. For this elongated halo model, we find M_vir = 1.7\pm0.2\times10^15 M\odot/h70 and c_vir = 4.6\pm0.2, placing rough lower limits on these values. The need for halo elongation can be partially obviated by non-thermal pressure support and, perhaps entirely, by systematic errors in the X-ray mass measurements. We estimate the effect of background structures based on MMT/Hectospec spectroscopic redshifts and find these tend to lower Mvir further by ~7% and increase cvir by ~5%., Comment: Submitted to the Astrophysical Journal. 19 pages, 14 figures - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
276. Rotation Curve Measurement using Cross-Correlation
- Author
-
Barton, Elizabeth J., Kannappan, Sheila J., Kurtz, Michael J., and Geller, Margaret J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Abstract
Longslit spectroscopy is entering an era of increased spatial and spectral resolution and increased sample size. Improved instruments reveal complex velocity structure that cannot be described with a one-dimensional rotation curve, yet samples are too numerous to examine each galaxy in detail. Therefore, one goal of rotation curve measurement techniques is to flag cases in which the kinematic structure of the galaxy is more complex than a single-valued curve. We examine cross-correlation as a technique that is easily automated and works for low signal-to-noise spectra. We show that the technique yields well-defined errors which increase when the simple spectral model (template) is a poor match to the data, flagging those cases for later inspection. We compare the technique to the more traditional, parametric technique of simultaneous emission line fitting. When the line profile at a single slit position is non-Gaussian, the techniques disagree. For our model spectra with two well-separated velocity components, assigned velocities from the two techniques differ by up to ~52% of the velocity separation of the model components. However, careful use of the error statistics for either technique allows one to flag these non-Gaussian spectra., Comment: LaTeX document with 26 pages, including 12 figures; published in PASP
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
277. Identifying Star Streams in the Milky Way Halo
- Author
-
King III, Charles, Brown, Warren R., Geller, Margaret J., Kenyon, Scott J., King III, Charles, Brown, Warren R., Geller, Margaret J., and Kenyon, Scott J.
- Abstract
We develop statistical methods for identifying star streams in the halo of the Milky Way galaxy that exploit observed spatial and radial velocity distributions. Within a great circle, departures of the observed spatial distribution from random provide a measure of the likelihood of a potential star stream. Comparisons between the radial velocity distribution within a great circle and the radial velocity distribution of the entire sample also measure the statistical significance of potential streams. The radial velocities enable construction of a more powerful joint statistical test for identifying star streams in the Milky Way halo. Applying our method to halo stars in the Hypervelocity Star (HVS) survey, we detect the Sagittarius stream at high significance. Great circle counts and comparisons with theoretical models suggest that the Sagittarius stream comprises 10% to 17% of the halo stars in the HVS sample. The population of blue stragglers and blue horizontal branch stars varies along the stream and is a potential probe of the distribution of stellar populations in the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy prior to disruption., Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, submitted to ApJ
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
278. Mapping the Universe: The 2010 Russell Lecture
- Author
-
Geller, Margaret J., Diaferio, Antonaldo, Kurtz, Michael J., Geller, Margaret J., Diaferio, Antonaldo, and Kurtz, Michael J.
- Abstract
Redshift surveys are a powerful tool of modern cosmology. We discuss two aspects of their power to map the distribution of mass and light in the universe: (1) measuring the mass distribution extending into the infall regions of rich clusters and (2) applying deep redshift surveys to the selection of clusters of galaxies and to the identification of very large structures (Great Walls). We preview the HectoMAP project, a redshift survey with median redshift z = 0.34 covering 50 square degrees to r= 21. We emphasize the importance and power of spectroscopy for exploring and understanding the nature and evolution of structure in the universe., Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures (2 videos available in the on-line journal article)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
279. The Faint End of the Luminosity Function and Low Surface Brightness Galaxies
- Author
-
Geller, Margaret J., Diaferio, Antonaldo, Kurtz, Michael J., Dell'Antonio, Ian P., Fabricant, Daniel G., Geller, Margaret J., Diaferio, Antonaldo, Kurtz, Michael J., Dell'Antonio, Ian P., and Fabricant, Daniel G.
- Abstract
SHELS (Smithsonian Hectospec Lensing Survey) is a dense redshift survey covering a 4 square degree region to a limiting R = 20.6. In the construction of the galaxy catalog and in the acquisition of spectroscopic targets, we paid careful attention to the survey completeness for lower surface brightness dwarf galaxies. Thus, although the survey covers a small area, it is a robust basis for computation of the slope of the faint end of the galaxy luminosity function to a limiting M_R = -13.3 + 5logh. We calculate the faint end slope in the R-band for the subset of SHELS galaxies with redshif ts in the range 0.02 <= z < 0.1, SHELS_{0.1}. This sample contains 532 galaxies with R< 20.6 and with a median surface brightness within the half light radius of SB_{50,R} = 21.82 mag arcsec^{-2}. We used this sample to make one of the few direct measurements of the dependence of the faint end of the galaxy luminosity function on surface brightness. For the sample as a whole the faint end slope, alpha = -1.31 +/- 0.04, is consistent with both the Blanton et al. (2005b) analysis of the SDSS and the Liu et al. (2008) analysis of the COSMOS field. This consistency is impressive given the very different approaches of th ese three surveys. A magnitude limited sample of 135 galaxies with optical spectroscopic reds hifts with mean half-light surface brightness, SB_{50,R} >= 22.5 mag arcsec^{-2} is unique to SHELS_{0.1}. The faint end slope is alpha_{22.5} = -1.52+/- 0.16. SHELS_{0.1} shows that lower surface brightness objects dominate the faint end slope of the l uminosity function in the field, underscoring the importance of surface brightness limits in evaluating measurements of the faint end slope and its evolution., Comment: 34 pages, 13 figures, 3 tables, Astronomical Journal, in press (updated based on review)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
280. Testing Weak Lensing Maps With Redshift Surveys: A Subaru Field
- Author
-
Kurtz, Michael J., Geller, Margaret J., Utsumi, Yousuke, Miyazaki, Satoshi, Dell'Antonio, Ian P., Fabricant, Daniel G., Kurtz, Michael J., Geller, Margaret J., Utsumi, Yousuke, Miyazaki, Satoshi, Dell'Antonio, Ian P., and Fabricant, Daniel G.
- Abstract
We use a dense redshift survey in the foreground of the Subaru GTO2deg^2 weak lensing field (centered at $\alpha_{2000}$ = 16$^h04^m44^s$;$\delta_{2000}$ =43^\circ11^{\prime}24^{\prime\prime}$) to assess the completeness and comment on the purity of massive halo identification in the weak lensing map. The redshift survey (published here) includes 4541 galaxies; 4405 are new redshifts measured with the Hectospec on the MMT. Among the weak lensing peaks with a signal-to-noise greater that 4.25, 2/3 correspond to individual massive systems; this result is essentially identical to the Geller et al. (2010) test of the Deep Lens Survey field F2. The Subaru map, based on images in substantially better seeing than the DLS, enables detection of less massive halos at fixed redshift as expected. We demonstrate that the procedure adopted by Miyazaki et al. (2007) for removing some contaminated peaks from the weak lensing map improves agreement between the lensing map and the redshift survey in the identification of candidate massive systems., Comment: Astrophysical Journal accepted version
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
281. Triggered Star Formation in Galaxy Pairs at z=0.08-0.38
- Author
-
Woods, Deborah Freedman, Geller, Margaret J., Kurtz, Michael J., Westra, Eduard, Fabricant, Daniel G., Dell'Antonio, Ian, Woods, Deborah Freedman, Geller, Margaret J., Kurtz, Michael J., Westra, Eduard, Fabricant, Daniel G., and Dell'Antonio, Ian
- Abstract
We measure the strength, frequency, and timescale of tidally triggered star formation at redshift z=0.08-0.38 in a spectroscopically complete sample of galaxy pairs drawn from the magnitude-limited redshift survey of 9,825 Smithsonian Hectospec Lensing Survey (SHELS) galaxies with R<20.3. To examine the evidence for tidal triggering, we identify a volume-limited sample of major (|\Delta M_R|<1.75, corresponding to mass ratio >1/5) pair galaxies with $M_R < -20.8 in the redshift range z=0.08-0.31. The size and completeness of the spectroscopic survey allows us to focus on regions of low local density. The spectrophotometric calibration enables the use of the 4000 Ang break (D_n4000), the H\alpha specific star formation rate (SSFR_{H\alpha}), and population models to characterize the galaxies. We show that D_n4000 is a useful population classification tool; it closely tracks the identification of emission line galaxies. The sample of major pair galaxies in regions of low local density with low D_n4000 demonstrates the expected anti-correlation between pair-wise projected separation and a set of star formation indicators explored in previous studies. We measure the frequency of triggered star formation by comparing the SSFR_{H\alpha} in the volume-limited sample in regions of low local density: 32 +/-7% of the major pair galaxies have SSFR_{H\alpha} at least double the median rate of the unpaired field galaxies. Comparison of stellar population models for pair and for unpaired field galaxies implies a timescale for triggered star formation of ~300-400 Myr., Comment: 25 pages, 15 figures. Accepted to AJ
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
282. Metallicity Gradients and Gas Flows in Galaxy Pairs
- Author
-
Kewley, Lisa J., Rupke, David, Zahid, H. Jabran, Geller, Margaret J., Barton, Elizabeth J., Kewley, Lisa J., Rupke, David, Zahid, H. Jabran, Geller, Margaret J., and Barton, Elizabeth J.
- Abstract
We present the first systematic investigation into the metallicity gradients in galaxy close pairs. We determine the metallicity gradients for 8 galaxies in close pairs using HII region metallicities obtained with high signal-to-noise multi-slit observations with the Keck LRIS Spectrograph. We show that the metallicity gradients in close pairs are significantly shallower than gradients in isolated spiral galaxies such as the Milky Way, M83, and M101. These observations provide the first solid evidence that metallicity gradients in interacting galaxies are systematically different from metallicity gradients in isolated spiral galaxies. Our results suggest that there is a strong relationship between metallicity gradients and the gas dynamics in galaxy interactions and mergers., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL. 6 pages, 3 figures, 1 table. Article with full resolution figures can be obtained from http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/~kewley/Gradients.pdf
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
283. A Galactic Center Origin for HE 0437-5439, the Hypervelocity Star near the Large Magellanic Cloud
- Author
-
Brown, Warren R., Anderson, Jay, Gnedin, Oleg Y., Bond, Howard E., Geller, Margaret J., Kenyon, Scott J., Livio, Mario, Brown, Warren R., Anderson, Jay, Gnedin, Oleg Y., Bond, Howard E., Geller, Margaret J., Kenyon, Scott J., and Livio, Mario
- Abstract
We use Hubble Space Telescope imaging to measure the absolute proper motion of the hypervelocity star (HVS) HE 0437-5439, a short-lived B star located in the direction of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). We observe (\mu_\alpha, \mu_\delta)=(+0.53+-0.25(stat)+-0.33(sys), +0.09+-0.21(stat)+-0.48(sys)) mas/yr. The velocity vector points directly away from the center of the Milky Way; an origin from the center of the LMC is ruled out at the 3-sigma level. The flight time of the HVS from the Milky Way exceeds its main-sequence lifetime, thus its stellar nature requires it to be a blue straggler. The large space velocity rules out a Galactic-disk ejection. Combining the HVS's observed trajectory, stellar nature, and required initial velocity, we conclude that HE 0437-5439 was most likely a compact binary ejected by the Milky Way's central black hole., Comment: 5 pages, accepted in ApJ Letters
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
284. Empirical optical k-Corrections for redshifts <= 0.7
- Author
-
Westra, Eduard, Geller, Margaret J., Kurtz, Michael J., Fabricant, Daniel G., Dell'Antonio, Ian, Westra, Eduard, Geller, Margaret J., Kurtz, Michael J., Fabricant, Daniel G., and Dell'Antonio, Ian
- Abstract
The Smithsonian Hectospec Lensing Survey (SHELS) is a magnitude limited spectroscopically complete survey for R<=21.0 covering 4 square degrees. SHELS provides a large sample (15,513) of flux calibrated spectra. The wavelength range covered by the spectra allows empirical determination of k-corrections for the g- and r-band from z=0 to ~0.68 and 0.33, respectively, based on large samples of spectra. We approximate the k-corrections using only two parameters in a standard way: Dn4000 and redshift. We use Dn4000 rather than the standard observed galaxy color because Dn4000 is a redshift independent tracer of the stellar population of the galaxy. Our approximations for the k-corrections using Dn4000 are as good as (or better than) those based on observed galaxy color (g-r) (sigma of the scatter is ~0.08 mag). The approximations for the k-corrections are available in an on-line calculator. Our results agree with previously determined analytical approximations from single stellar population (SSP) models fitted to multi-band optical and near-infrared photometry for galaxies with a known redshift. Galaxies with the smallest Dn4000-the galaxies with the youngest stellar populations-are always attenuated and/or contain contributions from older stellar populations. We use simple single SSP fits to the SHELS spectra to study the influence of emission lines on the k-correction. The effects of emission lines can be ignored for rest-frame equivalent widths <~ 100 A depending on required photometric accuracy. We also provide analytic approximations to the k-corrections determined from our model fits for z<=0.7 as a function of redshift and Dn4000 for ugriz and UBVRI (sigma of the scatter is typically ~0.10 mag). Again, the approximations using Dn4000 are as good (or better than) those based on a suitably chosen observed galaxy color. We provide all analytical approximations in an on-line calculator., Comment: 48 pages in total (includes 19 figures, 25 tables). Published in PASP. Version with high resolution figures available at http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~ewestra/publications/. Online calculator at http://tdc-www.cfa.harvard.edu/instruments/hectospec/progs/EOK/. Tables with coefficients differ slightly from first astro-ph version, results barely changed
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
285. The Mass Profile of the Galaxy to 80 kpc
- Author
-
Gnedin, Oleg Y., Brown, Warren R., Geller, Margaret J., Kenyon, Scott J., Gnedin, Oleg Y., Brown, Warren R., Geller, Margaret J., and Kenyon, Scott J.
- Abstract
The Hypervelocity Star survey presents the currently largest sample of radial velocity measurements of halo stars out to 80 kpc. We apply spherical Jeans modeling to these data in order to derive the mass profile of the Galaxy. We restrict the analysis to distances larger than 25 kpc from the Galactic center, where the density profile of halo stars is well approximated by a single power law with logarithmic slope between -3.5 and -4.5. With this restriction, we also avoid the complication of modeling a flattened Galactic disk. In the range 25 < r < 80 kpc, the radial velocity dispersion declines remarkably little; a robust measure of its logarithmic slope is between -0.05 and -0.1. The circular velocity profile also declines remarkably little with radius. The allowed range of V_c(80 kpc) lies between 175 and 231 km/s, with the most likely value 193 km/s. Compared with the value at the solar location, the Galactic circular velocity declines by less than 20% over an order of magnitude in radius. Such a flat profile requires a massive and extended dark matter halo. The mass enclosed within 80 kpc is 6.9(+3.0-1.2) 10^11 Msun. Our sample of radial velocities is large enough that the biggest uncertainty in the mass is not statistical but systematic, dominated by the density slope and anisotropy of the tracer population. Further progress requires modeling observed datasets within realistic simulations of galaxy formation., Comment: matches version accepted to ApJ Letters
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
286. Metallicity gradients and gas flows in galaxy pairs
- Author
-
Kewley, Lisa, Rupke, D S N, Zahid, H J, Geller, Margaret J, Barton, Elizabeth J, Kewley, Lisa, Rupke, D S N, Zahid, H J, Geller, Margaret J, and Barton, Elizabeth J
- Abstract
We present the first systematic investigation into the metallicity gradients in galaxy close pairs. We determine the metallicity gradients for eight galaxies in close pairs using H II region metallicities obtained with high signalto- noise multi-slit observations with the Keck LRIS Spectrograph. We show that the metallicity gradients in close pairs are significantly shallower than gradients in isolated spiral galaxies such as the Milky Way, M83, and M101. These observations provide the first solid evidence that metallicity gradients in interacting galaxies are systematically different from metallicity gradients in isolated spiral galaxies. Our results suggest that there is a strong relationship between metallicity gradients and the gas dynamics in galaxy interactions and mergers.
- Published
- 2010
287. Comparison of Hectospec Virial Masses with SZE Measurements
- Author
-
Rines, Kenneth, Geller, Margaret J., Diaferio, Antonaldo, Rines, Kenneth, Geller, Margaret J., and Diaferio, Antonaldo
- Abstract
We present the first comparison of virial masses of galaxy clusters with their Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect (SZE) signals. We study 15 clusters from the Hectospec Cluster Survey (HeCS) with MMT/Hectospec spectroscopy and published SZE signals. We measure virial masses of these clusters from an average of 90 member redshifts inside the radius $r_{100}$. The virial masses of the clusters are strongly correlated with their SZE signals (at the 99% confidence level using a Spearman rank-sum test). This correlation suggests that $Y_{SZ}$ can be used as a measure of virial mass. Simulations predict a powerlaw scaling of $Y_{SZ}\propto M_{200}^\alpha$ with $\alpha\approx$1.6. Observationally, we find $\alpha$=1.11$\pm$0.16, significantly shallower (given the formal uncertainty) than the theoretical prediction. However, the selection function of our sample is unknown and a bias against less massive clusters cannot be excluded (such a selection bias could artificially flatten the slope). Moreover, our sample indicates that the relation between velocity dispersion (or virial mass estimate) and SZE signal has significant intrinsic scatter, comparable to the range of our current sample. More detailed studies of scaling relations are therefore needed to derive a robust determination of the relation between cluster mass and SZE., Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted to ApJ Letters, minor revisions, shortened title
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
288. SHELS: Testing Weak Lensing Maps with Redshift Surveys
- Author
-
Geller, Margaret J., Kurtz, Michael J., Dell'Antonio, Ian P., Ramella, Massimo, Fabricant, Daniel G., Geller, Margaret J., Kurtz, Michael J., Dell'Antonio, Ian P., Ramella, Massimo, and Fabricant, Daniel G.
- Abstract
Weak lensing surveys are emerging as an important tool for the construction of "mass selected" clusters of galaxies. We evaluate both the efficiency and completeness of a weak lensing selection by combining a dense, complete redshift survey, the Smithsonian Hectospec Lensing Survey (SHELS), with a weak lensing map from the Deep Lens Survey (DLS). SHELS includes 11,692 redshifts for galaxies with R < 20.6 in the four square degree DLS field; the survey is a solid basis for identifying massive clusters of galaxies with redshift z < 0.55. The range of sensitivity of the redshift survey is similar to the range for the DLS convergence map. Only four the twelve convergence peaks with signal-to-noise > 3.5 correspond to clusters of galaxies with M > 1.7 x 10^14 solar masses. Four of the eight massive clusters in SHELS are detected in the weak lensing map yielding a completeness of roughly 50%. We examine the seven known extended cluster x-ray sources in the DLS field: three can be detected in the weak lensing map, three should not be detected without boosting from superposed large-scale structure, and one is mysteriously undetected even though its optical properties suggest that it should produce a detectable lensing signal. Taken together, these results underscore the need for more extensive comparisons among different methods of massive cluster identification., Comment: 34 pages, 16 figures, ApJ accepted
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
289. Evolution of the Halpha luminosity function
- Author
-
Westra, Eduard, Geller, Margaret J., Kurtz, Michael J., Fabricant, Daniel G., Dell'Antonio, Ian, Westra, Eduard, Geller, Margaret J., Kurtz, Michael J., Fabricant, Daniel G., and Dell'Antonio, Ian
- Abstract
The Smithsonian Hectospec Lensing Survey (SHELS) is a window on the star formation history over the last 4 Gyr. SHELS is a spectroscopically complete survey for Rtot < 20.3 over 4 square degrees. We use the 10k spectra to select a sample of pure star forming galaxies based on their Halpha emission line. We use the spectroscopy to determine extinction corrections for individual galaxies and to remove active galaxies in order to reduce systematic uncertainties. We use the large volume of SHELS with the depth of a narrowband survey for Halpha galaxies at z ~ 0.24 to make a combined determination of the Halpha luminosity function at z ~ 0.24. The large area covered by SHELS yields a survey volume big enough to determine the bright end of the Halpha luminosity function from redshift 0.100 to 0.377 for an assumed fixed faint-end slope alpha = -1.20. The bright end evolves: the characteristic luminosity L* increases by 0.84 dex over this redshift range. Similarly, the star formation density increases by 0.11 dex. The fraction of galaxies with a close neighbor increases by a factor of 2-5 for L(Halpha) >~ L* in each of the redshift bins. We conclude that triggered star formation is an important influence for star forming galaxies with Halpha emission., Comment: 26 pages, 23 figures, submitted to ApJ; version with high resolution figures available at http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~ewestra/publications
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
290. Velocity Dispersion Profile of the Milky Way Halo
- Author
-
Brown, Warren R., Geller, Margaret J., Kenyon, Scott J., Diaferio, Antonaldo, Brown, Warren R., Geller, Margaret J., Kenyon, Scott J., and Diaferio, Antonaldo
- Abstract
We present a spectroscopic sample of 910 distant halo stars from the Hypervelocity Star survey from which we derive the velocity dispersion profile of the Milky Way halo. The sample is a mix of 74% evolved horizontal branch stars and 26% blue stragglers. We estimate distances to the stars using observed colors, metallicities, and stellar evolution tracks. Our sample contains twice as many objects with R>50 kpc as previous surveys. We compute the velocity dispersion profile in two ways: with a parametric method based on a Milky Way potential model, and with a non-parametric method based on the caustic technique originally developed to measure galaxy cluster mass profiles. The resulting velocity dispersion profiles are remarkably consistent with those found by two independent surveys based on other stellar populations: the Milky Way halo exhibits a mean decline in radial velocity dispersion of -0.38+-0.12 km/s/kpc over 15
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
291. Runaway Stars, Hypervelocity Stars, and Radial Velocity Surveys
- Author
-
Bromley, Benjamin C., Kenyon, Scott J., Brown, Warren R., Geller, Margaret J., Bromley, Benjamin C., Kenyon, Scott J., Brown, Warren R., and Geller, Margaret J.
- Abstract
Runaway stars ejected from the Galactic disk populate the halo of the Milky Way. To predict the spatial and kinematic properties of runaways, we inject stars into a Galactic potential, compute their trajectories through the Galaxy, and derive simulated catalogs for comparison with observations. Runaways have a flattened spatial distribution, with higher velocity stars at Galactic latitudes less than 30 degrees. Due to their shorter stellar lifetimes, massive runaway stars are more concentrated towards the disk than low mass runaways. Bound (unbound) runaways that reach the halo probably originate from distances of 6--12 kpc (10--15 kpc) from the Galactic center, close to the estimated origin of the unbound runaway star HD 271791. Because runaways are brighter and have smaller velocities than hypervelocity stars (HVSs), radial velocity surveys are unlikely to confuse runaway stars with HVSs. We estimate that at most 1 runaway star contaminates the current sample. We place an upper limit of 2% on the fraction of A-type main sequence stars ejected as runaways., Comment: Astrophysical Journal, submitted; 45 pages of text and 10 figures
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
292. A REDSHIFT SURVEY OF THE STRONG-LENSING CLUSTER ABELL 383
- Author
-
Geller, Margaret J., primary, Hwang, Ho Seong, additional, Diaferio, Antonaldo, additional, Kurtz, Michael J., additional, Coe, Dan, additional, and Rines, Kenneth J., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
293. The Anisotropic Spatial Distribution of Hypervelocity Stars
- Author
-
Brown, Warren R., Geller, Margaret J., Kenyon, Scott J., Bromley, Benjamin C., Brown, Warren R., Geller, Margaret J., Kenyon, Scott J., and Bromley, Benjamin C.
- Abstract
We study the distribution of angular positions and angular separations of unbound hypervelocity stars (HVSs). HVSs are spatially anisotropic at the 3-sigma level. The spatial anisotropy is significant in Galactic longitude, not in latitude, and the inclusion of lower velocity, possibly bound HVSs reduces the significance of the anisotropy. We discuss how the observed distribution of HVSs may be linked to their origin. In the future, measuring the distribution of HVSs in the southern sky will provide additional constraints on the spatial anisotropy and the origin of HVSs., Comment: 4 pages, accepted to ApJ Letters
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
294. MMT Hypervelocity Star Survey
- Author
-
Brown, Warren R., Geller, Margaret J., Kenyon, Scott J., Brown, Warren R., Geller, Margaret J., and Kenyon, Scott J.
- Abstract
We describe a new survey for unbound hypervelocity stars (HVSs), stars traveling with such extreme velocities that dynamical ejection from a massive black hole (MBH) is their most likely origin. We investigate the possible contribution of unbound runaway stars, and show that the physical properties of binaries constrain low mass runaways to bound velocities. We measure radial velocities for HVS candidates with the colors of early A-type and late B-type stars. We report the discovery of 6 unbound HVSs with velocities and distances exceeding the conservative escape velocity estimate of Kenyon and collaborators. We additionally report 4 possibly unbound HVSs with velocities and distances exceeding the lower escape velocity estimate of Xue and collaborators. These discoveries increase the number of known HVSs by 60%-100%. Other survey objects include 19 newly identified z~2.4 quasars. One of the HVSs may be a horizontal branch star, consistent with the number of evolved HVSs predicted by Galactic center ejection models. Finding more evolved HVSs will one day allow a probe of the low-mass regime of HVSs and will constrain the mass function of stars in the Galactic center., Comment: 10 pages, accepted to ApJ with minor revisions
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
295. Spectrophotometry with Hectospec, the MMT's Fiber-Fed Spectrograph
- Author
-
Fabricant, Daniel G., Kurtz, Michael J., Geller, Margaret J., Caldwell, Nelson, Woods, Deborah, Fabricant, Daniel G., Kurtz, Michael J., Geller, Margaret J., Caldwell, Nelson, and Woods, Deborah
- Abstract
We describe techniques for photometric calibration of optical spectra obtained with the MMT's fiber-fed spectrograph, Hectospec. The atmospheric dispersion compensation prisms built into the MMT's f/5 wide field corrector effectively eliminate errors due to differential refraction, and simplify the calibration procedure. The procedures that we describe here are applicable to all 220,000+ spectra obtained to date with Hectospec because the instrument response is stable. We estimate the internal error in the Hectospec measurements by comparing duplicate measurements of $\sim$1500 galaxies. For a sample of 400 galaxies in the Smithsonian Hectospec Lensing Survey (SHELS) with a median z=0.10, we compare line and continuum fluxes measured by Hectospec through a 1.5 arcsec diameter optical fiber with those measured by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) through a 3 arcsec diameter optical fiber. Agreement of the [OII] and H alpha SHELS and SDSS line fluxes, after scaling by the R band flux in the different apertures, suggests that the spatial variation in star formation rates over a 1.5 to 3 kpc radial scale is small. The median ratio of the Hectospec and SDSS spectra, smoothed over 100 Angstrom scales, is remarkably constant to ~5% over the range of 3850 to 8000 Angstroms. Offsets in the ratio of the median [OII] and H alpha fluxes, the equivalent width of H delta and the continuum index d4000 are a few percent, small compared with other sources of scatter.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
296. Lyman-Alpha Absorption Systems and the Nearby Galaxy Distribution
- Author
-
Grogin, Norman A. and Geller, Margaret J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the galaxy number density (smoothed on a 5h^{-1} Mpc scale) around 18 low-redshift Lyman-alpha absorbers previously observed with HST. The absorbers lie in the foregrounds of Mrk 335, Mrk 421, Mrk 501, I Zw 1, and 3C 273, all within regions where there are now complete redshift surveys to m_{Zw}=15.5. We construct a smoothed galaxy number density field from the redshift survey data and determine the distribution of densities at the Lyman-alpha absorber locations. We also find the distribution of galaxy number density for a variety of test samples: all galaxy locations within the Center for Astrophysics Redshift Survey (CfA2), CfA2 galaxy locations along randomly selected lines of sight (LOS), and randomly chosen redshifts along random LOS. The Lyman-alpha absorbers are present in dense regions of the survey, but occur far more frequently in underdense regions than do typical luminous galaxies. The distribution of smoothed galaxy density around the Lyman-alpha absorbers is inconsistent at the 4-sigma level with the density distribution around survey galaxies. It is highly consistent with a density distribution at randomly chosen redshifts along random LOS. This supports earlier evidence that the nearby, low column density (log N_{HI} < 14) Lyman-alpha forest systems are spatially distributed at random; they are not well correlated with the local large-scale structure., Accepted for publication in ApJ, 38 pages including 10 figures
- Published
- 1998
297. A Complete Redshift Survey to the Zwicky Catalog Limit in a 2-hour by 15-degree Region Around 3C 273
- Author
-
Grogin, Norman A., Geller, Margaret J., and Huchra, John P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Abstract
We compile 1113 redshifts (648 new measurements, 465 from the literature) for Zwicky catalogue galaxies in the region (-3.5deg < ��< 8.5deg, 11.5h < ��< 13.5h). We include redshifts for 114 component objects in 78 Zwicky catalogue multiplets. The redshift survey in this region is 99.5% complete to the Zwicky catalogue limit, m_Zw=15.7. It is 99.9% complete to m_Zw = 15.5, the CfA Redshift Survey (CfA2) magnitude limit. The survey region is adjacent to the northern portion of CfA2, overlaps the northernmost slice of the Las Campanas Redshift Survey, includes the southern extent of the Virgo Cluster, and is roughly centered on the QSO 3C 273. As in other portions of the Zwicky catalogue, bright and faint galaxies trace the same large-scale structure., 43 pages (3 tables and 4 figures included separately); ApJS, in press
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
298. Measuring Galaxy Velocity Dispersions with Hectospec
- Author
-
Fabricant, Daniel, primary, Chilingarian, Igor, additional, Seong Hwang, Ho, additional, Kurtz, Michael J., additional, Geller, Margaret J., additional, Del’Antonio, Ian P., additional, and Rines, Kenneth J., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
299. DUST PROPERTIES OF LOCAL DUST-OBSCURED GALAXIES WITH THE SUBMILLIMETER ARRAY
- Author
-
Hwang, Ho Seong, primary, Andrews, Sean M., additional, and Geller, Margaret J., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
300. DISCOVERY OF NINE INTERMEDIATE-REDSHIFT COMPACT QUIESCENT GALAXIES IN THE SLOAN DIGITAL SKY SURVEY
- Author
-
Damjanov, Ivana, primary, Chilingarian, Igor, additional, Hwang, Ho Seong, additional, and Geller, Margaret 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.