468 results on '"Donas, J."'
Search Results
2. Prognostic gene expression signature for high-grade serous ovarian cancer.
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Millstein, J, Budden, T, Goode, EL, Anglesio, MS, Talhouk, A, Intermaggio, MP, Leong, HS, Chen, S, Elatre, W, Gilks, B, Nazeran, T, Volchek, M, Bentley, RC, Wang, C, Chiu, DS, Kommoss, S, Leung, SCY, Senz, J, Lum, A, Chow, V, Sudderuddin, H, Mackenzie, R, George, J, AOCS Group, Fereday, S, Hendley, J, Traficante, N, Steed, H, Koziak, JM, Köbel, M, McNeish, IA, Goranova, T, Ennis, D, Macintyre, G, Silva De Silva, D, Ramón Y Cajal, T, García-Donas, J, Hernando Polo, S, Rodriguez, GC, Cushing-Haugen, KL, Harris, HR, Greene, CS, Zelaya, RA, Behrens, S, Fortner, RT, Sinn, P, Herpel, E, Lester, J, Lubiński, J, Oszurek, O, Tołoczko, A, Cybulski, C, Menkiszak, J, Pearce, CL, Pike, MC, Tseng, C, Alsop, J, Rhenius, V, Song, H, Jimenez-Linan, M, Piskorz, AM, Gentry-Maharaj, A, Karpinskyj, C, Widschwendter, M, Singh, N, Kennedy, CJ, Sharma, R, Harnett, PR, Gao, B, Johnatty, SE, Sayer, R, Boros, J, Winham, SJ, Keeney, GL, Kaufmann, SH, Larson, MC, Luk, H, Hernandez, BY, Thompson, PJ, Wilkens, LR, Carney, ME, Trabert, B, Lissowska, J, Brinton, L, Sherman, ME, Bodelon, C, Hinsley, S, Lewsley, LA, Glasspool, R, Banerjee, SN, Stronach, EA, Haluska, P, Ray-Coquard, I, Mahner, S, Winterhoff, B, Slamon, D, Levine, DA, Kelemen, LE, Benitez, J, and Chang-Claude, J
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AOCS Group ,Humans ,Cystadenocarcinoma ,Serous ,Ovarian Neoplasms ,Prognosis ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Survival Analysis ,Female ,Transcriptome ,formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded ,gene expression ,high-grade serous ovarian cancer ,overall survival ,prognosis ,Rare Diseases ,Genetic Testing ,Cancer ,Ovarian Cancer ,Genetics ,4.4 Population screening ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis - Abstract
BackgroundMedian overall survival (OS) for women with high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC) is ∼4 years, yet survival varies widely between patients. There are no well-established, gene expression signatures associated with prognosis. The aim of this study was to develop a robust prognostic signature for OS in patients with HGSOC.Patients and methodsExpression of 513 genes, selected from a meta-analysis of 1455 tumours and other candidates, was measured using NanoString technology from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tumour tissue collected from 3769 women with HGSOC from multiple studies. Elastic net regularization for survival analysis was applied to develop a prognostic model for 5-year OS, trained on 2702 tumours from 15 studies and evaluated on an independent set of 1067 tumours from six studies.ResultsExpression levels of 276 genes were associated with OS (false discovery rate < 0.05) in covariate-adjusted single-gene analyses. The top five genes were TAP1, ZFHX4, CXCL9, FBN1 and PTGER3 (P < 0.001). The best performing prognostic signature included 101 genes enriched in pathways with treatment implications. Each gain of one standard deviation in the gene expression score conferred a greater than twofold increase in risk of death [hazard ratio (HR) 2.35, 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.02-2.71; P < 0.001]. Median survival [HR (95% CI)] by gene expression score quintile was 9.5 (8.3 to -), 5.4 (4.6-7.0), 3.8 (3.3-4.6), 3.2 (2.9-3.7) and 2.3 (2.1-2.6) years.ConclusionThe OTTA-SPOT (Ovarian Tumor Tissue Analysis consortium - Stratified Prognosis of Ovarian Tumours) gene expression signature may improve risk stratification in clinical trials by identifying patients who are least likely to achieve 5-year survival. The identified novel genes associated with the outcome may also yield opportunities for the development of targeted therapeutic approaches.
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- 2020
3. Results from the INMUNOSUN-SOGUG trial: a prospective phase II study of sunitinib as a second-line therapy in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma after immune checkpoint-based combination therapy
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Grande, E., Alonso-Gordoa, T., Reig, O., Esteban, E., Castellano, D., Garcia-del-Muro, X., Mendez, M.J., García-Donas, J., González Rodríguez, M., Arranz-Arija, J.A., Lopez-Criado, P., Molina-Cerrillo, J., Mellado, B., Alvarez-Fernandez, C., De Velasco, G., Cuéllar-Rivas, M.A., Rodríguez-Alonso, R.M., Rodríguez-Moreno, J.F., and Suarez-Rodriguez, C.
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- 2022
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4. Patient derived renal cell carcinoma organoids and isolated autologous tumor infiltrating lymphocytes as cancer in vitro models for immunotherapy agents screening
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Hevia Palacios, V., primary, García-Donas, J., additional, García-Rojo, E., additional, Rodriguez-Moreno, J.F., additional, Feltes, J., additional, Sevillano, E., additional, Duque, G., additional, Grazioso, T., additional, Brime, R., additional, Barquin, A., additional, Quiralte, M., additional, Romero, J., additional, and Navarro, P., additional
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- 2024
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5. Gender influence on work satisfaction and leadership for medical oncologists: a survey of the Spanish Society of Medical Oncology (SEOM)
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Elez, E., Ayala, F., Felip, E., García Campelo, R., García Carbonero, R., García Donás, J., González del Alba, A., González Flores, E., Hidalgo, J., Isla, D., Majem, M., Rodríguez Lescure, Á., Safont, M.J., Santaballa, A., Villacampa, G., Vera, R., and Garrido, P.
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- 2021
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6. Rucaparib maintenance treatment for recurrent ovarian carcinoma after response to platinum therapy (ARIEL3): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial
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Coleman, Robert L, Oza, Amit M, Lorusso, Domenica, Aghajanian, Carol, Oaknin, Ana, Dean, Andrew, Colombo, Nicoletta, Weberpals, Johanne I, Clamp, Andrew, Scambia, Giovanni, Leary, Alexandra, Holloway, Robert W, Gancedo, Margarita Amenedo, Fong, Peter C, Goh, Jeffrey C, O'Malley, David M, Armstrong, Deborah K, Garcia-Donas, Jesus, Swisher, Elizabeth M, Floquet, Anne, Konecny, Gottfried E, McNeish, Iain A, Scott, Clare L, Cameron, Terri, Maloney, Lara, Isaacson, Jeff, Goble, Sandra, Grace, Caroline, Harding, Thomas C, Raponi, Mitch, Sun, James, Lin, Kevin K, Giordano, Heidi, Ledermann, Jonathan A, investigators, ARIEL3, Buck, M, Dean, A, Friedlander, ML, Goh, JC, Harnett, P, Kichenadasse, G, Scott, CL, Denys, H, Dirix, L, Vergote, I, Elit, L, Ghatage, P, Oza, AM, Plante, M, Provencher, D, Weberpals, JI, Welch, S, Floquet, A, Gladieff, L, Joly, F, Leary, A, Lortholary, A, Lotz, J, Medioni, J, Tredan, O, You, B, El-Balat, A, Hänle, C, Krabisch, P, Neunhöffer, T, Pölcher, M, Wimberger, P, Amit, A, Kovel, S, Leviov, M, Safra, T, Shapira-Frommer, R, Stemmer, S, Bologna, A, Colombo, N, Lorusso, D, Pignata, S, Sabbatini, RF, Scambia, G, Tamberi, S, Zamagni, C, Fong, PC, O'Donnell, A, Gancedo, M Amenedo, Herraez, A Casado, Garcia-Donas, J, Guerra, EM, Oaknin, A, Palacio, I, Romero, I, Sanchez, A, Banerjee, SN, Clamp, A, Drew, Y, Gabra, HG, Jackson, D, Ledermann, JA, McNeish, IA, Parkinson, C, and Powell, M
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Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Orphan Drug ,Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Genetics ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Ovarian Cancer ,Rare Diseases ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,6.2 Cellular and gene therapies ,Aged ,Disease-Free Survival ,Double-Blind Method ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Indoles ,Internationality ,Maintenance Chemotherapy ,Middle Aged ,Molecular Targeted Therapy ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,Ovarian Neoplasms ,Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerase Inhibitors ,Risk Assessment ,Survival Rate ,Treatment Outcome ,ARIEL3 investigators ,Medical and Health Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundRucaparib, a poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor, has anticancer activity in recurrent ovarian carcinoma harbouring a BRCA mutation or high percentage of genome-wide loss of heterozygosity. In this trial we assessed rucaparib versus placebo after response to second-line or later platinum-based chemotherapy in patients with high-grade, recurrent, platinum-sensitive ovarian carcinoma.MethodsIn this randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial, we recruited patients from 87 hospitals and cancer centres across 11 countries. Eligible patients were aged 18 years or older, had a platinum-sensitive, high-grade serous or endometrioid ovarian, primary peritoneal, or fallopian tube carcinoma, had received at least two previous platinum-based chemotherapy regimens, had achieved complete or partial response to their last platinum-based regimen, had a cancer antigen 125 concentration of less than the upper limit of normal, had a performance status of 0-1, and had adequate organ function. Patients were ineligible if they had symptomatic or untreated central nervous system metastases, had received anticancer therapy 14 days or fewer before starting the study, or had received previous treatment with a poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor. We randomly allocated patients 2:1 to receive oral rucaparib 600 mg twice daily or placebo in 28 day cycles using a computer-generated sequence (block size of six, stratified by homologous recombination repair gene mutation status, progression-free interval after the penultimate platinum-based regimen, and best response to the most recent platinum-based regimen). Patients, investigators, site staff, assessors, and the funder were masked to assignments. The primary outcome was investigator-assessed progression-free survival evaluated with use of an ordered step-down procedure for three nested cohorts: patients with BRCA mutations (carcinoma associated with deleterious germline or somatic BRCA mutations), patients with homologous recombination deficiencies (BRCA mutant or BRCA wild-type and high loss of heterozygosity), and the intention-to-treat population, assessed at screening and every 12 weeks thereafter. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01968213; enrolment is complete.FindingsBetween April 7, 2014, and July 19, 2016, we randomly allocated 564 patients: 375 (66%) to rucaparib and 189 (34%) to placebo. Median progression-free survival in patients with a BRCA-mutant carcinoma was 16·6 months (95% CI 13·4-22·9; 130 [35%] patients) in the rucaparib group versus 5·4 months (3·4-6·7; 66 [35%] patients) in the placebo group (hazard ratio 0·23 [95% CI 0·16-0·34]; p
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- 2017
7. Prognostic gene expression signature for high-grade serous ovarian cancer
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Bowtell, D., Chenevix-Trench, G., Green, A., Webb, P., DeFazio, A., Gertig, D., Traficante, N., Fereday, S., Moore, S., Hung, J., Harrap, K., Sadkowsky, T., Pandeya, N., Malt, M., Mellon, A., Robertson, R., Vanden Bergh, T., Jones, M., Mackenzie, P., Maidens, J., Nattress, K., Chiew, Y.E., Stenlake, A., Sullivan, H., Alexander, B., Ashover, P., Brown, S., Corrish, T., Green, L., Jackman, L., Ferguson, K., Martin, K., Martyn, A., Ranieri, B., White, J., Jayde, V., Mamers, P., Bowes, L., Galletta, L., Giles, D., Hendley, J., Alsop, K., Schmidt, T., Shirley, H., Ball, C., Young, C., Viduka, S., Tran, Hoa, Bilic, Sanela, Glavinas, Lydia, Brooks, Julia, Stuart-Harris, R., Kirsten, F., Rutovitz, J., Clingan, P., Glasgow, A., Proietto, A., Braye, S., Otton, G., Shannon, J., Bonaventura, T., Stewart, J., Begbie, S., Friedlander, M., Bell, D., Baron-Hay, S., Ferrier,a, A., Gard, G., Nevell, D., Pavlakis, N., Valmadre, S., Young, B., Camaris, C., Crouch, R., Edwards, L., Hacker, N., Marsden, D., Robertson, G., Beale, P., Beith, J., Carter, J., Dalrymple, C., Houghton, R., Russell, P., Links, M., Grygiel, J., Hill, J., Brand, A., Byth, K., Jaworski, R., Harnett, P., Sharma, R., Wain, G., Ward, B., Papadimos, D., Crandon, A., Cummings, M., Horwood, K., Obermair, A., Perrin, L., Wyld, D., Nicklin, J., Davy, M., Oehler, M.K., Hall, C., Dodd, T., Healy, T., Pittman, K., Henderson, D., Miller, J., Pierdes, J., Blomfield, P., Challis, D., McIntosh, R., Parker, A., Brown, B., Rome, R., Allen, D., Grant, P., Hyde, S., Laurie, R., Robbie, M., Healy, D., Jobling, T., Manolitsas, T., McNealage, J., Rogers, P., Susil, B., Sumithran, E., Simpson, I., Phillips, K., Rischin, D., Fox, S., Johnson, D., Lade, S., Loughrey, M., O’Callaghan, N., Murray, W., Waring, P., Billson, V., Pyman, J., Neesham, D., Quinn, M., Underhill, C., Bell, R., Ng, L.F., Blum, R., Ganju, V., Hammond, I., Leung, Y., McCartney, A., Buck, M., Haviv, I., Purdie, D., Whiteman, D., Zeps, N., Millstein, J., Budden, T., Goode, E.L., Anglesio, M.S., Talhouk, A., Intermaggio, M.P., Leong, H.S., Chen, S., Elatre, W., Gilks, B., Nazeran, T., Volchek, M., Bentley, R.C., Wang, C., Chiu, D.S., Kommoss, S., Leung, S.C.Y., Senz, J., Lum, A., Chow, V., Sudderuddin, H., Mackenzie, R., George, J., Steed, H., Koziak, J.M., Köbel, M., McNeish, I.A., Goranova, T., Ennis, D., Macintyre, G., Silva De Silva, D., Ramón y Cajal, T., García-Donas, J., Hernando Polo, S., Rodriguez, G.C., Cushing-Haugen, K.L., Harris, H.R., Greene, C.S., Zelaya, R.A., Behrens, S., Fortner, R.T., Sinn, P., Herpel, E., Lester, J., Lubiński, J., Oszurek, O., Tołoczko, A., Cybulski, C., Menkiszak, J., Pearce, C.L., Pike, M.C., Tseng, C., Alsop, J., Rhenius, V., Song, H., Jimenez-Linan, M., Piskorz, A.M., Gentry-Maharaj, A., Karpinskyj, C., Widschwendter, M., Singh, N., Kennedy, C.J., Harnett, P.R., Gao, B., Johnatty, S.E., Sayer, R., Boros, J., Winham, S.J., Keeney, G.L., Kaufmann, S.H., Larson, M.C., Luk, H., Hernandez, B.Y., Thompson, P.J., Wilkens, L.R., Carney, M.E., Trabert, B., Lissowska, J., Brinton, L., Sherman, M.E., Bodelon, C., Hinsley, S., Lewsley, L.A., Glasspool, R., Banerjee, S.N., Stronach, E.A., Haluska, P., Ray-Coquard, I., Mahner, S., Winterhoff, B., Slamon, D., Levine, D.A., Kelemen, L.E., Benitez, J., Chang-Claude, J., Gronwald, J., Wu, A.H., Menon, U., Goodman, M.T., Schildkraut, J.M., Wentzensen, N., Brown, R., Berchuck, A., deFazio, A., Gayther, S.A., García, M.J., Henderson, M.J., Rossing, M.A., Beeghly-Fadiel, A., Fasching, P.A., Orsulic, S., Karlan, B.Y., Konecny, G.E., Huntsman, D.G., Bowtell, D.D., Brenton, J.D., Doherty, J.A., Pharoah, P.D.P., and Ramus, S.J.
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- 2020
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8. Pemigatinib for Metastatic or Surgically Unresectable Urothelial Carcinoma With FGF/FGFR Genomic Alterations: Final Results From FIGHT-201
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Necchi, A., primary, Pouessel, D., additional, Leibowitz, R., additional, Gupta, S., additional, Fléchon, A., additional, García-Donas, J., additional, Bilen, M.A., additional, Debruyne, P.R., additional, Milowsky, M.I., additional, Friedlander, T., additional, Maio, M., additional, Gilmartin, A., additional, Li, X., additional, Veronese, M.L., additional, and Loriot, Y., additional
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- 2023
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9. GALEX-SDSS Catalogs for Statistical Studies
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Budavari, T., Heinis, S., Szalay, A. S., Nieto-Santisteban, M., Gupchup, J., Shiao, B., Smith, M., Chang, R., Kauffmann, G., Morrissey, P., Schiminovich, D., Milliard, B., Wyder, T. K., Martin, D. C., Barlow, T. A., Seibert, M., Forster, K., Bianchi, L., Donas, J., Friedman, P. G., Heckman, T. M., Lee, Y. -W., Madore, B. F., Neff, S. G., Rich, R. M., and Welsh, B. Y.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a detailed study of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer's photometric catalogs with special focus on the statistical properties of the All-sky and Medium Imaging Surveys. We introduce the concept of primaries to resolve the issue of multiple detections and follow a geometric approach to define clean catalogs with well-understood selection functions. We cross-identify the GALEX sources (GR2+3) with Sloan Digital Sky Survey (DR6) observations, which indirectly provides an invaluable insight about the astrometric model of the UV sources and allows us to revise the band merging strategy. We derive the formal description of the GALEX footprints as well as their intersections with the SDSS coverage along with analytic calculations of their areal coverage. The crossmatch catalogs are made available for the public. We conclude by illustrating the implementation of typical selection criteria in SQL for catalog subsets geared toward statistical analyses, e.g., correlation and luminosity function studies., Comment: 12 pages, 15 figures, accepted to ApJ
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- 2009
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10. UV to IR SEDs of UV selected galaxies in the ELAIS fields: evolution of dust attenuation and star formation activity from z=0.7 to z=0.2
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Iglesias-Paramo, J., Buat, V., Hernandez-Fernandez, J., Xu, C. K., Burgarella, D., Takeuchi, T. T., Boselli, A., Shupe, D., Rowan-Robinson, M., Babbedge, T., Conrow, T., Fang, F., Farrah, D., Gonzalez-Solares, E., Lonsdale, C., Smith, G., Surace, J., Barlow, T. A., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Martin, D. C., Morrissey, P., Neff, S. G., Schiminovich, D., Seibert, M., Small, T., Wyder, T. K., Bianchi, L., Donas, J., Heckman, T. M., Lee, Y. -W., Madore, B. F., Milliard, B., Rich, R. M., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, B. Y., and Yi, S. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the ultraviolet to far-infrared (hereafter UV-to-IR) SEDs of a sample of intermediate redshift (0.2 < z < 0.7) UV-selected galaxies from the ELAIS-N1 and ELAIS-N2 fields by fitting a multi-wavelength dataset to a library of GRASIL templates. Star formation related properties of the galaxies are derived from the library of models by using the Bayesian statistics. We find a decreasing presence of galaxies with low attenuation and low total luminosity as redshift decreases, which does not hold for high total luminosity galaxies. In addition the dust attenuation of low mass galaxies increases as redshift decreases, and this trend seems to disappear for galaxies with M* > 10^11 M_sun. This result is consistent with a mass dependent evolution of the dust to gas ratio, which could be driven by a mass dependent efficiency of star formation in star forming galaxies. The specific star formation rates (SSFR) decrease with increasing stellar mass at all redshifts, and for a given stellar mass the SSFR decreases with decreasing redshift. The differences in the slope of the M*--SSFR relation found between this work and others at similar redshift could be explained by the adopted selection criteria of the samples which, for a UV selected sample, favours blue, star forming galaxies., Comment: 21 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2007
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11. Chemical and Photometric Evolution of Extended Ultraviolet Disks: Optical Spectroscopy of M83 (NGC5236) and NGC4625
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de Paz, A. Gil, Madore, B. F., Boissier, S., Thilker, D., Bianchi, L., Contreras, C. Sánchez, Barlow, T. A., Conrow, T., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Martin, D. C., Morrissey, P., Neff, S. G., Rich, R. M., Schiminovich, D., Seibert, M., Small, T., Donas, J., Heckman, T. M., Lee, Y. -W., Milliard, B., Szalay, A. S., Wyder, T. K., and Yi, S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results from the analysis of optical spectra of 31 Halpha-selected regions in the extended UV (XUV) disks of M83 (NGC5236) and NGC4625 recently discovered by GALEX. The spectra were obtained using IMACS at Las Campanas Observatory 6.5m Magellan I telescope and COSMIC at the Palomar 200-inch telescope, respectively for M83 and NGC4625. The line ratios measured indicate nebular oxygen abundances (derived from the R23 parameter) of the order of Zsun/5-Zsun/10. For most emission-line regions analyzed the line fluxes and ratios measured are best reproduced by models of photoionization by single stars with masses in the range 20-40 Msun and oxygen abundances comparable to those derived from the R23 parameter. We find indications for a relatively high N/O abundance ratio in the XUV disk of M83. Although the metallicities derived imply that these are not the first stars formed in the XUV disks, such a level of enrichment could be reached in young spiral disks only 1 Gyr after these first stars would have formed. The amount of gas in the XUV disks allow maintaining the current level of star formation for at least a few Gyr., Comment: 52 pages, 8 tables, 7 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2007
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12. 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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13. The Local Universe as Seen in Far-Infrared and in Far-Ultraviolet: A Global Point of View on the Local Recent Star Formation
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Buat, V., Takeuchi, T. T., Iglesias-Paramo, J., Xu, C. K., Burgarella, D., Boselli, A., Barlow, T., Bianchi, L., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Heckman, T. M., Lee, Y. -W., Madore, B. F., Martin, D. C., Milliard, B., Morissey, P., Neff, S., Rich, M., Schiminovich, D., Seibert, M., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, B., Wyder, T., and Yi, S. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We select far-infrared (FIR-60 microns) and far-ultraviolet (FUV-1530 A) samples of nearby galaxies in order to discuss the biases encountered by monochromatic surveys (FIR or FUV). Very different volumes are sampled by each selection and much care is taken to apply volume corrections to all the analyses. The distributions of the bolometric luminosity of young stars are compared for both samples: they are found to be consistent with each other for galaxies of intermediate luminosities but some differences are found for high (>5 10^{10} L_sun) luminosities. The shallowness of the IRAS survey prevents us from securing comparison at low luminosities (<2 10^9 L_sun). The ratio of the total infrared (TIR) luminosity to the FUV luminosity is found to increase with the bolometric luminosity in a similar way for both samples up to 5 10^{10} L_sun. Brighter galaxies are found to have a different behavior according to their selection: the L_TIR/L_FUV ratio of the FUV-selected galaxies brighter than 5 10^{10} L_sun reaches a plateau whereas L_TIR/L_FUV continues to increase with the luminosity of bright galaxies selected in FIR. The volume-averaged specific star formation rate (SFR per unit galaxy stellar mass, SSFR) is found to decrease toward massive galaxies within each selection. The SSFR is found to be larger than that measured for optical and NIR-selected sample over the whole mass range for the FIR selection, and for masses larger than 10^{10} M_sun for the FUV selection. Luminous and massive galaxies selected in FIR appear as active as galaxies with similar characteristics detected at z ~ 0.7., Comment: 32 pages, 9 figures, to be published in the Astrophysical Journal Supplement series dedicated to GALEX results
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- 2006
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14. The GALEX Ultraviolet Atlas of Nearby Galaxies
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de Paz, A. Gil, Boissier, S., Madore, B. F., Seibert, M., Joe, Y. H., Boselli, A., Wyder, T. K., Thilker, D., Bianchi, L., Rey, S. -C., Rich, R. M., Barlow, T. A., Conrow, T., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Martin, D. C., Morrissey, P., Neff, S. G., Schiminovich, D., Small, T., Donas, J., Heckman, T. M., Lee, Y. -W., Milliard, B., Szalay, A. S., and Yi, S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present images, integrated photometry, surface-brightness and color profiles for a total of 1034 nearby galaxies recently observed by the GALEX satellite in its far-ultraviolet (FUV; 1516A) and near-ultraviolet (NUV; 2267A) bands. (...) This data set has been complemented with archival optical, near-infrared, and far-infrared fluxes and colors. We find that the integrated (FUV-K) color provides robust discrimination between elliptical and spiral/irregular galaxies and also among spiral galaxies of different sub-types. Elliptical galaxies with brighter K-band luminosities (i.e. more massive) are redder in (NUV-K) color but bluer in (FUV-NUV) than less massive ellipticals. In the case of the spiral/irregular galaxies our analysis shows the presence of a relatively tight correlation between the (FUV-NUV) color and the total infrared-to-UV ratio. The correlation found between (FUV-NUV) color and K-band luminosity (with lower luminosity objects being bluer than more luminous ones) can be explained as due to an increase in the dust content with galaxy luminosity. The images in this Atlas along with the profiles and integrated properties are publicly available through a dedicated web page at http://nedwww.ipac.caltech.edu/level5/GALEX_Atlas/, Comment: 181 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in ApJS (abstract abridged)
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15. Dissecting Galaxy Colors with GALEX, SDSS, and Spitzer
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Johnson, B. D., Schiminovich, D., Seibert, M., Treyer, M. A., Charlot, S., Heckman, T. M., Martin, D. C., Salim, S., Kauffmann, G., Bianchi, L., Donas, J., Friedman, P. G., Lee, Y. -W., Madore, B. F., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S. G., Rich, R. M., Szalay, A. S., Forster, K., Barlow, T. A., Conrow, T., Small, T., and Wyder, T. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We combine data from SDSS and the GALEX and Spitzer observatories to create a sample of galaxies observed homogeneously from the UV to the Far-IR. This sample, consisting of ~460 galaxies observed spectroscopically by SDSS provides a multiwavelength (0.15-24 micron) view of obscured and unobscured star formation in nearby (z<0.3) galaxies with SFRs ranging from 0.01 to 100 M_solar/yr. We calculate a robust dust measure from the infrared to UV ratio (IRX) and explore the influence of star formation history (SFH) on the dust-UV color relation (i.e. the IRX-beta relation). We find that the UV colors of galaxies are only weakly dependent on their SFH as measured by the 4000A break. However, we find that the contributions of dust and SFH are distinguishable when colors at widely separated wavelengths (e.g. 0.23-3.6 micron) are introduced. We show this explicitly by recasting the IRX-beta relation as a more general IRX-SFH-color relation, which we examine in different projections. We also determine simple fits to this relation., Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted by ApJ Letters
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- 2006
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16. Star formation in the nearby universe: the ultraviolet and infrared points of view
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Iglesias-Paramo, J., Buat, V., Takeuchi, T. T., Xu, K., Boissier, S., Boselli, A., Burgarella, D., Madore, B. F., de Paz, A. Gil, Bianchi, L., Barlow, T. A., Byun, Y. -I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Heckman, T. M., Jelinski, P. N., Lee, Y. -W., Malina, R. F., Martin, D. C., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P. F., Neff, S. G., Rich, R. M., Schiminovich, D., Seibert, M., Siegmund, O. H. W., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., and Welsh, B. Y.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
This work presents the main ultraviolet (UV) and far-infrared (FIR) properties of two samples of nearby galaxies selected from the GALEX ($\lambda = 2315$\AA, hereafter NUV) and IRAS ($\lambda = 60\mu$m) surveys respectively. They are built in order to get detection at both wavelengths for most of the galaxies. Star formation rate (SFR) estimators based on the UV and FIR emissions are compared. Systematic differences are found between the SFR estimators for individual galaxies based on the NUV fluxes corrected for dust attenuation and on the total IR luminosity. A combined estimator based on NUV and IR luminosities seems to be the best proxy over the whole range of values of SFR. Although both samples present similar average values of the birthrate parameter b, their star-formation-related properties are substantially different: NUV-selected galaxies tend to show larger values of $b$ for lower masses, SFRs and dust attenuations, supporting previous scenarios for the star formation history (SFH). Conversely, about 20% of the FIR-selected galaxies show high values of $b$, SFR and NUV attenuation. These galaxies, most of them being LIRGs and ULIRGs, break down the downsizing picture for the SFH, however their relative contribution per unit volume is small in the local Universe. Finally, the cosmic SFR density of the local Universe is estimated in a consistent way from the NUV and IR luminosities., Comment: 43 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series
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- 2006
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17. UV-optical colours as probes of early-type galaxy evolution
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Kaviraj, S., Schawinski, K., Devriendt, J. E. G., Ferreras, I., Khochfar, S., Yoon, S. -J., Yi, S. K., Deharveng, J. -M., Boselli, A., Barlow, T., Conrow, T., Forster, K., Friedman, P., Martin, D. C., Morrissey, P., Neff, S., Schiminovich, D., Seibert, M., Small, T., Wyder, T., Bianchi, L., Donas, J., Heckman, T., Lee, Y. -W., Madore, B., Milliard, B., Rich, R. M., and Szalay, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have studied ~2100 early-type galaxies in the SDSS DR3 which have been detected by the GALEX Medium Imaging Survey (MIS), in the redshift range 0 < z < 0.11. Combining GALEX UV photometry with corollary optical data from the SDSS, we find that, at a 95 percent confidence level, at least ~30 percent of galaxies in this sample have UV to optical colours consistent with some recent star formation within the last Gyr. In particular, galaxies with a NUV - r colour less than 5.5 are very likely to have experienced such recent star formation, taking into account the possibility of a contribution to NUV flux from the UV upturn phenomenon. We find quantitative agreement between the observations and the predictions of a semi-analytical LCDM hierarchical merger model and deduce that early-type galaxies in the redshift range 0 < z < 0.11 have ~1 to 3 percent of their stellar mass in stars less than 1 Gyr old. The average age of this recently formed population is ~300 to 500 Myrs. We also find that monolithically evolving galaxies, where recent star formation can be driven solely by recycled gas from stellar mass loss, cannot exhibit the blue colours (NUV - r < 5.5) seen in a significant fraction (~30 percent) of our observed sample., Comment: To appear in GALEX dedicated ApJ issue in December 2007 (accepted June 2006). A version with high-resolution figures can be downloaded at http://www-astro.physics.ox.ac.uk/~skaviraj/PAPERS/uv_cmr.pdf
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- 2006
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18. The effect of environment on the UV colour-magnitude relation of early-type galaxies
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Schawinski, K., Kaviraj, S., Khochfar, S., Yoon, S. -J., Yi, S. K., Deharveng, J. -M., Boselli, A., Barlow, T., Conrow, T., Forster, K., Friedman, P., Martin, D. C., Morrissey, P., Neff, S., Schiminovich, D., Seibert, M., Small, T., Wyder, T., Bianchi, L., Donas, J., Heckman, T., Lee, Y. -W., Madore, B., Milliard, B., Rich, R. M., and Szalay, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We use \textit{GALEX} (Galaxy Evolution Explorer) near-UV (NUV) photometry of a sample of early-type galaxies selected in \textit{SDSS} (Sloan Digital Sky Survey) to study the UV color-magnitude relation (CMR). $NUV-r$ color is an excellent tracer of even small amounts ($\sim 1$% mass fraction) of recent ($\la 1$ Gyr) star formation and so the $NUV-r$ CMR allows us to study the effect of environment on the recent star formation history. We analyze a volume-limited sample of 839 visually-inspected early-type galaxies in the redshift range $0.05 < z < 0.10$ brighter than $M_{r}$ of -21.5 with any possible emission-line or radio-selected AGN removed to avoid contamination. We find that contamination by AGN candidates and late-type interlopers highly bias any study of recent star formation in early-type galaxies and that, after removing those, our lower limit to the fraction of massive early-type galaxies showing signs of recent star formation is roughly $30 \pm 3%$ This suggests that residual star formation is common even amongst the present day early-type galaxy population. We find that the fraction of UV-bright early-type galaxies is 25% higher in low-density environments. However, the density effect is clear only in the lowest density bin. The blue galaxy fraction for the subsample of the brightest early-type galaxies however shows a very strong density dependence, in the sense that the blue galaxy fraction is lower in a higher density region., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, paper with high-resolution figures can be downloaded at: http://www-astro.physics.ox.ac.uk/~kevins/PAPERS/uv_environment.ps
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- 2006
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19. UV properties of early-type galaxies in the Virgo cluster
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Boselli, A., Cortese, L., Deharveng, J. M., Gavazzi, G., Yi, K. S., de Paz, A. Gil, Seibert, M., Boissier, S., Donas, J., Lee, Y. -W., Madore, B. F., Martin, D. C., Rich, R. M., and Sohn, Y. -J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the UV properties of a volume limited sample of early-type galaxies in the Virgo cluster combining new GALEX far- (1530 A) and near-ultraviolet (2310 A) data with spectro-photometric data available at other wavelengths. The sample includes 264 ellipticals, lenticulars and dwarfs spanning a large range in luminosity (M(B)<-15). While the NUV to optical or near-IR color magnitude relations (CMR) are similar to those observed at optical wavelengths, with a monotonic reddening of the color index with increasing luminosity, the (FUV-V) and (FUV-H) CMRs show a discontinuity between massive and dwarf objects. An even more pronounced dichotomy is observed in the (FUV-NUV) CMR. For ellipticals the (FUV-NUV) color becomes bluer with increasing luminosity and with increasing reddening of the optical or near-IR color indices. For the dwarfs the opposite trend is observed. These observational evidences are consistent with the idea that the UV emission is dominated by hot, evolved stars in giant systems, while in dwarf ellipticals residual star formation activity is more common., Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letters
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- 2005
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20. The GALEX UV luminosity function of the cluster of galaxies Abell 1367
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Cortese, L., Boselli, A., Gavazzi, G., Iglesias-Paramo, J., Madore, B. F., Barlow, T., Bianchi, L., Byun, Y. -I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Heckman, T. M., Jelinsky, P., Lee, Y. -W., Malina, R., Martin, D. C., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S., Rich, R. M., Schiminovich, D., Siegmund, O., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., Treyer, M. A., Welsh, B., and Wyder, T. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the GALEX NUV (2310 A) and FUV (1530 A) galaxy luminosity functions of the nearby cluster of galaxies A1367 in the magnitude range -20.3< M_AB < -13.3. The luminosity functions are consistent with previous (~ 2 mag shallower) estimates based on the FOCA and FAUST experiments, but display a steeper faint-end slope than the GALEX luminosity function for local field galaxies. Using spectro-photometric optical data we select out star-forming systems from quiescent galaxies and study their separate contributions to the cluster luminosity function. We find that the UV luminosity function of cluster star-forming galaxies is consistent with the field. The difference between the cluster and field LF is entirely due to the contribution at low luminosities (M_AB >-16 mag) of non star-forming, early-type galaxies that are significantly over dense in clusters., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letters
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- 2005
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21. GALEX UV observations of the interacting galaxy NGC 4438 in the Virgo cluster
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Boselli, A., Boissier, S., Cortese, L., de Paz, A. Gil, Buat, V., Iglesias-Paramo, J., Madore, B. F., Barlow, T., Bianchi, L., Byun, Y. -I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Heckman, T. M., Jelinsky, P., Lee, Y. -W., Malina, R., Martin, D. C., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S., Rich, R. M., Schiminovich, D., Seibert, M., Siegmund, O., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, B., and Wyder, T. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present GALEX NUV (2310 A) and FUV (1530 A) images of the interacting galaxy NGC 4438 (Arp 120) in the center of the Virgo cluster. These images show an extended (20 kpc) tidal tail at the north-west edge of the galaxy previously undetected at other wavelengths, at 15-25 kpc from its nucleus. Except in the nucleus, the UV morphology of NGC 4438 is totally different from the Halpha+[NII] one, more similar to the X-ray emission, confirming its gas cooling origin. We study the star formation history of NGC 4438 combining spectro-photometric data in the UV-visible-near-IR wavelength range with population synthesis and galaxy evolution models. The data are consistent with a recent (~ 10 Myr), instantaneous burst of star formation in the newly discovered UV north-western tail which is significantly younger than the age of the tidal interaction with NGC 4435, dated by dynamical models at ~ 100 Myr ago. Recent star formation events are also present at the edge of the northern arm and in the southern tail, while totally lacking in the other regions, which are dominated by the old stellar population perturbed during the dynamical interaction with NGC 4435. The contribution of this recent starburst to the total galaxy stellar mass is lower than 0.1%, an extremely low value for such a violent interaction. High-velocity, off-center tidal encounters such as that observed in Arp 120 are thus not sufficient to significantly increase the star formation activity of cluster galaxies., Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letters. High resolution version of Fig. 3 is available at http://www.ociw.edu/~boissier/f3.ps
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- 2005
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22. GALEX UV Spectroscopy and Deep Imaging of LIRGs in the ELAIS S1 field
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Burgarella, D., Buat, V., Small, T., Barlow, T. A., Boissier, S., de Paz, A. Gil, Heckman, T. M., Madore, B. F., Martin, D. C., Rich, R. M., Bianchi, L., Byun, Y. -I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Jelinsky, P. N., Lee, Y. -W., Malina, R. F., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S. G., Schiminovich, D., Siegmund, O. H. W., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, B. Y., and Wyder, T. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The ELAIS S1 field was observed by GALEX in both its Wide Spectroscopic and Deep Imaging Survey modes. This field was previously observed by the Infrared Space Observatory and we made use of the catalogue of multi-wavelength data published by the ELAIS consortium to select galaxies common to the two samples. Among the 959 objects with GALEX spectroscopy, 88 are present in the ELAIS catalog and 19 are galaxies with an optical spectroscopic redshift. The distribution of redshifts covers the range $0
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- 2004
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23. Recent star formation in nearby galaxies from GALEX imaging:M101 and M51
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Bianchi, Luciana, Thilker, D., Burgarella, D., Friedman, P., Hoopes, C., Boissier, S., de Paz, A. Gil, Barlow, T., Byun, Y. -I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Heckman, T., Jelinsky, P., Lee, Y-W, Madore, B., Malina, R., Martin, C., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S., Rich, M., Schiminovich, D., Siegmund, O., Small, T., Szalay, A., Welsh, B., and Wyder, T.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The GALEX (Galaxy Evolution Explorer) Nearby Galaxies Survey is providing deep far-UV and near-UV imaging for a representative sample of galaxies in the local universe. We present early results for M51 and M101, from GALEX UV imaging and SDSS optical data in five bands. The multi-band photometry of compact stellar complexes in M101 is compared to population synthesis models, to derive ages, reddening, reddening-corrected luminosities and current/initial masses. The GALEX UV photometry provides a complete census of young compact complexes on a approximately 160pc scale. A galactocentric gradient of the far-UV - near-UV color indicates younger stellar populations towards the outer parts of the galaxy disks, the effect being more pronounced in M101 than in M51., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Full paper available from http://dolomiti.pha.jhu.edu . Links to full set of papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after November 22, 2004
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- 2004
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24. Classification and Characterization of Objects from GALEX and SDSS surveys
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Bianchi, Luciana, Seibert, M., Zheng, W., Thilker, D., Friedman, P., Wyder, T., Donas, J., Barlow, T., Byun, Yong-Ik, Forster, K., Heckman, T., Jelinsky, P., Lee, Y. -W., Madore, B., Malina, R., Martin, C., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S., Rich, M., Schiminovich, D., Siegmund, O., Small, T., Szalay, A., and Welsh, B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We use the GALEX (Galaxy Evolution Explorer) Medium Imaging Survey (MIS) and All-Sky Imaging Survey (AIS) data available in the first internal release, matched to the SDSS catalogs in the overlapping regions, to classify objects by comparing the multi-band photometry to model colors. We show an example of the advantage of such broad wavelength coverage (GALEX far-UV and near-UV, SDSS ugriz) in classifying objects and augmenting the existing samples and catalogs. From the MIS [AIS] sample over an area of 75 [92] square degrees, we select a total of 1736 [222] QSO candidates at redshift less than 2, significantly extending the number of fainter candidates, and moderately increasing the number of bright objects in the SDSS list of spectroscopically confirmed QSO. Numerous hot stellar objects are also revealed by the UV colors, as expected., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Full paper available from http://dolomiti.pha.jhu.edu . Links to the full set of papers available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after Nov.22, 2004
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- 2004
25. Extinction radial profiles of M83 from GALEX UV imaging
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Boissier, S., de Paz, A. Gil, Madore, B. F., Boselli, A., Buat, V., Burgarella, D., Friedman, P. G., Barlow, T. A., Bianchi, L., Byun, Y. -I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Heckman, T. M., Jelinsky, P. N., Lee, Y. -W., Malina, R. F., Martin, D. C., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S. G., Rich, R. M., Schiminovich, D., Siegmund, O. H. W., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, Barry Y., and Wyder, T. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We use the far-UV (FUV) and near-UV (NUV) images of M83 obtained by GALEX to compute the radial profile of the UV spectral slope in the star forming disk. We briefly present a model of its chemical evolution which allows us to obtain realistic intrinsic properties of the stellar populations. Using corollary data, we also compute the profiles of H-alpha/H-beta and of the total IR (TIR) to FUV ratio. Both data and model are used to estimate and compare the extinction gradients at the FUV wavelength obtained from these various indicators. We discuss the implications for the determination of the star formation rate., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after November 22, 2004. A high resolution version of figure 1 is available at http://www.ociw.edu/~boissier/M83/fig1.ps
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- 2004
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26. UV Emission from Stellar Populations within Tidal Tails: Catching the Youngest Galaxies in Formation?
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Neff, S. G., Thilker, D. A., Seibert, M., de Paz, A. Gil, Bianchi, L., Schiminovich, D., Martin, D. C., Madore, B. F., Rich, R. M., Barlow, T. A., Byun, Y-I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Heckman, T. M., Jelinsky, P. N., Lee, Y-W., Malina, R. F., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Siegmund, O. H. W., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, B. Y., and Wyder, T. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
New GALEX observations have detected significant FUV (1530 Angstroms) and NUV (2310 Angstroms) emission from stellar substructures within the tidal tails of four ongoing galaxy mergers. The UV-bright regions are optically faint and are coincident with HI density enhancements. FUV emission is detected at any location where the HI surface density exceeds ~2 M_sun pc^{-2}, and is often detected in the absence of visible wavelength emission. UV luminosities of the brighter regions of the tidal tails imply masses of 10^6 M_sun to ~10^9 M_sun in young stars in the tails, and HI luminosities imply similar HI masses. UV-optical colors of the tidal tails indicate stellar populations as young as a few Myr, and in all cases ages < 400Myr. Most of the young stars in the tails formed in single bursts rather than resulting from continuous star formation, and they formed *in situ* as the tails evolved. Star formation appears to be older near the parent galaxies and younger at increasing distances from the parent galaxy. This could be because the star formation occurs progressively along the tails, or because the star formation has been inhibited near the galaxy/tail interface. The youngest stellar concentrations, usually near the ends of long tidal tails, have masses comparable to confirmed tidal dwarf galaxies and may be newly forming galaxies undergoing their first burst of star formation., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after November 22, 2004
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- 2004
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27. Systematics of the Ultraviolet Rising flux in a GALEX/SDSS sample of Early-type Galaxies
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Rich, R. M., Salim, S., Brinchmann, J., Charlot, S., Seibert, M., Kauffmann, G., Lee, Y-W., Yi, S. K., Barlow, T. A., Bianchi, L., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Heckman, T. M., Jelinsky, P. N., Madore, B. F., Malina, R. F., Martin, D. C., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S. G., Schiminovich, D., Siegmund, O. H. W., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, B. Y., and Wyder, T. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present ultraviolet photometry for a sample of morphologically early-type galaxies selected by matching the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 1 with the GALEX Medium and All-sky Imaging Surveys. We obtain a working sample of 1032 early-type galaxies with GALEX FUV detections, SDSS spectroscopy, and $z<0.2$. Using the SDSS spectra to identify galaxies with even weak star formation or evidence of AGN, and further removing galaxies with any evidence of non early-type morphology, we derive a final sample of 172 red quiescent early-type galaxies. We find that the $FUV-r$ color has a full range of 5 mag. Plotting against the $FUV-r$ color the metallicity sensitive Lick $\rm Mg_2$ and D4000 indices, and the stellar velocity dispersion, we find no correlation between our measurement of UV rising flux, and any parameter sensitive to metallicity., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after November 22, 2004
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- 2004
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28. New Constraints on the Star Formation Histories and Dust Attenuation of Galaxies in the Local Universe from GALEX
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Salim, Samir, Charlot, Stephane, Rich, R. Michael, Kauffmann, Guinevere, Heckman, Timothy M., Barlow, T. A., Bianchi, L., Byun, Y. -I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Jelinsky, P. N., Lee, Y. -W., Madore, B. F., Malina, R. F., Martin, D. C., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S. G., Schiminovich, D., Seibert, M., Siegmund, O. H. W., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, B. Y., and Wyder, T. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We derive a variety of physical parameters including star formation rates (SFRs), dust attenuation and burst mass fractions for 6472 galaxies observed by the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) and present in the SDSS DR1 main spectroscopic sample. Parameters are estimated in a statistical way by comparing each observed broad-band SED (two GALEX and five SDSS bands) with an extensive library of model galaxy SEDs, which cover a wide range of star formation histories and include stochastic starbursts. We compare the constraints derived using SDSS bands only with those derived using the combination of SDSS and GALEX photometry. We find that the addition of the GALEX bands leads to significant improvement in the estimation of both the dust optical depth and the star formation rate over timescales of 100 Myr to 1 Gyr in a galaxy. We are sensitive to SFRs as low as 10^{-3} M_sun/yr, and we find that low levels of star formation (SF) are mostly associated with early-type, red galaxies. The least massive galaxies have ratios of current to past-averaged SF rates (b-parameter) consistent with constant SF over a Hubble time. For late-type galaxies, this ratio on average decreases with mass. We find that b correlates tightly with NUV-r color, implying that the SF history of a galaxy can be constrained on the basis of the NUV-r color alone. The fraction of galaxies that have undergone a significant starburst episode within the last 1 Gyr steeply declines with mass-from ~20% for galaxies with ~10^8 M_sun to ~5% for ~10^11 M_sun galaxies., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) ApJ Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS after Nov 22, 2004
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- 2004
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29. A comparative study of the spatial distribution of ultraviolet and far-infrared fluxes from M 101
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Popescu, C. C., Tuffs, R. J., Madore, B. F., de Paz, A. Gil, Völk, H. J., Barlow, T., Bianchi, L., Byun, Y-I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Heckman, T. M., Jelinsky, P. N., Lee, Y. -W., Malina, R. F., Martin, C. D., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S. G., Rich, R. M., Schiminovich, D., Siegmund, O. H. W., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, B. Y., and Wyder, T. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The total ultraviolet (UV) flux (from 1412 to 2718 AA) of M 101 is compared on a pixel-to-pixel basis with the total far-infrared (FIR) flux (from 60 to 170 micron), using the maps of the galaxy taken by GALEX in the near-UV and far-UV and by ISOPHOT at 60, 100 and 170 micron. The main result of this investigation is the discovery of a tight dependence of the FIR/UV ratio on radius, with values monotonically decreasing from around 4 in the nuclear region to nearly zero towards the edge of the optical disk. Although the tightness of this dependence is in part attributable to resolution effects, the result is consistent with the presence of a large-scale distribution of diffuse dust having a face-on optical depth which decreases with radius and which dominates over the more localized variations in opacity between the arm and interarm regions. We also find a trend for the FIR/UV ratio to take on higher values in the regions of diffuse interarm emission than in the spiral-arm regions, at a given radius. This is interpreted quantitatively in terms of the escape probability of UV photons from spiral arms and their subsequent scattering in the interarm regions, and in terms of the larger relative contribution of optical photons to the heating of the dust in the interarm regions., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) ApJ Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after Nov. 22, 2004. For version with full resolution images go to: http://edoc.mpg.de/204700.0
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- 2004
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30. Dust attenuation in the nearby Universe: comparison between galaxies selected in the ultraviolet or in the infrared
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Buat, V., Iglesias-Paramo, J., Seibert, M., Burgarella, D., Charlot, S., Martin, D. C., Xu, C. K., Heckman, T. M., Boissier, S., Boselli, A., Barlow, T. A., Bianchi, L., Byun, Y. -I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Jelinski, P. N., Lee, Y. -W., Madore, B. F., Malina, R. F., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S. G., Rich, R. M., Schiminovitch, D., Siegmund, O. H. W., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, B., and Wyder, T. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We compare the dust attenuation properties of two samples of galaxies purely selected in the near-ultraviolet (NUV) band (1750-2750 A, lambda_m = 2310 A) and in the far-infrared (FIR) at 60micron. These samples are built using the GALEX and IRAS sky surveys over ~600 square degrees. The NUV selected sample contains 95 galaxies detected down to NUV=16mag (AB system). 83 galaxies in this sample are spirals or irregulars and only two of them are not detected at 60micron. The FIR selected sample is built from the IRAS PSCz catalog complete down to 0.6Jy. Among the 163 sources, we select 118 star forming galaxies well measured by IRAS, all but 1 are detected in NUV and 14 galaxies are not detected in the far-ultraviolet (FUV) band (1350-1750 A, lambda_m = 1530 A). The dust to ultraviolet (NUV and FUV) flux ratio is calibrated to estimate the dust attenuation at both wavelengths. The median value of the attenuation in NUV is found to be ~1 mag for the NUV selected sample versus ~2 mag for the FIR selected one. Within both samples, the dust attenuation is found to correlate with the luminosity of the galaxies. Almost all the NUV selected galaxies and 2/3 of the FIR selected sample exhibit a lower dust attenuation than that expected from the tight relation found previously for starburst galaxies between the dust attenuation and the slope of the ultraviolet continuum. The situation is inverse for one third of the FIR selected galaxies: their extinction is higher than that deduced from their FUV-NUV color and the relation valid for starbursts., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue
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- 2004
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31. GALEX UV Color-Magnitude Relations and Evidence for Recent Star Formation in Early-type Galaxies
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Yi, S, Yoon, SJ, Kaviraj, S, Deharveng, JM, Rich, RM, Salim, S, Boselli, A, Lee, YW, Ree, CH, Sohn, YJ, Rey, SC, Lee, JW, Rhee, J, Bianchi, L, Byun, YI, Donas, J, Friedman, PG, Heckman, TM, Jelinsky, P, Madore, BF, Malina, R, Martin, DC, Milliard, B, Morrissey, P, Neff, S, Schiminovich, D, Siegmund, O, Small, T, Szalay, AS, Jee, MJ, Kim, SW, Barlow, T, Forster, K, Welsh, B, and Wyder, TK
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We have used the GALEX UV photometric data to construct a first near-ultraviolet (NUV) color-magnitude relation (CMR) for the galaxies pre-classified as early-type by SDSS studies. The NUV CMR is a powerful tool for tracking the recent star formation history in early-type galaxies, owing to its high sensitivity to the presence of young stellar populations. Our NUV CMR for UV-weak galaxies shows a well-defined slope and thus will be useful for interpreting the restframe NUV data of distant galaxies and studying their star formation history. Compared to optical CMRs, the NUV CMR shows a substantially larger scatter, which we interpret as evidence of recent star formation activities. Roughly 15% of the recent epoch (z < 0.13) bright (M[r] < -22) early-type galaxies show a sign of recent (< 1Gyr) star formation at the 1-2% level (lower limit) in mass compared to the total stellar mass. This implies that low level residual star formation was common during the last few billion years even in bright early-type galaxies., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after November 22, 2004
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- 2004
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32. GALEX Ultraviolet Photometry of Globular Clusters in M31
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Rey, S. -C., Rich, R. M., Lee, Y. -W., Yoon, S. -J., Yi, S. K., Bianchi, L., Sohn, Y. -J., Friedman, P. G., Barlow, T. A., Byun, Y. -I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Heckman, T. M., Jee, M. J., Jelinsky, P. N., Kim, S. -W., Lee, J. -W., Madore, B. F., Malina, R. F., Martin, D. C., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S. G., Rhee, J., Schiminovich, D., Siegmund, O. H. W., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, B. Y., and Wyder, T. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present ultraviolet photometry for globular clusters (GCs) in M31 from 15 square deg of imaging using the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX). We detect 200 and 94 GCs with certainty in the near-ultraviolet (NUV; 1750 - 2750 Angstroms) and far-ultraviolet (FUV; 1350 - 1750 Angstroms) bandpasses, respectively. Our rate of detection is about 50% in the NUV and 23% in the FUV, to an approximate limiting V magnitude of 19. Out of six clusters with [Fe/H]>-1 seen in the NUV, none is detected in the FUV bandpass. Furthermore, we find no candidate metal-rich clusters with significant FUV flux, because of the contribution of blue horizontal-branch (HB) stars, such as NGC 6388 and NGC 6441, which are metal-rich Galactic GCs with hot HB stars. We show that our GALEX photometry follows the general color trends established in previous UV studies of GCs in M31 and the Galaxy. Comparing our data with Galactic GCs in the UV and with population synthesis models, we suggest that the age range of M31 and Galactic halo GCs are similar., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after November 22, 2004
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- 2004
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33. Panoramic GALEX FUV and NUV imaging of M31 and M33
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Thilker, D. A., Hoopes, C. G., Bianchi, L., Boissier, S., Rich, M., Seibert, M., Friedman, P. G., Rey, S., Buat, V., Barlow, T. A., Byun, Y., Donas, J., Forster, K., Heckman, T. M., Jelinsky, P. N., Lee, Y., Madore, B. F., Malina, R. F., Martin, C., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P. F., Neff, S. G., Schiminovich, D., Siegmund, O. H. W., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, B. Y., and Wyder, T. K.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) far-UV and near-UV mosaic observations covering the entirety of M31 and M33. For both targets, we measure the decline of surface brightness (in FUV and NUV) and changes in FUV--NUV color as a function of galactocentric radius. These UV radial profiles are compared to the distribution of ionized gas traced by H-alpha emission. We find that the extent of the UV emission, in both targets, is greater than the extent of the observed HII regions and diffuse ionized gas. We determine the ultraviolet diffuse fraction in M33 using our FUV observations and compare it to the H-alpha diffuse fraction obtained from wide-field narrow-band imaging. The FUV diffuse fraction appears to be remarkably constant near 0.65 over a large range in galactocentric radius, with departures to higher values in circumnuclear regions and, most notably, at the limit of the H-alpha disk. We suggest that the increase in FUV diffuse fraction at large galactocentric radii could indicate that a substantial portion of the diffuse emission beyond this point is not generated in situ but rather scattered from dust, after originating in the vicinity of the disk's outermost HII regions. Radial variation of the H-alpha diffuse fraction was also measured. We found the H-alpha diffuse fraction generally near 0.4 but rising toward the galaxy center, up to 0.6. We made no attempt to correct our diffuse fraction measurements for position-dependent extinction, so the quoted values are best interpreted as upper limits given the plausibly higher extinction for stellar clusters relative to their surroundings., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after November 22, 2004. Individual high-resolution figures can be found at http://dolomiti.pha.jhu.edu/publgoto.html
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- 2004
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34. GALEX Observations of the Ultraviolet Halos of NGC 253 and M82
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Hoopes, C. G., Heckman, T. M., Strickland, D. K., Seibert, M., Madore, B. F., Rich, R. M., Bianchi, L., de Paz, A. Gil, Burgarella, D., Thilker, D. A., Friedman, P. G., Barlow, T. A., Byun, Y. -I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Jelinsky, P. N., Lee, Y. -W., Malina, R. F., Martin, D. C., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P. F., Neff, S. G., Schiminovich, D., Siegmund, O. H. W., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, B. Y., and Wyder, T. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) images of the prototypical edge-on starburst galaxies M82 and NGC253. Our initial analysis is restricted to the complex of ultraviolet (UV) filaments in the starburst-driven outflows in the galaxy halos. The UV luminosities in the halo are too high to be provided by shock-heated or photoionized gas except perhaps in the brightest filaments in M82, suggesting that most of the UV light is the stellar continuum of the starburst scattered into our line of sight by dust in the outflow. This interpretation agrees with previous results from optical imaging polarimetry in M82. The morphology of the UV filaments in both galaxies shows a high degree of spatial correlation with H-alpha and X-ray emission. This indicates that these outflows contain cold gas and dust, some of which may be vented into the intergalactic medium (IGM). UV light is seen in the ``H-alpha cap'' 11 kpc North of M82. If this cap is a result of the wind fluid running into a pre-existing gas cloud, the gas cloud contains dust and is not primordial in nature but was probably stripped from M82 or M81. If starburst winds efficiently expel dust into the IGM, this could have significant consequences for the observation of cosmologically distant objects., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after November 22, 2004
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- 2004
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35. The Ultraviolet Luminosity Function of GALEX Galaxies at Photometric Redshifts Between 0.07 and 0.25
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Budavari, T., Szalay, A. S., Charlot, S., Seibert, M., Wyder, T. K., Arnouts, S., Barlow, T. A., Bianchi, L., Byun, Y. -I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Heckman, T. M., Jelinsky, P. N., Lee, Y. -W., Madore, B. F., Malina, R. F., Martin, D. C., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S. G., Rich, R. M., Schiminovich, D., Siegmund, O. H. W., Small, T., Treyer, M. A., and Welsh, B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present measurements of the UV galaxy luminosity function and the evolution of luminosity density from GALEX observations matched to the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). We analyze galaxies in the Medium Imaging Survey overlapping the SDSS DR1 with a total coverage of 44 deg^2. Using the combined GALEX+SDSS photometry, we compute photometric redshifts and study the LF in three redshift shells between z=0.07 and 0.25. The Schechter function fits indicate that the faint-end slope alpha is consistent with -1.1 at all redshifts but the characteristic UV luminosity M* brightens by 0.2 mag from z=0.07 to 0.25. In the lowest redshift bin, early and late type galaxies are studied separately and we confirm that red galaxies tend to be brighter and have a shallower slope alpha than blue ones. The derived luminosity densities are consistent with other GALEX results based on a local spectroscopic sample from 2dF and the evolution follows the trend reported by deeper studies., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after November 22, 2004
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- 2004
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36. Recent Star Formation in the Extreme Outer Disk of M83
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Thilker, D. A., Bianchi, L., Boissier, S., de Paz, A. Gil, Madore, B. F., Martin, C., Meurer, G. R., Neff, S. G., Rich, M., Schiminovich, D., Seibert, M., Wyder, T. K., Barlow, T. A., Byun, Y., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Heckman, T. M., Jelinsky, P. N., Lee, Y., Malina, R. F., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Siegmund, O. H. W., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., and Welsh, B. Y.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Ultraviolet imaging with the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) has revealed an extensive sample of UV-bright stellar complexes in the extreme outer disk of M83, extending to about four times the radius where the majority of HII regions are detected (R_HII = 5.1' or 6.6 kpc). These sources are typically associated with large-scale filamentary HI structures in the warped outer disk of M83, and are distributed beyond the galactocentric radii at which molecular ISM has yet been detected. We present measured properties of these stellar complexes, including FUV and NUV magnitudes and local gas surface density. Only a subset of the outer disk UV sources have corresponding HII regions detected in H-alpha imaging, consistent with a sample of mixed age in which some sources are a few Myr old and others are much more evolved (~ 10^8 yr)., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after November 22, 2004
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- 2004
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37. The Look-back Time Evolution of Far-UV Flux from Elliptical Galaxies: The Fornax Cluster and Abell 2670
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Lee, Y. -W., Ree, C. H., Rich, R. M., Deharveng, J. -M., Sohn, Y. -J., Rey, S. -C., Yi, S. K., Yoon, S. -J., Bianchi, L., Lee, J. -W., Seibert, M., Barlow, T. A., Byun, Y. -I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Heckman, T. M., Jee, M. J., Jelinsky, P. N., Kim, S. -W., Madore, B. F., Malina, R. F., Martin, D. C., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S. G., Rhee, J., Schiminovich, D., Siegmund, O. H. W., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, B. Y., and Wyder, T. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In order to investigate the origin of the far-UV (FUV) flux from the early-type galaxies, Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) is collecting the UV data for the elliptical-rich clusters at moderate redshifts (z < 0.2) where the dominant FUV source is predicted to be hot horizontal-branch (HB) stars and their post-HB progeny. Here we present our first result for the early-type galaxies in Abell 2670 at z = 0.076. Compared to NGC 1399, a nearby giant elliptical galaxy in the Fornax cluster, it appears that the rest-frame FUV - V color of the giant ellipticals gets redder by ~ 0.7 mag at the distance of Abell 2670 (z = 0.076; look-back time ~ 1.0 Gyr). Although a detailed comparison with the models is postponed until more cluster data are accumulated, it is interesting to note that this value is consistent with the variation predicted by the population synthesis models where the mean temperature of HB stars declines rapidly with increasing look-back time., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/
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- 2004
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38. The On-Orbit Performance of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer
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Morrissey, P., Schiminovich, D., Barlow, T. A., Martin, D. C., Blakkolb, B., Conrow, T., Cooke, B., Erickson, K., Fanson, J., Friedman, P. G., Grange, R., Jelinsky, P. N., Lee, S. C., Liu, D., Mazer, A., McLean, R., Milliard, B., Randall, D., Schmitigal, W., Sen, A., Siegmund, O. H. W., Surber, F., Vaughan, A., Viton, M., Welsh, B. Y., Bianchi, L., Byun, Y. -I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Heckman, T. M., Lee, Y-W, Madore, B. F., Malina, R. F., Neff, S. G., Rich, R. M., Small, T., Szalay, A., and Wyder, T.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the first year on-orbit performance results for the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX), a NASA Small Explorer that is performing a survey of the sky in two ultraviolet bands. The instrument comprises a 50 cm diameter modified Ritchey-Chretien telescope with a 1.25 degree field of view, selectable imaging and objective grism spectroscopic modes, and an innovative optical system with a thin-film multilayer dichroic beam splitter that enables simultaneous imaging by a pair of photon counting, microchannel plate, delay line readout detectors. Initial measurements demonstrate that GALEX is performing well, meeting its requirements for resolution, efficiency, astrometry, bandpass definition and survey sensitivity., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue
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- 2004
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39. GALEX observations of the UV surface brightness and color profiles of the Local Group elliptical galaxy M32 (NGC221)
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de Paz, A. Gil, Madore, B. F., Sohn, Y. -J., Lee, Y. -W., Seibert, M., Rich, R. M., Bianchi, L., Barlow, T. A., Byun, Y. -I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Heckman, T. M., Jelinsky, P., Malina, R. F., Martin, D. C., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S. G., Schiminovich, D., Siegmund, O. H. W., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., Welsh, B. Y., and Wyder, T. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
M32, the compact elliptical-galaxy companion to the Andromeda spiral galaxy has been imaged by the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) in two ultraviolet bands, centered at ~1500 (FUV) and 2300 Angstroms (NUV). The imaging data have been carefully decomposed so as to properly account for the complicated background contamination from the disk of M31. We have derived the surface brightness and color profiles finding a slightly positive color gradient of Delta(FUV-B)/Delta log(r)=+0.15+/-0.03 within one effective radius. Earlier data from the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope suggested that M32 had an extremely large (negative) FUV-optical color gradient (Delta(FUV-B)/Delta log(r)<-2), inverted with respect to the majority of gradients seen in giant elliptical galaxies. Our new results show that, despite of its very low UV-upturn, M32 has similar UV properties to those observed in luminous elliptical galaxies., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after November 22, 2004
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- 2004
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40. The Ultraviolet Galaxy Luminosity Function from GALEX data: Color Dependent Evolution at Low Redshift
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Treyer, M., Wyder, T., Schiminovich, D., Arnouts, S., Budavari, T., Milliard, B., Barlow, T., Bianchi, L., Byun, Y. -I., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P., Heckman, T., Jelinsky, P., Lee, Y. -W., Madore, B., Malina, R., Martin, D. C., Morrissey, P., Neff, S., Rich, R. M., Siegmund, O. H. W., Small, T., Szalay, A., and Welsh, B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present measurements of the FUV (1530A) and NUV (2310A) galaxy luminosity functions (LF) at low redshift (z<0.2) from GALEX observations matched to the 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey. We split our FUV and NUV samples into two UV-bj color bins and two redshift bins. As observed at optical wavelengths, the local LF of the bluest galaxies tend to have steeper faint end slopes and fainter characteristic magnitudes M* than the reddest subsamples. We find evidence for color dependent evolution at very low redshift in both bands, with bright blue galaxies becoming dominant in the highest redshift bin. The evolution of the total LF is consistent with an 0.3 magnitude brightening between z=0 and 0.13, in agreement with the first analysis of deeper GALEX fields probing adjacent and higher redshifts., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be available at : http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after November 22, 2004
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- 2004
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41. Large-Amplitude Ultraviolet Variations in the RR Lyrae Star ROTSE-I J143753.84+345924.8
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Wheatley, J. M., Welsh, B. Y., Siegmund, O. H. W., Byun, Y. I., Yi, S., Lee, Y. W., Madore, B. F., Viton, M., Rich, R. M., Bianchi, L., Barlow, T. A., Donas, J., Forster, K., Friedman, P. G., Heckman, T. M., Jelinsky, P. N., Malina, R. F., Martin, D. C., Milliard, B., Morrissey, P., Neff, S. G., Schiminovich, D., Small, T., Szalay, A. S., and Wyder, T. K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The NASA Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) satellite has obtained simultaneous near and far ultraviolet light curves of the ROTSE-I Catalog RR Lyrae ab-type variable star J143753.84+345924.8. A series of 38 GALEX Deep Imaging Survey observations well distributed in phase within the star's 0.56432d period shows an AB=4.9mag variation in the far UV (1350-1750A) band and an AB=1.8mag variation in the near UV (1750-2750A) band, compared with only a 0.8mag variation in the broad, unfiltered ROTSE-I (4500-10000A) band. These GALEX UV observations are the first to reveal a large RR Lyrae amplitude variation at wavelengths below 1800A. We compare the GALEX and ROTSE-I observations to predictions made by recent Kurucz stellar atmosphere models. We use published physical parameters for the comparable period (0.57433d), well-observed RR Lyrae star WY Antliae to compute predicted FUV, NUV, and ROTSE-I light curves for J143753.84+345924.8. The observed light curves agree with the Kurucz predictions for [Fe/H]=-1.25 to within AB=0.2mag in the GALEX NUV and ROTSE-I bands, and within 0.5mag in the FUV. At all metallicities between solar and one hundredth solar, the Kurucz models predict 6-8mag of variation at wavelengths between 1000-1700A. Other variable stars with similar temperature variations, such as Cepheids, should also have large-amplitude FUV light curves, observable during the ongoing GALEX imaging surveys., Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be available at http:/www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS after November 22, 2004
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- 2004
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42. The radial extinction profiles of late-type galaxies
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Boissier, S., Boselli, A., Buat, V., Donas, J., and Milliard, B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have used UV (FOCA) and FIR (IRAS) images of six nearby late type galaxies to study the radial variation of the UV extinction (deduced from the FIR/UV ratio). We compare the UV extinction gradient with other extinction indicators (Balmer decrement) and search for a relation between the extinction, the metallicity and the gas surface density among our galaxies. We detect in our small sample a clear relation between extinction and metallicity. These observed relations are used to calibrate an empirical recipe useful for extinction correction in the UV, visible and near-infrared images of late type galaxies., Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures (higher resolution images available on request). Accepted in A&A (in press)
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- 2004
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43. UV and FIR selected samples of galaxies in the local Universe. Dust extinction and star formation rates
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Iglesias-Paramo, J., Buat, V., Donas, J., Boselli, A., and Milliard, B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have built two samples of galaxies selected at 0.2micron (hereafter UV) and 60micron (hereafter FIR) covering a sky area of 35.36 deg^2. The UV selected sample contains 25 galaxies brighter than AB_0.2=17mag. All of them, but one elliptical, are detected at 60micron with a flux density larger or equal to 0.2Jy. The UV counts are significantly lower than the euclidean extrapolation towards brighter fluxes of previous determinations. The FIR selected sample contains 42 galaxies brighter than f_60=0.6Jy. Excepting four galaxies, all of them have a UV counterpart at the limiting magnitude AB_0.2=20.3mag. The mean extinction derived from the analysis of the FIR to UV flux ratio is ~1mag for the UV selected sample and ~2mag for the FIR selected one. For each sample we compare several indicators of the recent star formation rate (SFR) based on the FIR and/or the UV emissions and we find linear relationships with slopes close to unity, meaning that no trend with the SFR exists when converting between each other. Various absolute calibrations for both samples are discussed in this paper. A positive correlation between extinction and SFR is found when both samples are considered together although with a considerable scatter. A similar result is obtained when using the SFR normalized to the optical surface of the galaxies., Comment: 34 pages, 17 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2004
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44. The UV luminosity function of nearby clusters of galaxies
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Cortese, L., Gavazzi, G., Boselli, A., Iglesias-Paramo, J., Donas, J., and Milliard, B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the UV composite luminosity function for galaxies in the Virgo, Coma and Abell 1367 clusters. The luminosity function (LF) is well fitted by a Schechter function with M*(UV} - 5*log h(75) = -20.75 +/- 0.40 and alpha = -1.50 +/- 0.10 and does not differ significantly from the local UV luminosity function of the field. This result is in agreement with recent studies carried out in the Halpha and B-bands which find no difference between the LFs of star forming galaxies in clusters and in the field. This indicates that, whatever mechanisms are responsible for quenching the star formation in clusters, they influence similarly the giant and the dwarf populations, leaving the shape of the LF unchanged and only modifying its normalization., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables.Accepted for publication on A&A. Data avaliable at http://goldmine.mib.infn.it/papers/LF_UV.html
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- 2003
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45. The UV (GALEX) and FIR (ASTRO-F) All Sky Surveys: the measure of the dust extinction in the local universe
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Buat, V., Takeuchi, T. T., Boselli, A., Burgarella, D., Hirashita, H., Tomita, A., Shibai, H., Milliard, B., Donas, J., Yoshikawa, K., Inoue, A. K., and Tajiri, Y. Y.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Before the end of 2002 will be launched the GALEX satellite (a NASA/SMEX project) which will observe all the sky in Ultraviolet (UV) through filters at 1500 and 2300 A down to m(AB) 21. In 2004 will be launched the ASTRO-F satellite which will perform an all sky survey at Far-Infrared (FIR) wavelengths. The cross-correlation of both surveys will lead to very large samples of galaxies for which FIR and UV fluxes will be available. Using the FIR to UV flux ratio as a quantitative tracer of the dust extinction we will be able to measure the extinction in the nearby universe (z<0.2) and to perform a statistically significant analysis of the extinction as a function of galactic properties. Of particular interest is the construction of pure FIR and UV selected samples for which the extinction will be measured as templates for the observation of high redshift galaxies.
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- 2002
46. The far-ultraviolet emission of early-type galaxies
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Deharveng, J. M., Boselli, A., and Donas, J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have assembled a UV-flux selected sample of 82 early-type galaxies and collected additional information at other wavelengths. These data confirm a large spread of the UV-V color in the range 2 to 5. The spread in UV-V is accompanied by a spread in B-V that is mainly attributed to the range of morphological types and luminosities. A large fraction of the objects have red colors, UV-V = 4 +-0.4, corresponding to a weak UV-upturn as observed with IUE. If the current interpretation for the UV emission from early-type galaxies is applicable to our sample, the PAGB (Post-Asymptotic Giant Branch) tracks are the most common evolution path for the low-mass stars responsible for the UV emission. A small number of very blue (UV-V < 1.4) objects have been found that can be reasonably interpreted as harbouring some low level of star formation. In contrast with a previous sample based on IUE observations, no correlation is found between the UV-V color and the Mg_2 spectral line index; possible explanations are reviewed. The potential of a more extended UV survey like GALEX is briefly presented., Comment: accepted for publication on Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2002
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47. Far infrared and Ultraviolet emissions of individual galaxies at z=0: selection effects on the estimate of the dust extinction
- Author
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Buat, V., Donas, J., Milliard, B., and Xu, C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We have cross-correlated Far Infrared (IRAS) and UV (FOCA) observations of galaxies to construct a sample of FIR selected galaxies with a UV observation at 0.2 microns. The FIR and UV properties of this sample are compared to the mean properties of the local Universe deduced from the luminosity distributions at both wavelengths. Almost all the galaxies of our sample have a FIR to UV flux ratio larger than the ratio of the FIR and UV luminosity densities, this effect becoming worse as the galaxies become brighter: the increase of the UV (0.2 microns) extinction is about 0.5 mag per decade of FIR (60 microns) luminosity. Quantitative star formation rates are estimated by adding the contribution of the FIR and UV emissions. They are found consistent with the corrections for extinction deduced from the FIR to UV flux ratio. A total local volume-average star formation rate is calculated by summing the contribution of the FIR and UV wavelengths bands. Each band contributes for an almost similar amount to the total star formation rate with rho_{SFR} = 0.03 +/- 0.01 h M solar/yr/Mpc^3 at z=0. This is equivalent to a global extinction of 0.75 mag to apply to the local luminosity density at 0.2 microns. The trend of a larger FIR to UV flux ratio for a larger FIR luminosity found for our sample of nearby galaxies is extended and amplified toward the very large FIR luminosities when we consider the galaxies detected by ISOCAM in a CFRS field and the Ultra Luminous Infrared Galaxies at low and high redshift. A UV extinction is tentatively estimated for these objects., Comment: 13 pqges, accepted for publications in Astronomy & Astrsophysics, main journal
- Published
- 1999
48. An Ultraviolet-Selected Galaxy Redshift Survey - II: The Physical Nature of Star Formation in an Enlarged Sample
- Author
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Sullivan, M., Treyer, M. A., Ellis, R. S., Bridges, T. J., Milliard, B., and Donas, J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present further spectroscopic observations for a sample of galaxies selected in the vacuum ultraviolet (UV) at 2000 \AA from the FOCA balloon-borne imaging camera of Milliard et al. (1992). This work represents an extension of the initial study of Treyer et al. (1998). Our enlarged catalogue contains 433 sources; 273 of these are galaxies, nearly all with redshifts z=0-0.4. Nebular emission line measurements are available for 216 galaxies, allowing us to address issues of reddening and metallicity. The UV and Halpha luminosity functions strengthen our earlier assertions that the local volume-averaged star formation rate is higher than indicated from earlier surveys. Moreover, internally within our sample, we do not find a steep rise in the UV luminosity density with redshift over 0
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Mid-IR and Far-UV observations of the star-forming ring of M 31
- Author
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Pagani, L., Lequeux, J., Cesarsky, D., Donas, J., Milliard, B., Loinard, L., and Sauvage, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present mid-IR images of a 15'x15' field in the south-west part of the Andromeda galaxy M 31 obtained with the ISOCAM camera on board ISO. We also present a 20" resolution far-UV image of a larger field at 200 nm obtained with the balloon-borne telescope FOCA 1000. These images are compared with HI, CO(1-0) and Halpha maps. The mid-IR emission as seen through filters at 7 and 15 mic is extremely well correlated with the distribution of neutral gas as shown by the HI and CO(1-0) maps, while the correlation is poorer with the distribution of the ionized gas seen through its Halpha emission. There is some correlation with the UV radiation, but it appears that the contribution of UV photons to the excitation of the carriers of the mid-IR emission is not dominant in most of M 31. The spectro-imaging observations of Cesarsky et al. (1998) show that the mid-IR spectra of several regions of M 31 are dominated by a strong emission band at 11.3 mic while emission in the other classical Infrared Bands at 6.2, 7.7 and 8.6 mic is faint or absent. More precisely, we find that the mid-IR spectral variations are not clearly related to the UV radiation field. The present observations have important consequences on our understanding of excitation of the interstellar mid-IR emission. In particular, we conclude that like for M 31, excitation in the Galactic cirruses may not be dominated by UV photons but rather by another mechanism which remains to be identified (visible photons ?). The UV excitation appears to become important when the UV radiation density is of the order of twice that near the Sun., Comment: 12 pages, 16 figures, requires A&A LaTeX stylefiles, to appear in A&A. For sake of size, figures have been converted to rather lowres jpeg. You can get high resolution ps versions at http://altern.org/msauvage/perso.html
- Published
- 1999
50. An Ultraviolet-Selected Galaxy Redshift Survey: New Estimates of the Local Star Formation Rate
- Author
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Treyer, M. A., Ellis, R. S., Milliard, B., Donas, J., and Bridges, T. J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first results of an ongoing spectroscopic survey of galaxies selected in the rest-frame ultraviolet (UV). The redshift distribution extends over 0
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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