293 results on '"Gerke, Brian"'
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2. Potential bill impacts of dynamic electricity pricing on California utility customers
- Author
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Gerke, Brian F, Stuebs, Marius, Murthy, Samanvitha, Khandekar, Aditya, Cappers, Peter, Brown, Richard E, and Piette, Mary Ann
- Abstract
The rapid growth of renewable generation is creating challenges for the California grid in the form of the “duck curve,” with increasingly steep ramping required for conventional generation resources in the morning and evening, and growing curtailment of solar resources in midday periods. Time-varying electricity tariffs have received considerable attention as a tool to address these challenges, with a renewed recent focus on the potential for dynamic tariffs that vary to reflect conditions on the grid in near-real time. Consideration of dynamic tariffs may raise concerns about the financial impact on utility customers, especially for those who have limited flexibility to modify their electricity consumption in response. Specific areas of concern include electricity bills, bill volatility, and equity implications related to cost shifting among customer groups. In this paper we leverage smart meter data for more than 400,000 California utility customers, spanning residential, commercial, industrial, and agricultural customers, to assess potential customer bill impacts arising from a multi-component dynamic tariff . Specifically, we compute impacts on customer bills and bill volatility under the assumption of fully inelastic demand, i.e., where customers do not change their consumption patterns in response to the tariff. We also assess various approaches designing subscription load shapes that customers can pre-purchase as a hedge that may provide a measure of protection against large negative impacts, while still incentivizing the modification of loads on the margin. We compare and contrast the relative impacts on different customer classes and discuss benefits and pitfalls of different dynamic tariff structures and subscription load shapes.
- Published
- 2024
3. Consumer Purchasing Behavior and Usage of Lighting in the Residential Sector
- Author
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Ganeshalingam, Mohan, Hosbach, Robert, Zavodivker, Liat, Gerke, Brian F, Kantner, Colleen, and Stratton, Hannah
- Abstract
We present the results of a 2019 online survey of 1,800 adults in the United States who recently purchased a light bulb to understand how consumers make decisions about purchasing light bulbs and how light bulbs are used in the residential sector. From our survey, we found that purchases of LED bulbs made up the largest percentage of sales by lighting technology and respondents generally had positive impressions of LEDs. We estimated the average daily hours of use for bulbs being purchased depending on bulb shape. We also provide an estimate for the lumen distribution of purchased light bulbs and the distribution of installation locations by bulb shape. We found that incandescent bulb purchasers were primarily replacing a failed incandescent bulb and these purchasers were less likely to have favorable impressions of LEDs. However, we found that the majority of participants replacing an incandescent bulb purchased either a CFL or LED. Using an adaptive conjoint analysis technique, we found that the five most important factors to consumers when choosing a light bulb are purchase price, bulb lifetime, energy cost savings relative to an incandescent bulb, light appearance, and energy savings relative to an incandescent bulb. The results of this study provide an in-depth look at the lighting market in 2019 and may provide a basis for developing models of the residential lighting market.
- Published
- 2023
4. Potential bill impacts of dynamic electricity pricing on California utility customers
- Author
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Gerke, Brian F, Stübs, Marius, Murthy, Samanvitha, Khandekar, Aditya, Cappers, Peter, Brown, Richard E, and Piette, Mary Ann
- Subjects
dynamic tariff ,electricity prices - Abstract
The rapid growth of renewable generation is creating challenges for the California grid in the form of the duck curve, with increasingly steep generation ramping requirements and growing curtailment of renewable resources. In response, there has been increased discussion of promoting dynamic electricity tariffs that vary with conditions on the grid in near-real time, which could incentivize customers to shift consumption and help flatten the duck curve. Dynamic tariffs may raise concerns about financial impacts on utility customers, bill volatility, and equity issues arising from potential cost shifting among customer groups. In this report, we leverage smart meter data for more than 400,000 California utility customers to assess potential customer bill impacts arising from a multi-component dynamic tariff that is conceptually informed by the “California Flexible Unified Signal for Energy” (CalFUSE1 ) tariff structure that has recently been proposed by staff at the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC). Specifically, we compute impacts on customer bills and bill volatility under the assumption of fully inelastic demand, i.e., where customers do not change their consumption patterns in response to the tariff. Implicit in this assumption is that even flexible loads, such as storage and EV charging, do not respond to the dynamic tariff. In practice, customers would have the opportunity to reduce their bills by modifying their consumption patterns and operational profiles of flexible devices under a dynamic tariff; thus, the results of this study represent a worst-case set of bill impacts, which could provide a useful benchmark for future studies of customer response to dynamic tariffs.We develop a single hypothetical dynamic tariff for each IOU, which applies to all of that IOU’s customers regardless of sector or customer class. The tariff is constructed to be revenue-neutral for the utility, relative to presently active IOU tariffs, so that any increase or decrease in one customer’s bill will be offset by changes in other customers’ bills, allowing us to assess any changes in cost allocation among customer classes (i.e., “cost-shifts”) that would accompany a universal dynamic tariff. The hypothetical dynamic tariff recovers all required utility revenue through a purely volumetric energy charge (i.e., with no demand charges or fixed charges) whose rate varies hourly based on expected conditions on the grid, as reflected in the CAISO day-ahead market.
- Published
- 2022
5. A multi-level load shape clustering and disaggregation approach to characterize patterns of energy consumption behavior
- Author
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Murthy, Samanvitha, Gerke, Brian F, Smith, Sarah, Khandekar, Aditya, Zhang, Cong, Brown, Richard E, and Piette, Mary Ann
- Abstract
This study presents representative electrical load shapes, disaggregated to the end-use level, for over 5000 customer clusters across California’s residential, commercial, industrial and agricultural sectors. We developed a novel, multi-level load shape clustering approach for residential and commercial sectors leveraging interval meter data for over 350,000 California utility customers collected as a part of the Phase 4 California Demand Response (DR) Potential Study. The clustering approach allowed us to identify typical consumption patterns and categorize customers based on their daily load shape displayed throughout the year. For example, we were able to identify customers with particular energy technologies such as electric vehicles and rooftop solar, as well as building occupancy types such as restaurants, grocery stores and even unoccupied buildings, based solely on whole-building interval data. We then combined the load shape-based clusters with other customer information including building type, climate, geographical area, total consumption and low-income status, to create a set of customer clusters based on both demographics and usage patterns. Total cluster electricity demand was then disaggregated into a wide variety of end-uses using weather normalization and other publicly available end-use load shape datasets. The resulting disaggregated cluster load shapes will be released in anonymized form as part of the Phase 4 DR Potential Study. They will have wide-ranging applications in energy research and policy analysis, including estimation of energy efficiency (EE) and DR potential on the end-use level, time-dependent valuation of EE savings, building stock modeling, and developing customer targeting strategies for EE and DR programs.
- Published
- 2022
6. Assessing the Interactive Impacts of Energy Efficiency and Demand Response on Power System Costs and Emissions
- Author
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Satchwell, Andrew, Cowiestoll, Brady, Hale, Elaine, Gerke, Brian F, Jadun, Paige, Zhang, Cong, and Murthy, Samanvitha
- Abstract
Utilities are increasingly interested in integrating energy efficiency (EE) and demand response (DR) measures and technologies (as well as other distributed energy resources) as a strategic approach to improve their cost-effectiveness and performance. However, the specific EE and DR features that may be best integrated, the interplay between changing EE and DR resource potential, and resulting utility system impacts are not well understood. We quantify the impacts of EE and DR in isolation and in combination on bulk power system costs and emissions based on changes in generation expansion, transmission expansion, and dispatch patterns. The study methodology mimics utility resource planning and uses more novel techniques to select least-cost generation and transmission capacity from supply-and demand-side resources, as compared to more commonly used utility approaches that only consider supply-side resources. The results identify key EE and DR characteristics affecting each other’s power system value and the most valuable technologies and strategies that can be jointly deployed. We discuss implications for EE and DR cost-effectiveness frameworks, program design, and integrated resource planning.
- Published
- 2022
7. Load-driven interactions between energy efficiency and demand response on regional grid scales
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Gerke, Brian F, Zhang, Cong, Murthy, Samanvitha, Satchwell, Andrew J, Present, Elaina, Horsey, Henry, Wilson, Eric, Parker, Andrew, Speake, Andrew, Adhikari, Rajendra, and Piette, Mary Ann
- Subjects
Environmental Sciences ,Environmental Management ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,Climate Action - Abstract
Energy efficiency (EE) has long been recognized as a source of value to the electricity grid. Especially with increasing penetration of variable renewable generation, demand response (DR) can also provide system value and support the evolving needs of the grid. Yet there has been little study to date of interactions between EE and DR that may complicate their grid impacts. In this study we perform bottom-up modelling of the interactive effects between EE and DR in buildings for three representative regions of the United States electricity grid. Leveraging new simulation tools that enable detailed modelling of the building stock, we synthesize system-level demand profiles for several scenarios representing different portfolios of EE measures. In each scenario, we couple the underlying building models with a database of DR-enabling technologies to estimate building-level DR capabilities and compute a system-level supply curve for DR. We assess the resulting EE and DR interactive effects based on an existing conceptual framework. The results show a complex relationship between EE and DR, with interactive effects whose size and direction can vary widely depending on the grid system, type of DR, and the framework level being considered. Most often, the overall effect is competition between EE and DR, but significant complementarity can also occur, especially when the EE portfolio includes controls measures. Our results suggest that EE and DR programs developed without considering interactive effects may erode the benefits of both resources, whereas a more integrated approach may yield increased benefits.
- Published
- 2022
8. Metrics to describe changes in the power system need for demand response resources
- Author
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Murthy, Samanvitha, Satchwell, Andrew J, and Gerke, Brian F
- Subjects
Information and Computing Sciences ,Engineering ,Electrical Engineering ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,Climate Action ,Demand response ,Power system planning and operation ,Grid decarbonization - Abstract
Grid decarbonization efforts can benefit significantly from demand response (DR) resources. However, system-level changes that affect the net-load such as increased variable renewable energy (VRE) generation and widespread deployment of energy efficiency (EE) also affect the type, magnitude and timing of DR required to support the grid. In this study, we use publicly available system-level data to define seven metrics to assess how these changes affect system-level shed and shift DR needs. Specifically, there are four metrics for grid conditions when DR has the highest system value and three metrics for DR program design that were developed by considering the magnitude and temporal distribution of net-load. We also develop three stylized load shape profiles illustrating EE measure impacts and one high VRE generation profile to demonstrate the application of these metrics. The results confirm the robustness of the metrics to identify complex interactions between demand-side and supply-side resources that can affect the DR need. Widespread application of our metrics can help system planners and operators be cognizant of such interactions and identify the DR need for the system in a way that can be most valuable.
- Published
- 2022
9. MOBILIZING THE ANTI-DUCK BRIGADE: TECHNOLOGY AND MARKET PATHWAYS FOR LOAD-SHIFTING DEMAND RESPONSE IN CALIFORNIA
- Author
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Gallo, Giulia, Gerke, Brian, Liu, Jingjing, Piette, Mary Ann, Schwartz, Peter, and Alstone, Peter
- Abstract
With rapidly increasing renewable power generation, the California electricity system is experiencing the impacts of the so-called “duck curve,” with occasional over-generation in the middle of the day, followed by rapid ramping of net demand producing a sharp evening peak. Mitigating this pattern will require novel demand-side management approaches to shifting demand away from high net demand periods and toward high renewables generation periods. In this paper, drawing from more than 200,000 individual residential, commercial, and industrial customers’ hourly smart meter data, we disaggregate load shapes for certain key end-uses and then average the results across a highly granular set of customer segments by sector, building type, demand profile and geographic region, to yield a library of characteristic daily load profiles (“clusters”) for different end-uses and seasons. By categorizing the library into particularly desirable or undesirable load shapes in the context of mitigating the duck curve, we can gain insight into specific technologies, seasonal effects, or site-level attributes that may serve as helpful levers to use in developing future load-shifting programs. Based on these insights, we develop recommendations on technologies and new market structures and incentives that can create a future demand curve that more closely matches renewable generation patterns.
- Published
- 2021
10. Private versus Shared, Automated Electric Vehicles for U.S. Personal Mobility: Energy Use, Greenhouse Gas Emissions, Grid Integration, and Cost Impacts
- Author
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Sheppard, Colin JR, Jenn, Alan T, Greenblatt, Jeffery B, Bauer, Gordon S, and Gerke, Brian F
- Subjects
Built Environment and Design ,Commerce ,Management ,Tourism and Services ,Engineering ,Transportation ,Logistics and Supply Chains ,Urban and Regional Planning ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,Climate Action ,Electricity ,Gasoline ,Greenhouse Gases ,Motor Vehicles ,Vehicle Emissions ,Environmental Sciences - Abstract
Transportation is the fastest-growing source of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and energy consumption globally. While the convergence of shared mobility, vehicle automation, and electrification has the potential to drastically reduce transportation impacts, it requires careful integration with rapidly evolving electricity systems. Here, we examine these interactions using a U.S.-wide simulation framework encompassing private electric vehicles (EVs), shared automated EVs (SAEVs), charging infrastructure, controlled EV charging, and a grid economic dispatch model to simulate personal mobility exclusively using EVs. We find that private EVs with uncontrolled charging would reduce GHG emissions by 46% compared to gasoline vehicles. Private EVs with fleetwide controlled charging would achieve a 49% reduction in emissions from baseline and reduce peak charging demand by 53% from the uncontrolled scenario. We also find that an SAEV fleet 9% the size of today's active vehicle fleet can satisfy trip demand with only 2.6 million chargers (0.2 per EV). Such an SAEV fleet would achieve a 70% reduction in GHG emissions at 41% of the lifecycle cost as a private EV fleet with controlled charging. The emissions and cost advantage of SAEVs is primarily due to reduced vehicle manufacturing compared with private EVs.
- Published
- 2021
11. A Conceptual Framework to Describe Energy Efficiency and Demand Response Interactions
- Author
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Satchwell, Andrew, Cappers, Peter, Deason, Jeff, Forrester, Sydney, Frick, Natalie Mims, Gerke, Brian F, and Piette, Mary Ann
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energy efficiency ,demand response ,integrated building systems ,utility resource planning ,Physical Sciences ,Engineering - Abstract
Energy efficiency (EE) and demand response (DR) resources provide important utility system and ratepayer benefits. At the same time, the rapid change in the amount and type of variable renewable energy, like solar and wind, is reshaping the role and economic value of EE and DR, and will likely affect time-dependent valuation of EE and DR measures. Utilities are increasingly interested in integrating EE and DR measures and technologies (as well as other distributed energy resources) as a strategic approach to improve their collective cost-effectiveness and performance. However, the specific EE and DR features that may be best integrated, the interplay between changing EE and DR resource potential, and the resulting utility system impacts, are not well understood.We develop a framework to identify the EE and DR attributes, system conditions, and technological factors that are likely to drive interactions between EE and DR. We apply the framework to example measures with different technology specifics (e.g., presence of controls, building type, and targeted end use) in the context of different system conditions (e.g., peak demand, load-building periods during high renewable generation output). Ultimately, the framework defines EE and DR interactions not only by the change in discretionary load (i.e., DR potential) but also by the change in likelihood of participation in EE and DR programs—as well as the change in system need for, and the overall availability of, EE and DR resources. The framework is intended to improve the integration of EE and DR in utility operational and planning activities.
- Published
- 2020
12. The California Demand Response Potential Study, Phase 3: Final Report on the Shift Resource through 2030
- Author
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Gerke, Brian, Gallo, Giulia, Smith, Sarah, Liu, Jingjing, Alstone, Peter, Raghavan, Shuba, Schwartz, Peter, Piette, Mary Ann, Yin, Rongxin, and Stensson, Sofia
- Subjects
Demand Response ,Load Shifting ,Renewable Energy ,Demand Flexibility - Abstract
In response to the imperative of the climate crisis, California is in the midst of deployment of low-carbon energy generation and electrified heating and transportation at a rapid pace. In 2018 the grid managed by the California Independent System Operator (CAISO) was already generating 26 percent of its power from non-hydro renewable sources, with an additional ten percent hydroelectric power; and with SB 100, California statute now sets a target of 100 percent carbon free electricity by 2045. Maintaining this fast pace of decarbonization requires action across multiple domains on the grid from generators to loads. This study describes new findings on the scale of the opportunity for enabling load shifting as a form of demand response (DR) in California, as part of this renewable energy transition. We use the shorthand term Shift to refer to this potential load-shifting DR resource. The operating principles for the electric power system mean that achieving California’s renewable energy goals requires careful planning to build and operate the system in a way that maintains reliability at low cost. The most fundamental of these principles is that generation and demand need to be balanced at all times. Historically this has meant building adequate flexible and dispatchable generators that can be operated to match inflexible and uncontrolled loads. Meeting large fractions of demand with variable renewable energy (VRE) generation introduces a new paradigm, exemplified by the “duck curve” in California. In the times of year it occurs, the duck curve illustrates the net electricity demand that must be met by non-VRE generation; it has sharp peaks in morning and evening (the “tail” and “head” of the duck, respectively) and steep transitions to a deep midday trough (the duck’s “belly”) resulting from solar generation. Balancing the duck curve is a key priority for integrating increasing levels of VRE on the California grid. Shift DR is one of several renewables integration planning approaches that can work together to balance a high-VRE system. Others include “overbuilding” renewable energy with the intent to curtail during times of surplus generation, building and operating transmission lines to integrate regional systems, and building and operating energy storage to match generation with loads. Based on the 2019-2020 Integrated Resource Planning (IRP) model for California1—which did not consider Shift among its resource options—the least-cost pathway for achieving California GHG goals includes all of these other approaches. The Reference System Portfolio that is used to inform utility planning includes development of energy storage that is operated to serve about 10 GWh of consumption on the average day in 2020, 70 GWh in 2030, and 400 GWh by 2045. There is also significant curtailment of VRE in this least-cost portfolio, with 4 GWh on the average day in 2020, rising to 15 GWh by 2030 and 100 GWh by 2045. Throughout this report we compare the Shift resource to curtailment and storage as benchmarks, providing context for the results we report related to the quantity, cost, and performance of Shift. The timing of evening peak and curtailment defines times when load shifting is most valuable and would likely be used. The quantity of curtailment and use of storage to balance the system represent how much Shift could be valuable at the upper bound if Shift is inexpensive. The cost of energy storage is also a useful benchmark for the cost of Shift because it is the most comparable “competing” technology option; we therefore use the cost of storage to set a reference price level below which Shift will be most broadly cost competitive.
- Published
- 2020
13. Potential bill impacts of dynamic electricity pricing on California utility customers
- Author
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Gerke, Brian, primary, Stuebs, Marius, additional, Murthy, Samanvitha, additional, Khandekar, Aditya, additional, Cappers, Peter, additional, Brown, Richard, additional, and Piette, Mary, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Joint Optimization Scheme for the Planning and Operations of Shared Autonomous Electric Vehicle Fleets Serving Mobility on Demand
- Author
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Sheppard, Colin JR, Bauer, Gordon S, Gerke, Brian F, Greenblatt, Jeffery B, Jenn, Alan T, and Gopal, Anand R
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Affordable and Clean Energy ,Civil Engineering ,Urban and Regional Planning ,Transportation and Freight Services ,Logistics & Transportation - Abstract
As the transportation sector undergoes three major transformations—electrification, shared/on-demand mobility, and automation—there are new challenges to analyzing the impacts of these trends on both the transportation system and the power sector. Most models that analyze the requirements of fleets of shared autonomous electric vehicles (SAEVs) operate at the scale of an urban region, or smaller. A quadratically constrained, quadratic programming problem is formulated, designed to model the requirements of SAEVs at a national scale. The size of the SAEV fleet, the necessary charging infrastructure, the fleet charging schedule, and the dispatch required to serve demand for trips in a region are treated as decision variables. By minimizing both the amortized cost of the fleet and chargers as well as the operational costs of charging, it is possible to explore the coupled interactions between system design and operation. To apply the model at a national scale, key complications about fleet operations are simplified; but a detailed agent-based regional simulation model to parameterize those simplifications is leveraged. Preliminary results are presented, finding that all mobility in the United States (U.S.) currently served by 276 million personally owned vehicles could be served by 12.5 million SAEVs at a cost of $ 0.27/vehicle-mile or $ 0.18/passenger-mile. The energy requirements for this fleet would be 1142 GWh/day (8.5% of 2017 U.S. electricity demand) and the peak charging load 76.7 GW (11% of U.S. power peak). Several model sensitivities are explored, and it is found that sharing is a key factor in the analysis.
- Published
- 2019
15. The Value Proposition for Cost-Effective, Demand Responsive-Enabling, Nonresidential Lighting System Retrofits in California Buildings
- Author
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Schwartz, Peter, Gerke, Brian, Potter, Jennifer, Robinson, Alastair, Jagger, David, Sanders, Kelly, Wen, Yao-Jung, Shepard, Jasmine, and Kisch, Teddy
- Subjects
networked lighting controls ,non-energy benefits ,commercial lighting ,demand response ,lighting controls value proposition - Abstract
Commercial lighting represents a significant potential source of demand response (DR) for the electrical grid, via traditional load shedding and rapid-dispatch (fast-DR) ancillary services when DR is enabled by networked lighting controls (NLCs). However, despite the significantopportunity and a regulatory push, DR-enabled lighting is installed in relatively few buildings because most building owners do not recognize its strong value proposition. Although NLCs can reduce energy bills, optimize facilities, and increase revenue, these co-benefits are not wellquantified. This project analyzed lighting DR resources and energy-related co-benefits for commercial buildings in California. Using more than 100,000 individual hourly load profiles, the team forecasted the potential DR resources likely available from commercial lighting in 2025 and estimated revenues available from participation of these DR resources in energy markets. Combining these results with field-study estimates for NLC installation costs and energy savings provided a detailed accounting of site-level cost and energy-related co-benefits by building type from NLC’s DR enablement. In many cases, energy savings alone can deliversignificant net value, justifying NLC DR-enabled adoption. Additionally, the study considers the sometimes-larger non-energy benefits (NEBs).
- Published
- 2019
16. Load-driven interactions between energy efficiency and demand response on regional grid scales
- Author
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Gerke, Brian F., Zhang, Cong, Murthy, Samanvitha, Satchwell, Andrew J., Present, Elaina, Horsey, Henry, Wilson, Eric, Parker, Andrew, Speake, Andrew, Adhikari, Rajendra, and Piette, Mary Ann
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Cost, Energy, and Environmental Impact of Automated Electric Taxi Fleets in Manhattan
- Author
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Bauer, Gordon S, Greenblatt, Jeffery B, and Gerke, Brian F
- Subjects
Affordable and Clean Energy ,Air Pollution ,Automobiles ,Motor Vehicles ,New York City ,Vehicle Emissions ,Environmental Sciences - Abstract
Shared automated electric vehicles (SAEVs) hold great promise for improving transportation access in urban centers while drastically reducing transportation-related energy consumption and air pollution. Using taxi-trip data from New York City, we develop an agent-based model to predict the battery range and charging infrastructure requirements of a fleet of SAEVs operating on Manhattan Island. We also develop a model to estimate the cost and environmental impact of providing service and perform extensive sensitivity analysis to test the robustness of our predictions. We estimate that costs will be lowest with a battery range of 50-90 mi, with either 66 chargers per square mile, rated at 11 kW or 44 chargers per square mile, rated at 22 kW. We estimate that the cost of service provided by such an SAEV fleet will be $0.29-$0.61 per revenue mile, an order of magnitude lower than the cost of service of present-day Manhattan taxis and $0.05-$0.08/mi lower than that of an automated fleet composed of any currently available hybrid or internal combustion engine vehicle (ICEV). We estimate that such an SAEV fleet drawing power from the current NYC power grid would reduce GHG emissions by 73% and energy consumption by 58% compared to an automated fleet of ICEVs.
- Published
- 2018
18. MOBILIZING THE ANTI-DUCK BRIGADE: TECHNOLOGY AND MARKET PATHWAYS FOR LOAD-SHIFTING DEMAND RESPONSE IN CALIFORNIA
- Author
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Gallo, Giulia, Gerke, Brian, Liu, Jingjing, Piette, Mary Ann, Schwartz, Peter, and Alstone, Peter
- Abstract
With rapidly increasing renewable power generation, the California electricity system is experiencing the impacts of the so-called “duck curve,” with occasional over-generation in the middle of the day, followed by rapid ramping of net demand producing a sharp evening peak. Mitigating this pattern will require novel demand-side management approaches to shifting demand away from high net demand periods and toward high renewables generation periods. In this paper, drawing from more than 200,000 individual residential, commercial, and industrial customers’ hourly smart meter data, we disaggregate load shapes for certain key end-uses and then average the results across a highly granular set of customer segments by sector, building type, demand profile and geographic region, to yield a library of characteristic daily load profiles (“clusters”) for different end-uses and seasons. By categorizing the library into particularly desirable or undesirable load shapes in the context of mitigating the duck curve, we can gain insight into specific technologies, seasonal effects, or site-level attributes that may serve as helpful levers to use in developing future load-shifting programs. Based on these insights, we develop recommendations on technologies and new market structures and incentives that can create a future demand curve that more closely matches renewable generation patterns.
- Published
- 2018
19. The International Database of Efficient Appliances (IDEA): A new tool to support appliance energy-efficiency deployment
- Author
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Gerke, Brian F, McNeil, Michael A, and Tu, Thomas
- Subjects
Economics ,Engineering ,Built Environment and Design ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,Energy ,Built environment and design - Abstract
Appliance energy-efficiency programs are a central component of many countries’ energy-policy portfolios. A major barrier to optimal implementation of these programs is lack of data to determine market baselines, assess the potential for cost-effective energy savings, and track markets over time to evaluate and verify program impacts. To address this gap, we have developed the International Database of Efficient Appliances (IDEA), a suite of software tools that automatically gathers data that is currently dispersed across various online sources and compiles it into a unified repository of information on efficiency, price, and features for a diversity of appliances and devices in markets around the world. In this article we describe the framework and functionality of IDEA, and we demonstrate its power as a resource for research and policy development related to appliance energy efficiency. Using IDEA data for refrigerators in China and India, we assess the potential for cost-effective energy savings within each market by computing robust indicators that can also be easily compared across different appliances and markets. We find that significant cost-effective savings are available on both markets. We discuss implications for the development of future energy-efficiency deployment programs.
- Published
- 2017
20. Impacts of the EISA 2007 Energy Efficiency Standard on General Service Lamps:
- Author
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Kantner, Colleen L, Alstone, Andrea L, Ganeshalingam, Mohan, Gerke, Brian F, and Hosbach, Robert
- Abstract
The Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975, as amended by the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (EISA 2007), requires that, effective beginning January 1, 2020, the Secretary of Energy shall prohibit the sale of any general service lamp (GSL) that does not meet a minimum efficacy standard of 45 lumens per watt. This is referred to as the EISA 2007 backstop. The U.S. Department of Energy recently revised the definition of the term GSL to include certain lamps that were either previously excluded or not explicitly mentioned in the EISA 2007 definition. For this subset of GSLs, we assess the impacts of the EISA 2007 backstop on national energy consumption, carbon dioxide emissions, and consumer expenditures. To estimate these impacts, we projected the energy use, purchase price, and operating cost of representative lamps purchased during a 30-year analysis period, 2020-2049, for cases in which the EISA 2007 backstop does and does not take effect; the impacts of the backstop are then given by the difference between the two cases. In developing the projection model, we also performed the most comprehensive assessment to date of usage patterns and lifetime distributions for the analyzed lamp types in the United States. There is substantial uncertainty in the estimated impacts, which arises from uncertainty in the speed and extent of the market conversion to solid state lighting technology that would occur in the absence of the EISA 2007 backstop. In our central estimate we find that the EISA 2007 backstop results in significant energy savings of 27 quads and consumer net present value of $120 billion (at a seven percent discount rate) for lamps shipped between 2020 and 2049, and carbon dioxide emissions reduction of 540 million metric tons by 2030 for those GSLs not explicitly included in the EISA 2007 definition of a GSL.
- Published
- 2017
21. Consumer Purchasing Behavior and Usage of Lighting in the Residential Sector
- Author
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Ganeshalingam, Mohan, primary, Hosbach, Robert, additional, Zavodivker, Liat, additional, Gerke, Brian, additional, Kantner, Colleen, additional, and Stratton, Hannah, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The International Database of Efficient Appliances (IDEA): A New Resource for Global Efficiency Policy:
- Author
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Gerke, Brian F, McNeil, Michael A, Tu, Thomas, and Xu, Feiyang
- Abstract
A major barrier to effective appliance efficiency program design and evaluation is a lack of data for determination of market baselines and cost-effective energy savings potential. The data gap is particularly acute in developing countries, which may have the greatest savings potential per unit GDP. To address this need, we are developing the International Database of Efficient Appliances (IDEA), which automatically compiles data from a wide variety of online sources to create a unified repository of information on efficiency, price, and features for a wide range of energy-consuming products across global markets. This paper summarizes the database framework and demonstrates the power of IDEA as a resource for appliance efficiency research and policy development. Using IDEA data for refrigerators in China and India, we develop robust cost-effectiveness indicators that allow rapid determination of savings potential within each market, as well as comparison of that potential across markets and appliance types. We discuss implications for future energy efficiency policy development.
- Published
- 2016
23. Assessing the Interactive Impacts of Energy Efficiency and Demand Response on Power System Costs and Emissions
- Author
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Satchwell, Andrew, primary, Cowiestoll, Brady, additional, Hale, Elaine, additional, Gerke, Brian, additional, Jadun, Paige, additional, Zhang, Cong, additional, and Murthy, Samanvitha, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Potential bill impacts of dynamic electricity pricing on California utility customers
- Author
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Gerke, Brian F, Gerke, Brian F, Stuebs, Marius, Murthy, Samanvitha, Khandekar, Aditya, Cappers, Peter, Brown, Richard E, Piette, Mary Ann, Gerke, Brian F, Gerke, Brian F, Stuebs, Marius, Murthy, Samanvitha, Khandekar, Aditya, Cappers, Peter, Brown, Richard E, and Piette, Mary Ann
- Abstract
The rapid growth of renewable generation is creating challenges for the California grid in the form of the “duck curve,” with increasingly steep ramping required for conventional generation resources in the morning and evening, and growing curtailment of solar resources in midday periods. Time-varying electricity tariffs have received considerable attention as a tool to address these challenges, with a renewed recent focus on the potential for dynamic tariffs that vary to reflect conditions on the grid in near-real time. Consideration of dynamic tariffs may raise concerns about the financial impact on utility customers, especially for those who have limited flexibility to modify their electricity consumption in response. Specific areas of concern include electricity bills, bill volatility, and equity implications related to cost shifting among customer groups. In this paper we leverage smart meter data for more than 400,000 California utility customers, spanning residential, commercial, industrial, and agricultural customers, to assess potential customer bill impacts arising from a multi-component dynamic tariff . Specifically, we compute impacts on customer bills and bill volatility under the assumption of fully inelastic demand, i.e., where customers do not change their consumption patterns in response to the tariff. We also assess various approaches designing subscription load shapes that customers can pre-purchase as a hedge that may provide a measure of protection against large negative impacts, while still incentivizing the modification of loads on the margin. We compare and contrast the relative impacts on different customer classes and discuss benefits and pitfalls of different dynamic tariff structures and subscription load shapes.
- Published
- 2023
25. Improved Mock Galaxy Catalogs for the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey from Subhalo Abundance and Environment Matching
- Author
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Gerke, Brian F., Wechsler, Risa H., Behroozi, Peter S., Cooper, Michael C., Yan, Renbin, and Coil, Alison L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We develop empirical methods for modeling the galaxy population and populating cosmological N-body simulations with mock galaxies according to the observed properties of galaxies in survey data. We use these techniques to produce a new set of mock catalogs for the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey based on the output of the high-resolution Bolshoi simulation, as well as two other simulations with different cosmological parameters, all of which we release for public use. The mock-catalog creation technique uses subhalo abundance matching to assign galaxy luminosities to simulated dark-matter halos. It then adds color information to the resulting mock galaxies in a manner that depends on the local galaxy density, in order to reproduce the measured color-environment relation in the data. In the course of constructing the catalogs, we test various models for including scatter in the relation between halo mass and galaxy luminosity, within the abundance-matching framework. We find that there is no constant-scatter model that can simultaneously reproduce both the luminosity function and the autocorrelation function of DEEP2. This result has implications for galaxy-formation theory, and it restricts the range of contexts in which the mocks can be usefully applied. Nevertheless, careful comparisons show that our new mocks accurately reproduce a wide range of the other properties of the DEEP2 catalog, suggesting that they can be used to gain a detailed understanding of various selection effects in DEEP2., Comment: 24 pages, 13 figures, matches version accepted for publication in ApJS. Catalogs are available for download from the URL referenced in the Appendix
- Published
- 2012
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26. The DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: The Voronoi-Delaunay Method catalog of galaxy groups
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Gerke, Brian F., Newman, Jeffrey A., Davis, Marc, Coil, Alison L., Cooper, Michael C., Dutton, Aaron A., Faber, S. M., Guhathakurta, Puragra, Konidaris, Nicholas, Koo, David C., Lin, Lihwai, Noeske, Kai, Phillips, Andrew C., Rosario, David J., Weiner, Benjamin J., Willmer, Christopher N. A., and Yan, Renbin
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a public catalog of galaxy groups constructed from the spectroscopic sample of galaxies in the fourth data release from the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey, including the Extended Groth Strip (EGS). The catalog contains 1165 groups with two or more members in the EGS over the redshift range 0
0.6 in the rest of DEEP2. 25% of EGS galaxies and 14% of high-z DEEP2 galaxies are assigned to galaxy groups. The groups were detected using the Voronoi-Delaunay Method, after it has been optimized on mock DEEP2 catalogs following similar methods to those employed in Gerke et al. (2005). In the optimization effort, we have taken particular care to ensure that the mock catalogs resemble the data as closely as possible, and we have fine-tuned our methods separately on mocks constructed for the EGS and the rest of DEEP2. We have also probed the effect of the assumed cosmology on our inferred group-finding efficiency by performing our optimization on three different mock catalogs with different background cosmologies, finding large differences in the group-finding success we can achieve for these different mocks. Using the mock catalog whose background cosmology is most consistent with current data, we estimate that the DEEP2 group catalog is 72% complete and 61% pure (74% and 67% for the EGS) and that the group-finder correctly classifies 70% of galaxies that truly belong to groups, with an additional 46% of interloper galaxies contaminating the catalog (66% and 43% for the EGS). (Abridged), Comment: 26 pages, 10 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in ApJ. The full group catalog is available for download from http://deep.berkeley.edu/dr4 - Published
- 2012
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27. The DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: Design, Observations, Data Reduction, and Redshifts
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Newman, Jeffrey A., Cooper, Michael C., Davis, Marc, Faber, S. M., Coil, Alison L., Guhathakurta, Puragra, Koo, David C., Phillips, Andrew C., Conroy, Charlie, Dutton, Aaron A., Finkbeiner, Douglas P., Gerke, Brian F., Rosario, David J., Weiner, Benjamin J., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Yan, Renbin, Harker, Justin J., Kassin, Susan A., Konidaris, Nicholas P., Lai, Kamson, Madgwick, Darren S., Noeske, Kai G., Wirth, Gregory D., Connolly, Andrew J., Kaiser, Nick, Kirby, Evan N., Lemaux, Brian C., Lin, Lihwai, Lotz, Jennifer M., Luppino, Gerard A., Marinoni, Christian, Matthews, Daniel J., Metevier, Anne, and Schiavon, Ricardo P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We describe the design and data sample from the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey, the densest and largest precision-redshift survey of galaxies at z ~ 1 completed to date. The survey has conducted a comprehensive census of massive galaxies, their properties, environments, and large-scale structure down to absolute magnitude M_B = -20 at z ~ 1 via ~90 nights of observation on the DEIMOS spectrograph at Keck Observatory. DEEP2 covers an area of 2.8 deg^2 divided into four separate fields, observed to a limiting apparent magnitude of R_AB=24.1. Objects with z < 0.7 are rejected based on BRI photometry in three of the four DEEP2 fields, allowing galaxies with z > 0.7 to be targeted ~2.5 times more efficiently than in a purely magnitude-limited sample. Approximately sixty percent of eligible targets are chosen for spectroscopy, yielding nearly 53,000 spectra and more than 38,000 reliable redshift measurements. Most of the targets which fail to yield secure redshifts are blue objects that lie beyond z ~ 1.45. The DEIMOS 1200-line/mm grating used for the survey delivers high spectral resolution (R~6000), accurate and secure redshifts, and unique internal kinematic information. Extensive ancillary data are available in the DEEP2 fields, particularly in the Extended Groth Strip, which has evolved into one of the richest multiwavelength regions on the sky. DEEP2 surpasses other deep precision-redshift surveys at z ~ 1 in terms of galaxy numbers, redshift accuracy, sample number density, and amount of spectral information. We also provide an overview of the scientific highlights of the DEEP2 survey thus far. This paper is intended as a handbook for users of the DEEP2 Data Release 4, which includes all DEEP2 spectra and redshifts, as well as for the publicly-available DEEP2 DEIMOS data reduction pipelines. [Abridged], Comment: submitted to ApJS; data products available for download at http://deep.berkeley.edu/DR4/
- Published
- 2012
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28. Dependence of Galaxy Quenching on Halo Mass and Distance from its Centre
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Woo, Joanna, Dekel, Avishai, Faber, S. M., Noeske, Kai, Koo, David C., Gerke, Brian F., Cooper, Michael C., Salim, Samir, Dutton, Aaron A., Newman, Jeffrey, Weiner, Benjamin J., Bundy, Kevin, Willmer, Christopher N. A., Davis, Marc, and Yan, Renbin
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the dependence of star-formation quenching on galaxy mass and environment, in the SDSS (z~0.1) and the AEGIS (z~1). It is crucial that we define quenching by low star-formation rate rather than by red colour, given that one third of the red galaxies are star forming. We address stellar mass M*, halo mass Mh, density over the nearest N neighbours deltaN, and distance to the halo centre D. The fraction of quenched galaxies appears more strongly correlated with Mh at fixed M* than with M* at fixed Mh, while for satellites quenching also depends on D. We present the M*-Mh relation for centrals at z~1. At z~1, the dependence of quenching on M* at fixed Mh is somewhat more pronounced than at z~0, but the quenched fraction is low (10%) and the haloes are less massive. For satellites, M*-dependent quenching is noticeable at high D, suggesting a quenching dependence on sub-halo mass for recently captured satellites. At small D, where satellites likely fell in more than a few Gyr ago, quenching strongly depends on Mh, and not on M*. The Mh-dependence of quenching is consistent with theoretical wisdom where virial shock heating in massive haloes shuts down accretion and triggers ram-pressure stripping, causing quenching. The interpretation of deltaN is complicated by the fact that it depends on the number of observed group members compared to N, motivating the use of D as a better measure of local environment., Comment: 23 pages, 13 figures, accepted by MNRAS
- Published
- 2012
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29. Kiloparsec-scale Spatial Offsets in Double-peaked Narrow-line Active Galactic Nuclei. I. Markers for Selection of Compelling Dual Active Galactic Nucleus Candidates
- Author
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Comerford, Julia M., Gerke, Brian F., Stern, Daniel, Cooper, Michael C., Weiner, Benjamin J., Newman, Jeffrey A., Madsen, Kristin, and Barrows, R. Scott
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Merger-remnant galaxies with kpc-scale separation dual active galactic nuclei (AGNs) should be widespread as a consequence of galaxy mergers and triggered gas accretion onto supermassive black holes, yet very few dual AGNs have been observed. Galaxies with double-peaked narrow AGN emission lines in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey are plausible dual AGN candidates, but their double-peaked profiles could also be the result of gas kinematics or AGN-driven outflows and jets on small or large scales. To help distinguish between these scenarios, we have obtained spatial profiles of the AGN emission via follow-up long-slit spectroscopy of 81 double-peaked narrow-line AGNs in SDSS at 0.03 < z < 0.36 using Lick, Palomar, and MMT Observatories. We find that all 81 systems exhibit double AGN emission components with ~kpc projected spatial separations on the sky, which suggests that they are produced by kpc-scale dual AGNs or kpc-scale outflows, jets, or rotating gaseous disks. In addition, we find that the subsample (58%) of the objects with spatially compact emission components may be preferentially produced by dual AGNs, while the subsample (42%) with spatially extended emission components may be preferentially produced by AGN outflows. We also find that for 32% of the sample the two AGN emission components are preferentially aligned with the host galaxy major axis, as expected for dual AGNs orbiting in the host galaxy potential. Our results both narrow the list of possible physical mechanisms producing the double AGN components, and suggest several observational criteria for selecting the most promising dual AGN candidates from the full sample of double-peaked narrow-line AGNs. Using these criteria, we determine the 17 most compelling dual AGN candidates in our sample., Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, published in ApJ. Modified from original version to reflect referee's comments
- Published
- 2011
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30. Chandra Observations of a 1.9 kpc Separation Double X-ray Source in a Candidate Dual AGN Galaxy at z=0.16
- Author
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Comerford, Julia M., Pooley, David, Gerke, Brian F., and Madejski, Greg M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We report Chandra observations of a double X-ray source in the z=0.1569 galaxy SDSS J171544.05+600835.7. The galaxy was initially identified as a dual AGN candidate based on the double-peaked [O III] emission lines, with a line-of-sight velocity separation of 350 km/s, in its Sloan Digital Sky Survey spectrum. We used the Kast Spectrograph at Lick Observatory to obtain two longslit spectra of the galaxy at two different position angles, which reveal that the two AGN emission components have not only a velocity offset, but also a projected spatial offset of 1.9 kpc/h70 on the sky. Chandra/ACIS observations of two X-ray sources with the same spatial offset and orientation as the optical emission suggest the galaxy most likely contains Compton-thick dual AGN, although the observations could also be explained by AGN jets. Deeper X-ray observations that reveal Fe K lines, if present, would distinguish between the two scenarios. The observations of a double X-ray source in SDSS J171544.05+600835.7 are a proof of concept for a new, systematic detection method that selects promising dual AGN candidates from ground-based spectroscopy that exhibits both velocity and spatial offsets in the AGN emission features., Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, submitted to ApJL
- Published
- 2011
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31. Statistics of Satellite Galaxies Around Milky Way-Like Hosts
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Busha, Michael T., Wechsler, Risa H., Behroozi, Peter S., Gerke, Brian F., Klypin, Anatoly A., and Primack, Joel R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We calculate the probability that a Milky-Way-like halo in the standard cosmological model has the observed number of Magellanic Clouds (MCs). The statistics of the number of MCs in the LCDM model are in good agreement with observations of a large sample of SDSS galaxies. Under the sub-halo abundance matching assumption of a relationship with small scatter between galaxy r-band luminosities and halo internal velocities v_max, we make detailed comparisons to similar measurements using SDSS DR7 data by Liu et al. (2010). Models and observational data give very similar probabilities for having zero, one, and two MC-like satellites. In both cases, Milky Way-luminosity hosts have just a \sim 10% chance of hosting two satellites similar to the Magellanic Clouds. In addition, we present a prediction for the probability for a host galaxy to have Nsats satellite galaxies as a function of the magnitudes of both the host and satellite. This probability and its scaling with host properties is significantly different from that of mass-selected objects because of scatter in the mass- luminosity relation and because of variations in the star formation efficiency with halo mass., Comment: 14 pages. Replaced with version accepted to ApJ. Some animations available at http://risa.stanford.edu/milkyway/
- Published
- 2010
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32. The Voronoi Tessellation cluster finder in 2+1 dimensions
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Soares-Santos, Marcelle, de Carvalho, Reinaldo R., Annis, James, Gal, Roy R., La Barbera, Francesco, Lopes, Paulo A. A., Wechsler, Risa H., Busha, Michael T., and Gerke, Brian F.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a detailed description of the Voronoi Tessellation (VT) cluster finder algorithm in 2+1 dimensions, which improves on past implementations of this technique. The need for cluster finder algorithms able to produce reliable cluster catalogs up to redshift 1 or beyond and down to $10^{13.5}$ solar masses is paramount especially in light of upcoming surveys aiming at cosmological constraints from galaxy cluster number counts. We build the VT in photometric redshift shells and use the two-point correlation function of the galaxies in the field to both determine the density threshold for detection of cluster candidates and to establish their significance. This allows us to detect clusters in a self consistent way without any assumptions about their astrophysical properties. We apply the VT to mock catalogs which extend to redshift 1.4 reproducing the $\Lambda$CDM cosmology and the clustering properties observed in the SDSS data. An objective estimate of the cluster selection function in terms of the completeness and purity as a function of mass and redshift is as important as having a reliable cluster finder. We measure these quantities by matching the VT cluster catalog with the mock truth table. We show that the VT can produce a cluster catalog with completeness and purity $>80%$ for the redshift range up to $\sim 1$ and mass range down to $\sim 10^{13.5}$ solar masses., Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures. ApJ accepted
- Published
- 2010
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33. How Common are the Magellanic Clouds?
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Liu, Lulu, Gerke, Brian F., Wechsler, Risa H., Behroozi, Peter S., and Busha, Michael T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We introduce a probabilistic approach to the problem of counting dwarf satellites around host galaxies in databases with limited redshift information. This technique is used to investigate the occurrence of satellites with luminosities similar to the Magellanic Clouds around hosts with properties similar to the Milky Way in the object catalog of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Our analysis uses data from SDSS Data Release 7, selecting candidate Milky-Way-like hosts from the spectroscopic catalog and candidate analogs of the Magellanic Clouds from the photometric catalog. Our principal result is the probability for a Milky-Way-like galaxy to host N_{sat} close satellites with luminosities similar to the Magellanic Clouds. We find that 81 percent of galaxies like the Milky Way are have no such satellites within a radius of 150 kpc, 11 percent have one, and only 3.5 percent of hosts have two. The probabilities are robust to changes in host and satellite selection criteria, background-estimation technique, and survey depth. These results demonstrate that the Milky Way has significantly more satellites than a typical galaxy of its luminosity; this fact is useful for understanding the larger cosmological context of our home galaxy., Comment: Updated to match published version. Added reference
- Published
- 2010
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34. Absence of Evidence Is Not Evidence of Absence: The Color-Density Relation at Fixed Stellar Mass Persists to z ~ 1
- Author
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Cooper, Michael C., Coil, Alison L., Gerke, Brian F., Newman, Jeffrey A., Bundy, Kevin, Conselice, Christopher J., Croton, Darren J., Davis, Marc, Faber, S. M., Guhathakurta, Puragra, Koo, David C., Lin, Lihwai, Weiner, Benjamin J., Willmer, Christopher N. A., and Yan, Renbin
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We use data drawn from the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey to investigate the relationship between local galaxy density, stellar mass, and rest-frame galaxy color. At z ~ 0.9, we find that the shape of the stellar mass function at the high-mass (log (M*/Msun) > 10.1) end depends on the local environment, with high-density regions favoring more massive systems. Accounting for this stellar mass-environment relation (i.e., working at fixed stellar mass), we find a significant color-density relation for galaxies with 10.6 < log(M*/Msun) < 11.1 and 0.75 < z < 0.95. This result is shown to be robust to variations in the sample selection and to extend to even lower masses (down to log(M*/Msun) ~ 10.4). We conclude by discussing our results in comparison to recent works in the literature, which report no significant correlation between galaxy properties and environment at fixed stellar mass for the same redshift and stellar mass domain. The non-detection of environmental dependence found in other data sets is largely attributable to their smaller samples size and lower sampling density, as well as systematic effects such as inaccurate redshifts and biased analysis techniques. Ultimately, our results based on DEEP2 data illustrate that the evolutionary state of a galaxy at z ~ 1 is not exclusively determined by the stellar mass of the galaxy. Instead, we show that local environment appears to play a distinct role in the transformation of galaxy properties at z > 1., Comment: 10 pages, 5 Figures; Accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2010
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35. Where do Wet, Dry, and Mixed Galaxy Mergers Occur? A Study of the Environments of Close Galaxy Pairs in the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey
- Author
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Lin, Lihwai, Cooper, Michael C., Jian, Hung-Yu, Koo, David C., Patton, David R., Yan, Renbin, Willmer, Christopher N. A., Coil, Alison L., Chiueh, Tzihong, Croton, Darren J., Gerke, Brian F., Lotz, Jennifer, Guhathakurta, Puragra, and Newman, Jeffrey A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the environment of wet, dry, and mixed galaxy mergers at 0.75 < z < 1.2 using close pairs in the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey. We find that the typical environment of mixed and dry merger candidates is denser than that of wet mergers, mostly due to the color-density relation. While the galaxy companion rate (Nc) is observed to increase with overdensity, using N-body simulations we find that the fraction of pairs that will eventually merge decreases with the local density, predominantly because interlopers are more common in dense environments. After taking into account the merger probability of pairs as a function of local density, we find only marginal environment dependence of the fractional merger rate for wet mergers over the redshift range we have probed. On the other hand, the fractional dry merger rate increases rapidly with local density due to the increased population of red galaxies in dense environments. We also find that the environment distribution of K+A galaxies is similar to that of wet mergers alone and of wet+mixed mergers, suggesting a possible connection between K+A galaxies and wet and/or wet+mixed mergers. We conclude that, as early as z ~ 1, high-density regions are the preferred environment in which dry mergers occur, and that present-day red-sequence galaxies in overdense environments have, on average, undergone 1.2+-0.3 dry mergers since this time, accounting for (38+-10)% of their mass accretion in the last 8 billion years. Our findings suggest that dry mergers are crucial in the mass-assembly of massive red galaxies in dense environments, such as Brightest Cluster Galaxies (BCGs) in galaxy groups and clusters., Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables, submitted to ApJ, revised according to the referee's comments
- Published
- 2010
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36. Groups of Galaxies in AEGIS: The 200 ksec Chandra Extended X-ray Source catalogue
- Author
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Jeltema, Tesla E., Gerke, Brian F., Laird, Elise S., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Coil, Alison L., Cooper, Michael C., Davis, Marc, Nandra, Kirpal, and Newman, Jeffrey A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the discovery of seven X-ray emitting groups of galaxies selected as extended X-ray sources in the 200 ksec Chandra coverage of the All-wavelength Extended Groth Strip International Survey (AEGIS). In addition, we report on AGN activity associated to these systems. Using the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey coverage, we identify optical counterparts and determine velocity dispersions. In particular, we find three massive high-redshift groups at z>0.7, one of which is at z=1.13, the first X-ray detections of spectroscopically selected DEEP2 groups. We also present a first look at the the L_X-T, L_X-sigma, and sigma-T scaling relations for high-redshift massive groups. We find that the properties of these X-ray selected systems agree well with the scaling relations of similar systems at low redshift, although there are X-ray undetected groups in the DEEP2 catalogue with similar velocity dispersions. The other three X-ray groups with identified redshifts are associated with lower mass groups at z~0.07 and together form part of a large structure or "supergroup" in the southern portion of the AEGIS field. All of the low-redshift systems are centred on massive elliptical galaxies, and all of the high-redshift groups have likely central galaxies or galaxy pairs. All of the central group galaxies host X-ray point sources, radio sources, and/or show optical AGN emission. Particularly interesting examples of central AGN activity include a bent-double radio source plus X-ray point source at the center of a group at z=0.74, extended radio and double X-ray point sources associated to the central galaxy in the lowest-redshift group at z=0.066, and a bright green valley galaxy (part of a pair) in the z=1.13 group which shows optical AGN emission lines., Comment: accepted to MNRAS, 15 pages, 11 figures, for version with full resolution figures see http://www.ucolick.org/~tesla/aegis_groups.ps.gz
- Published
- 2009
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37. A 1.75 kpc/h Separation Dual AGN at z=0.36 in the COSMOS Field
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Comerford, Julia M., Griffith, Roger L., Gerke, Brian F., Cooper, Michael C., Newman, Jeffrey A., Davis, Marc, and Stern, Daniel
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present strong evidence for dual active galactic nuclei (AGN) in the z=0.36 galaxy COSMOS J100043.15+020637.2. COSMOS Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging of the galaxy shows a tidal tail, indicating that the galaxy recently underwent a merger, as well as two bright point sources near the galaxy's center. Both the luminosities of these sources (derived from the HST image) and their emission line flux ratios (derived from Keck/DEIMOS slit spectroscopy) suggest that both are AGN and not star-forming regions or supernovae. Observations from zCOSMOS, Sloan Digital Sky Survey, XMM-Newton, Very Large Array, and Spitzer fortify the evidence for AGN activity. With HST imaging we measure a projected spatial offset between the two AGN of 1.75 +- 0.03 kpc/h, and with DEIMOS we measure a 150 +- 40 km/s line-of-sight velocity offset between the two AGN. Combined, these observations provide substantial evidence that COSMOS J100043.15+020637.2 is a dual AGN in a merger-remnant galaxy., Comment: Submitted to ApJL
- Published
- 2009
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38. The evolving price of household LED lamps: Recent trends and historical comparisons for the US market
- Author
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Gerke, Brian F., Ngo, Allison T., Alstone, Andrea L., and Fisseha, Kibret S.
- Abstract
In recent years, household LED light bulbs (LED A lamps) have undergone a dramatic price decline. Since late 2011, we have been collecting data, on a weekly basis, for retail offerings of LED A lamps on the Internet. The resulting data set allows us to track the recent price decline in detail. LED A lamp prices declined roughly exponentially with time in 2011-2014, with decline rates of 28percent to 44percent per year depending on lumen output, and with higher-lumen lamps exhibiting more rapid price declines. By combining the Internet price data with publicly available lamp shipments indices for the US market, it is also possible to correlate LED A lamp prices against cumulative production, yielding an experience curve for LED A lamps. In 2012-2013, LED A lamp prices declined by 20-25percent for each doubling in cumulative shipments. Similar analysis of historical data for other lighting technologies reveals that LED prices have fallen significantly more rapidly with cumulative production than did their technological predecessors, which exhibited a historical decline of 14-15percent per doubling of production.
- Published
- 2014
39. Inspiralling Supermassive Black Holes: A New Signpost for Galaxy Mergers
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Comerford, Julia M., Gerke, Brian F., Newman, Jeffrey A., Davis, Marc, Yan, Renbin, Cooper, Michael C., Faber, S. M., Koo, David C., Coil, Alison L., Rosario, D. J., and Dutton, Aaron A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a new technique for observationally identifying galaxy mergers spectroscopically rather than through host galaxy imaging. Our technique exploits the dynamics of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) powering active galactic nuclei (AGNs) in merger-remnant galaxies. Because structure in the universe is built up through galaxy mergers and nearly all galaxies host a central SMBH, some galaxies should possess two SMBHs near their centers as the result of a recent merger. These SMBHs spiral to the center of the resultant merger-remnant galaxy, and one or both of the SMBHs may power AGNs. Using the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey, we have examined 1881 red galaxies, of which 91 exhibit [O III] and Hbeta emission lines indicative of Seyfert 2 activity. Of these, 32 AGNs have [O III] emission-line redshifts significantly different from the redshifts of the host galaxies' stars, corresponding to velocity offsets of ~50 km/s to ~300 km/s. Two of these AGNs exhibit double-peaked [O III] emission lines, while the remaining 30 AGNs each exhibit a single set of velocity-offset [O III] emission lines. After exploring a variety of physical models for these velocity offsets, we argue that the most likely explanation is inspiralling SMBHs in merger-remnant galaxies. Based on this interpretation, we find that roughly half of the red galaxies hosting AGNs are also merger remnants, which implies that mergers may trigger AGN activity in red galaxies. The AGN velocity offsets we find imply a merger fraction of ~30% and a merger rate of ~3 mergers/Gyr for red galaxies at redshifts 0.34 < z < 0.82., Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, published in ApJ. Modified from original version to reflect referee's comments
- Published
- 2008
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40. X-ray selected AGN in groups at redshifts z~1
- Author
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Georgakakis, A., Gerke, Brian F., Nandra, K., Laird, E. S., Coil, A. L., Cooper, M. C., and Newman, J. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We explore the role of the group environment in the evolution of AGN at the redshift interval 0.7
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- 2008
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41. The DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: Environments of Poststarburst Galaxies at z~0.1 and z~0.8
- Author
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Yan, Renbin, Newman, Jeffrey A., Faber, S. M., Coil, Alison L., Cooper, Michael C., Davis, Marc, Weiner, Benjamin J., Gerke, Brian F., and Koo, David C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Postststarburst (K+A) galaxies are candidates for galaxies in transition from a star-forming phase to a passively-evolving phase. We have spectroscopically identified large samples of K+A galaxies both in the SDSS at z~0.1 and in the DEEP2 survey at z~0.8, using a robust selection method based on a cut in Hbeta emission rather than the more problematic [OII] 3727. Based on measurements of the overdensity of galaxies around each object, we find that K+A galaxies brighter than 0.4L*_B at low-z have a similar, statistically indistinguishable environment distribution as blue galaxies, preferring underdense environments, but dramatically different from that of red galaxies. However, at higher-z, the environment distribution of K+A galaxies is more similar to red galaxies than to blue galaxies. We conclude that the quenching of star formation and the build-up of the red sequence through the K+A phase is happening in relatively overdense environments at z~1 but in relatively underdense environments at z~0. Although the relative environments where quenching occurs are decreasing with time, the corresponding absolute environment may have stayed the same along with the quenching mechanisms, because the mean absolute environments of all galaxies has to grow with time. In addition, we do not find any significant dependence on luminosity in the environment distribution of K+As. The existence of a large K+A population in the field at both redshifts indicates that cluster-specific mechanisms cannot be the dominant route by which these galaxies are formed. We also demonstrates that studying K+A-environment relations by measuring the K+A fraction in different environments is highly non-robust. Statistical comparisons of the overall environment distributions of different populations are much better behaved., Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures, 4 tables, submitted to MNRAS; v2: major revision in Sec 5, 6, 7, and 9. Implemented robust statistical techniques in place of K+A fraction measurements; conclusions on the environment distribution of poststarbursts at z~0.8 have changed. Completely new discussion added. v3: minor changes matching the accepted version
- Published
- 2008
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42. List of contributors
- Author
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Andres, Philipp, primary, Corona, Blanca, additional, de Groot, Thijs, additional, de Jager, David, additional, Edelenbosch, Oreane Y., additional, Fairlie, Matthew, additional, Fleiter, Tobias, additional, Fraunholz, Christoph, additional, Gerke, Brian F., additional, Gomez Tuya, Nilo, additional, Gómez Vilchez, Jonatan J., additional, Heitel, Stephanie, additional, Herbst, Andrea, additional, Hittinger, Eric, additional, Jakob, Martin, additional, Jan Kramer, Gert, additional, Jochem, Patrick, additional, Junginger, Martin, additional, Kammen, Daniel M., additional, Kittner, Noah, additional, Krishnan, Subramani, additional, Lacerda, Juliana Subtil, additional, Louwen, Atse, additional, McCollum, David L., additional, Möst, Dominik, additional, Pettifor, Hazel, additional, Reiter, Ulrich, additional, Schmidt, Oliver, additional, Schreiber, Steffi, additional, Seddig, Katrin, additional, Staffell, Iain, additional, Tarvydas, Dalius, additional, Taylor, Michael, additional, Tsiropoulos, Ioannis, additional, van Sark, Wilfried, additional, van Vuuren, Detlef P., additional, van Zuijlen, Ernst, additional, Williams, Eric, additional, Wilson, Charlie, additional, Wiser, Ryan, additional, and Zöphel, Christoph, additional
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- 2020
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43. Light-emitting diode lighting products
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Gerke, Brian F., primary
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- 2020
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44. The DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: Color and Luminosity Dependence of Galaxy Clustering at z~1
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Coil, Alison L., Newman, Jeffrey A., Croton, Darren, Cooper, Michael C., Davis, Marc, Faber, S. M., Gerke, Brian F., Koo, David C., Padmanabhan, Nikhil, Wechsler, Risa H., and Weiner, Benjamin J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present measurements of the color and luminosity dependence of galaxy clustering at z~1 in the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey. Using volume-limited subsamples in bins of both color and luminosity, we find that: 1) The clustering dependence is much stronger with color than with luminosity and is as strong with color at z~1 as is found locally. We find no dependence of the clustering amplitude on color for galaxies on the red sequence, but a significant dependence on color for galaxies within the blue cloud. 2) For galaxies in the range L/L*~0.7-2, a stronger large-scale luminosity dependence is seen for all galaxies than for red and blue galaxies separately. The small-scale clustering amplitude depends significantly on luminosity for blue galaxies, with brighter samples having a stronger rise on scales r_p<0.5 Mpc/h. 3) Redder galaxies exhibit stronger small-scale redshift-space distortions ("fingers of god"), and both red and blue populations show large-scale distortions in xi(r_p,pi) due to coherent infall. 4) While the clustering length, r_0, increases smoothly with galaxy color (in narrow bins), its power-law exponent, gamma, exhibits a sharp jump from the blue cloud to the red sequence. The intermediate color `green' galaxy population likely includes transitional galaxies moving from the blue cloud to the red sequence; on large scales green galaxies are as clustered as red galaxies but show infall kinematics and a small-scale correlation slope akin to the blue galaxy population. 5) We compare our results to a semi-analytic galaxy formation model applied to the Millenium Run simulation. Differences between the data and the model suggest that in the model star formation is shut down too efficiently in satellite galaxies., Comment: 28 pages, 17 figures, emulateapj format, accepted to ApJ, updated to match published version
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- 2007
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45. The DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: The Role of Galaxy Environment in the Cosmic Star-Formation History
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Cooper, Michael C., Newman, Jeffrey A., Weiner, Benjamin J., Yan, Renbin, Willmer, Christopher N. A., Bundy, Kevin, Coil, Alison L., Conselice, Christopher J., Davis, Marc, Faber, S. M., Gerke, Brian F., Guhathakurta, Puragra, Koo, David C., and Noeske, Kai G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Using galaxy samples drawn from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey, we study the relationship between star formation and environment at z ~ 0.1 and z ~ 1. We estimate the total star-formation rate (SFR) and specific star-formation rate (sSFR) for each galaxy according to the measured [O II] nebular line luminosity, corrected using empirical calibrations to match more robust SFR indicators. Echoing previous results, we find that in the local Universe star formation depends on environment such that galaxies in regions of higher overdensity, on average, have lower star-formation rates and longer star-formation timescales than their counterparts in lower-density regions. At z ~ 1, we show that the relationship between specific SFR and environment mirrors that found locally. However, we discover that the relationship between total SFR and overdensity at z ~ 1 is inverted relative to the local relation. This observed evolution in the SFR-density relation is driven, in part, by a population of bright, blue galaxies in dense environments at z ~ 1. This population, which lacks a counterpart at z ~ 0, is thought to evolve into members of the red sequence from z ~ 1 to z ~ 0. Finally, we conclude that environment does not play a dominant role in the cosmic star-formation history at z < 1: the dependence of the mean galaxy SFR on local galaxy density at constant redshift is small compared to the decline in the global SFR space density over the last 7 Gyr., Comment: 20 pages including 18 figures and 4 tables in emulateapj format; submitted to MNRAS
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- 2007
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46. The DEEP2 galaxy redshift survey: the evolution of the blue fraction in groups and the field
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Gerke, Brian F., Newman, Jeffrey A., Faber, S. M., Cooper, Michael C., Croton, Darren J., Davis, Marc, Willmer, Christopher N. A., Yan, Renbin, Coil, Alison L., Guhathakurta, Puragra, Koo, David C., and Weiner, Benjamin J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We explore the behavior of the blue galaxy fraction over the redshift range 0.75 <= z <= 1.3 in the DEEP2 Survey, both for field galaxies and for galaxies in groups. The primary aim is to determine the role that groups play in driving the evolution of galaxy colour at high z. The colour segregation observed between local group and field samples is already in place at z ~ 1: DEEP2 groups have a significantly lower blue fraction than the field. At fixed z, there is also a correlation between blue fraction and galaxy magnitude, such that brighter galaxies are more likely to be red, both in groups and in the field. In addition, there is a negative correlation between blue fraction and group richness. In terms of evolution, the blue fraction in groups and the field remains roughly constant from z=0.75 to z ~ 1, but beyond this redshift the blue fraction in groups rises rapidly with z, and the group and field blue fractions become indistinguishable at z ~ 1.3. Careful tests indicate that this effect does not arise from known systematic or selection effects. To further ensure the robustness of this result, we build on previous mock DEEP2 catalogues to develop mock catalogues that reproduce the colour-overdensity relation observed in DEEP2 and use these to test our methods. The convergence between the group and field blue fractions at z ~ 1.3 implies that DEEP2 galaxy groups only became efficient at quenching star formation at z ~ 2; this result is broadly consistent with other recent observations and with current models of galaxy evolution and hierarchical structure growth. (Abridged.), Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures. Updated to match version published in MNRAS
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- 2006
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47. The DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: AEGIS Observations of a Dual AGN at z=0.7
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Gerke, Brian F., Newman, Jeffrey A., Lotz, Jennifer, Yan, Renbin, Barmby, P., Coil, Alison L., Conselice, Christopher J., Ivison, R. J., Lin, Lihwai, Koo, David C., Nandra, Kirpal, Salim, Samir, Small, Todd, Weiner, Benjamin J., Cooper, Michael C., Davis, Marc, Faber, S. M., and Guhathakurta, Puragra
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present evidence for a dual Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) within an early-type galaxy at z=0.709 in the Extended Groth Strip. The galaxy lies on the red sequence, with absolute magnitude M_B=-21.0 (AB, with h=0.7) and rest-frame color U-B=1.38. Its optical spectrum shows strong, double-peaked [OIII] emission lines and weak Hbeta emission, with Seyfert-like line ratios. The two narrow peaks are separated by 630 km/s in velocity and arise from two distinct regions, spatially resolved in the DEIMOS spectrum, with a projected physical separation of 1.2 kpc. HST/ACS imaging shows an early-type (E/S0) galaxy with hints of disturbed structure, consistent with the remnant of a dissipationless merger. Multiwavelength photometric information from the AEGIS consortium confirms the identification of a dust-obscured AGN in an early-type galaxy, with detections in X-ray, optical, infrared and radio wavebands. These data are most readily explained as a single galaxy harboring two AGN--the first such system to be observed in an otherwise typical early-type galaxy., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Updated to match published version
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- 2006
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48. The DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: Evolution of the Color-Density Relation at 0.4 < z < 1.35
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Cooper, Michael C., Newman, Jeffrey A., Coil, Alison L., Croton, Darren J., Gerke, Brian F., Yan, Renbin, Davis, Marc, Faber, S. M., Guhathakurta, Puragra, Koo, David C., and Weiner, Benjamin J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Using a sample of 19,464 galaxies drawn from the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey, we study the relationship between galaxy color and environment at 0.4 < z < 1.35. We find that the fraction of galaxies on the red sequence depends strongly on local environment out to z > 1, being larger in regions of greater galaxy density. At all epochs probed, we also find a small population of red, morphologically early-type galaxies residing in regions of low measured overdensity. The observed correlations between the red fraction and local overdensity are highly significant, with the trend at z > 1 detected at a greater than 5-\sigma level. Over the entire redshift regime studied, we find that the color-density relation evolves continuously, with red galaxies more strongly favoring overdense regions at low z relative to their red-sequence counterparts at high redshift. At z ~ 1.3, the red fraction only weakly correlates with overdensity, implying that any color dependence to the clustering of ~ L* galaxies at that epoch must be small. Our findings add weight to existing evidence that the build-up of galaxies on the red sequence has occurred preferentially in overdense environments (i.e., galaxy groups) at z < 1.5. The strength of the observed evolutionary trends at 0 < z < 1.35 suggests that the correlations observed locally, such as the morphology-density and color-density relations, are the result of environment-driven mechanisms (i.e., "nurture'') and do not appear to have been imprinted (by "nature'') upon the galaxy population during their epoch of formation., Comment: 19 pages including 10 figures, accepted to MNRAS
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- 2006
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49. Evolution in the Halo Masses of Isolated Galaxies between z~1 and z~0: From DEEP2 to SDSS
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Conroy, Charlie, Prada, Francisco, Newman, Jeffrey A., Croton, Darren, Coil, Alison L., Conselice, Christopher J., Cooper, Michael C., Davis, Marc, Faber, S. M., Gerke, Brian F., Guhathakurta, Puragra, Klypin, Anatoly, Koo, David C., and Yan, Renbin
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We measure the evolution in the virial mass-to-light ratio (M_{200}/L_B) and virial-to-stellar mass ratio (M_{200}/M_\ast) for isolated ~ L* galaxies between z~1 and z~0 by combining data from the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Utilizing the motions of satellite galaxies around isolated galaxies, we measure line-of-sight velocity dispersions and derive dark matter halo virial masses for these host galaxies. At both epochs the velocity dispersion of satellites correlates with host galaxy stellar mass, \sigma\propto M_\ast^{0.4+/-0.1}, while the relation between satellite velocity dispersion and host galaxy B-band luminosity may grow somewhat shallower from \sigma\propto L_B^{0.6+/-0.1} at z~1 to \sigma\propto L_B^{0.4+/-0.1} at z~0. The evolution in M_200/M_\ast from z~1 to z~0 displays a bimodality insofar as host galaxies with stellar mass below M_\ast ~10^{11} M_Sun/h maintain a constant ratio (the intrinsic increase is constrained to a factor of 1.1+/-0.7) while host galaxies above M_\ast ~10^{11} M_Sun/h experience a factor of 4+/-3 increase in their virial-to-stellar mass ratio. This result can be easily understood if galaxies below this stellar mass scale continue to form stars while star formation in galaxies above this scale is quenched and the dark matter halos of galaxies both above and below this scale grow in accordance with LCDM cosmological simulations. Host galaxies that are red in U-B color have larger satellite dispersions and hence reside on average in more massive halos than blue galaxies at both z~1 and z~0. The redshift and host galaxy stellar mass dependence of M_200/M_\ast agrees qualitatively with the Millennium Run semi-analytic model of galaxy formation. (ABRIDGED), Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, submitted to ApJ
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- 2006
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50. The DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: The Relationship Between Galaxy Properties and Environment at z ~ 1
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Cooper, Michael C., Newman, Jeffrey A., Croton, Darren J., Weiner, Benjamin J., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Gerke, Brian F., Madgwick, Darren S., Faber, S. M., Davis, Marc, Coil, Alison L., Finkbeiner, Douglas P., Guhathakurta, Puragra, and Koo, David C.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the mean environment of galaxies in the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey as a function of rest-frame color, luminosity, and [OII] equivalent width. The local galaxy overdensity for >14,000 galaxies at 0.75 < z < 1.35 is estimated using the projected 3rd-nearest-neighbor surface density. Of the galaxy properties studied, mean environment is found to depend most strongly on galaxy color; all major features of the correlation between mean overdensity and rest-frame color observed in the local universe were already in place at z ~ 1. In contrast to local results, we find a substantial slope in the mean dependence of environment on luminosity for blue, star-forming galaxies at z ~ 1, with brighter blue galaxies being found on average in regions of greater overdensity. We discuss the roles of galaxy clusters and groups in establishing the observed correlations between environment and galaxy properties at high redshift, and we also explore the evidence for a ``downsizing of quenching'' from z ~ 1 to z ~ 0. Our results add weight to existing evidence that the mechanism(s) that result in star-formation quenching are efficient in group environments as well as clusters. This work is the first of its kind at high redshift and represents the first in a series of papers addressing the role of environment in galaxy formation at 0 < z < 1., Comment: 36 pages including 10 figures and revised text, accepted to MNRAS
- Published
- 2006
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