449 results on '"Kampczyk P."'
Search Results
2. The effect of polyphenols on DNA methylation-assessed biological age attenuation: the DIRECT PLUS randomized controlled trial
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Yaskolka Meir, Anat, Keller, Maria, Hoffmann, Anne, Rinott, Ehud, Tsaban, Gal, Kaplan, Alon, Zelicha, Hila, Hagemann, Tobias, Ceglarek, Uta, Isermann, Berend, Shelef, Ilan, Blüher, Matthias, Stumvoll, Michael, Li, Jun, Haange, Sven-Bastian, Engelmann, Beatrice, Rolle-Kampczyk, Ulrike, von Bergen, Martin, Hu, Frank B., Stampfer, Meir J., Kovacs, Peter, Liang, Liming, and Shai, Iris
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- 2023
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3. Modulation of gut microbiota, blood metabolites, and disease resistance by dietary β-glucan in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)
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Menanteau-Ledouble, Simon, Skov, Jakob, Lukassen, Mie Bech, Rolle-Kampczyk, Ulrike, Haange, Sven-Bastiaan, Dalsgaard, Inger, von Bergen, Martin, and Nielsen, Jeppe Lund
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- 2022
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4. The effect of high-polyphenol Mediterranean diet on visceral adiposity: the DIRECT PLUS randomized controlled trial
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Zelicha, Hila, Kloting, Nora, Kaplan, Alon, Yaskolka Meir, Anat, Rinott, Ehud, Tsaban, Gal, Chassidim, Yoash, Bluher, Matthias, Ceglarek, Uta, Isermann, Berend, Stumvoll, Michael, Quayson, Rita Nana, von Bergen, Martin, Engelmann, Beatrice, Rolle-Kampczyk, Ulrike E., Haange, Sven-Bastiaan, Tuohy, Kieran M., Diotallevi, Camilla, Shelef, Ilan, Hu, Frank B., Stampfer, Meir J., and Shai, Iris
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- 2022
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5. Functional changes of the gastric bypass microbiota reactivate thermogenic adipose tissue and systemic glucose control via intestinal FXR-TGR5 crosstalk in diet-induced obesity
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Münzker, Julia, Haase, Nadine, Till, Andreas, Sucher, Robert, Haange, Sven-Bastiaan, Nemetschke, Linda, Gnad, Thorsten, Jäger, Elisabeth, Chen, Jiesi, Riede, Sjaak J., Chakaroun, Rima, Massier, Lucas, Kovacs, Peter, Ost, Mario, Rolle-Kampczyk, Ulrike, Jehmlich, Nico, Weiner, Juliane, Heiker, John T., Klöting, Nora, Seeger, Gudrun, Morawski, Markus, Keitel, Verena, Pfeifer, Alexander, von Bergen, Martin, Heeren, Joerg, Krügel, Ute, and Fenske, Wiebke K.
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- 2022
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6. Reduced lipolysis in lipoma phenocopies lipid accumulation in obesity
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Le Duc, Diana, Lin, Chen-Ching, Popkova, Yulia, Yang, Zuqin, Akhil, Velluva, Çakir, M. Volkan, Grunewald, Sonja, Simon, Jan-Christoph, Dietz, Andreas, Dannenberger, Dirk, Garten, Antje, Lemke, Johannes R., Schiller, Jürgen, Blüher, Matthias, Nono Nankam, Pamela Arielle, Rolle-Kampczyk, Ulrike, von Bergen, Martin, Kelso, Janet, and Schöneberg, Torsten
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- 2021
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7. Late-stage galaxy mergers in COSMOS to z~1
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Lackner, C. N., Silverman, J. D., Salvato, M., Kampczyk, P., Kartaltepe, J. S., Sanders, D., Capak, P., Civano, F., Ilbert, O., Jahnke, K., Koekemoer, A. M., Lee, N., Fevre, O. Le, Liu, C. T., Scoville, N., Sheth, K., and Toft, S.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The role of major mergers in galaxy and black hole formation is not well constrained. To help address this, we develop an automated method to identify late-stage galaxy mergers before coalescence of the galactic cores. The resulting sample of mergers is distinct from those obtained using pair-finding and morphological indicators. Our method relies on median-filtering of high-resolution images in order to distinguish two concentrated galaxy nuclei at small separations. Using mock images, we derive statistical contamination and incompleteness corrections for the fraction of late-stage mergers. We apply our new method to a magnitude-limited (I < 23) sample of 44,164 galaxies from the COSMOS HST/ACS catalog. Using a mass-complete sample with $\log M_*/M_\odot > 10.6$ and $0.25 < z \leq 1.00$, we find ~5% of systems are late-stage mergers with separations between 2.2 and 8 kpc. Correcting for incompleteness and contamination, the fractional merger rate increases strongly with redshift as $(1+z)^{3.8\pm0.9}$, in agreement with earlier studies and with dark matter halo merger rates. Separating the sample into star-forming and quiescent galaxies shows that the merger rate for star-forming galaxies increases strongly redshift, $(1+z)^{4.5\pm1.3}$, while the merger rate for quiescent galaxies is consistent with no evolution, $(1+z)^{1.1\pm1.2}$. Limiting our sample to galaxies with spectroscopic redshifts from zCOSMOS, we find that the star formation rates and X-ray selected AGN activity in likely late-stage mergers are enhanced by factors of ~2 relative to a control sample. Combining our sample with more widely separated pairs, we find that $8\pm5\%$ of star formation and $20\pm8\%$ of AGN activity is triggered by close encounters (<143 kpc) or mergers, once more suggesting that major mergers are not the only channels for star formation and black hole growth. (abridged), Comment: 28 pages, 24 figures, submitted to AJ
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- 2014
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8. The zCOSMOS Redshift Survey: evolution of the light in bulges and discs since z~0.8
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Tasca, L. A. M., Tresse, L., Fevre, O. Le, Ilbert, O., Lilly, S. J., Zamorani, G., Lopez-Sanjuan, C., Ho, L. C., Bardelli, S., Cattaneo, A., Cucciati, O., Farrah, D., Iovino, A., Koekemoer, A. M., Liu, C. T., Massey, R., Renzini, A., Taniguchi, Y., Welikala, N., Zucca, E., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. P., Mainieri, V., Scodeggio, M., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., de la Torre, S., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Guzzo, L., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Kovavc, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Rich, R. M., Tanaka, M., Vergani, D., Bordoloi, R., Cappi, A., Cimatti, A., Coppa, G., McCracken, H. J., Moresco, M., Pozzetti, L., Sanders, D., and Sheth, K.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We studied the chronology of galactic bulge and disc formation by analysing the relative contributions of these components to the B-band rest-frame luminosity density at different epochs. We present the first estimate of the evolution of the fraction of rest-frame B-band light in galactic bulges and discs since redshift z~0.8. We performed a bulge-to-disc decomposition of HST/ACS images of 3266 galaxies in the zCOSMOS-bright survey with spectroscopic redshifts in the range 0.7 < z < 0.9. We find that the fraction of B-band light in bulges and discs is $(26 \pm 4)%$ and $(74 \pm 4)%$, respectively. When compared with rest-frame B-band measurements of galaxies in the local Universe in the same mass range ($10^{9} M_{\odot}\lessapprox M \lessapprox 10^{11.5} M_{\odot}$), we find that the B-band light in discs decreases by ~30% from z~0.7-0.9 to z~0, while the light from the bulge increases by ~30% over the same period of time. We interpret this evolution as the consequence of star formation and mass assembly processes, as well as morphological transformation, which gradually shift stars formed at half the age of the Universe from star-forming late-type/irregular galaxies toearlier types and ultimately into spheroids., Comment: Letter to the Editor, 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2014
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9. Extreme emission-line galaxies out to z$\sim$1 in zCOSMOS. I. Sample and characterization of global properties
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Amorín, Ricardo, Pérez-Montero, E., Contini, T., Vílchez, J. M., Bolzonella, M., Tasca, L. A. M., Lamareille, F., Zamorani, G., Maier, C., Carollo, C. M., Kneib, J. -P., Fèvre, O. Le, Lilly, S., Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Kovač, K., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Mignoli, V. Le Brun M., Pellò, R., Peng, Y., Presotto, V., Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., and Zucca, E.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a thorough characterization of a large sample of 183 extreme emission-line galaxies (EELGs) at redshift 0.11 < z < 0.93 selected from the 20k zCOSMOS Bright Survey because of their unusually large emission line equivalent widths. We use multiwavelength COSMOS photometry, HST-ACS I-band imaging and optical zCOSMOS spectroscopy to derive the main global properties of EELGs, such as sizes, masses, SFRs, reliable metallicities from both "direct" and "strong-line" methods. The EELGs are compact (R_50 ~ 1.3 kpc), low-mass (log(M*/Msol)~7-10) galaxies forming stars at unusually high specific SFR (log(sSFR/yr) up to ~ -7) compared to main sequence SFGs of the same stellar mass and redshift. At UV wavelengths, the EELGs are luminous and show high surface brightness and include strong Ly$\alpha$ emitters, as revealed by GALEX spectroscopy. We show that zCOSMOS EELGs are high-ionization, low-metallicity systems, with median 12+log(O/H)=8.16, including a handful of extremely metal-deficient galaxies (<10% solar). While ~80% of the EELGs show non-axisymmetric morphologies, including clumpy and tadpole galaxies, we find that ~29% of them show additional low surface-brightness features, which strongly suggest recent or ongoing interactions. As star-forming dwarfs in the local Universe, EELGs are most often found in relative isolation. While only very few EELGs belong to compact groups, almost one third of them are found in spectroscopically confirmed loose pairs or triplets. We conclude that EELGs are galaxies caught in a transient and probably early period of their evolution, where they are efficiently building-up a significant fraction of their present-day stellar mass in an ongoing galaxy-wide starburst. Therefore, the EELGs constitute an ideal benchmark for comparison studies between low- and high-redshift low-mass star-forming galaxies., Comment: Accepted in A&A. Final replacement to match the version in press. It includes a minor change in the title and a new figure
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- 2014
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10. Prospects and challenges of multi-omics data integration in toxicology
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Canzler, Sebastian, Schor, Jana, Busch, Wibke, Schubert, Kristin, Rolle-Kampczyk, Ulrike E., Seitz, Hervé, Kamp, Hennicke, von Bergen, Martin, Buesen, Roland, and Hackermüller, Jörg
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- 2020
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11. The dependence of Galactic outflows on the properties and orientation of zCOSMOS galaxies at z ~ 1
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Bordoloi, R., Lilly, S. J., Hardmeier, E., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Carollo, C. M., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Kovac, K., Knobel, C., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Oesch, P., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Presotto, V., Silverman, J., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Cappi, A., Cimatti, A., Coppa, G., Franzetti, P., Koekemoer, A., Moresco, M., Nair, P., and Pozzetti, L.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an analysis of cool outflowing gas around galaxies, traced by MgII absorption lines in the co-added spectra of a sample of 486 zCOSMOS galaxies at 1 < z < 1.5. These galaxies span a range of stellar masses (9.45< log[M*/Msun]<10.7) and star formation rates (0.14 < log [SFR/Msun/yr] < 2.35). We identify the cool outflowing component in the MgII absorption and find that the equivalent width of the outflowing component increases with stellar mass. The outflow equivalent width also increases steadily with the increasing star formation rate of the galaxies. At similar stellar masses the blue galaxies exhibit a significantly higher outflow equivalent width as compared to red galaxies. The outflow equivalent width shows strong effect with star formation surface density ({\Sigma}SFR) of the sample. For the disk galaxies, the outflow equivalent width is higher for the face-on systems as compared to the edge-on ones, indicating that for the disk galaxies, the outflowing gas is primarily bipolar in geometry. Galaxies typically exhibit outflow velocities ranging from -200 km/s to -300 km/s and on average the face-on galaxies exhibit higher outflow velocity as compared to the edge-on ones. Galaxies with irregular morphologies exhibit outflow equivalent width as well as outflow velocities comparable to face on disk galaxies. These galaxies exhibit minimum mass outflow rates > 5-7 Msun/yr and a mass loading factor ({\eta} = dMout/dt /SFR) comparable to the star formation rates of the galaxies., Comment: 12 pages, 14 figures, ApJ submitted
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- 2013
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12. zCOSMOS 20k: Satellite galaxies are the main drivers of environmental effects in the galaxy population at least to z~0.7
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Kovac, K., Lilly, S. J., Knobel, C., Bschorr, T. J., Peng, Y., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Oesch, P., Pello, R., Montero, E. Perez, Presotto, V., Silverman, J., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Aussel, H., Koekemoer, A. M., Floch, E. Le, Moresco, M., and Pozzetti, L.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We explore the role of environment in the evolution of galaxies over 0.1
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- 2013
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13. Obscured AGN at z~1 from the zCOSMOS-Bright Survey I. Selection and Optical Properties of a [Ne v]-selected sample
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Mignoli, M., Vignali, C., Gilli, R., Comastri, A., Zamorani, G., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Lamareille, F., Nair, P., Pozzetti, L., Lilly, S. J., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Bardelli, S., Caputi, K., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Borgne, J. F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Presotto, V., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Bordoloi, R., Cappi, A., Cimatti, A., Koekemoer, A. M., McCracken, H. J., Moresco, M., and Welikala, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
A sample of 94 narrow line AGN with 0.65
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- 2013
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14. Spot the difference. Impact of different selection criteria on observed properties of passive galaxies in zCOSMOS 20-k sample
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Moresco, M., Pozzetti, L., Cimatti, A., Zamorani, G., Bolzonella, M., Lamareille, F., Mignoli, M., Zucca, E., Lilly, S. J., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Pello', R., Peng, Y., Perez-Montero, E., Presotto, V., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Barnes, L., Bordoloi, R., Cappi, A., Diener, C., Koekemoer, A. M., Floch, E. Le, Lopez-Sanjuan, C., McCracken, H. J., Nair, P., Oesch, P., Scarlata, C., Scoville, N., and Welikala, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the analysis of photometric, spectroscopic, and morphological properties for differently selected samples of passive galaxies up to z=1 extracted from the zCOSMOS-20k spectroscopic survey. This analysis intends to explore the dependence of galaxy properties on the selection criterion adopted, study the degree of contamination due to star-forming outliers, and provide a comparison between different commonly used selection criteria. We extracted from the zCOSMOS-20k catalog six different samples of passive galaxies, based on morphology, optical colors, specific star-formation rate, a best fit to the observed spectral energy distribution, and a criterion that combines morphological, spectroscopic, and photometric information. The morphological sample has the higher percentage of contamination in colors, specific star formation rate and presence of emission lines, while the red & passive ETGs sample is the purest, with properties mostly compatible with no star formation activity; however, it is also the less economic criterion in terms of information used. The best performing among the other criteria are the red SED and the quiescent ones, providing a percentage of contamination only slightly higher than the red & passive ETGs criterion (on average of a factor of ~2) but with absolute values of the properties of contaminants still compatible with a red, passively evolving population. We also provided two revised definitions of early type galaxies based on restframe color-color and color-mass criteria, that better reproduce the observed bimodalities. The analysis of the number densities shows evidences of mass-assembly downsizing, with galaxies at 10.25
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- 2013
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15. Investigating the relationship between AGN activity and stellar mass in zCOSMOS galaxies at 0<z<1 using emission line diagnostic diagrams
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Vitale, M., Mignoli, M., Cimatti, A., Lilly, S. J., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Barnes, L., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Bordoloi, R., Bschorr, T. J., Cappi, A., Caputi, K., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Koekemoer, A. M., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Lopez-Sanjuan, C., Maier, C., McCracken, H. J., Moresco, M., Nair, P., Oesch, P. A., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Pozzetti, L., Presotto, V., Silverman, J., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Welikala, N., and Zucca, E.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate the link between AGN activity, star-formation and stellar mass of the host galaxy at 0
10.2 threshold. Moreover, the stellar populations of AGN hosts are found to be older with respect to star-forming and composites galaxies. This could be due to the the tendency of AGN to reside in massive hosts. The dependence of the AGN classification on the stellar mass is in agreement with what has been already found in previous studies. It is consistent with, together with the evidence of older stellar populations inhabiting the AGN-like galaxies, the downsizing scenario. In particular, our evidence points to an evolutionary scenario where the AGN-feedback is capable of quenching the star formation in the most massive galaxies. Therefore, the AGN-feedback is the best candidate for initiating the passive evolutionary phase of galaxies., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A - Published
- 2013
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16. A dual‐function RNA balances carbon uptake and central metabolism in Vibrio cholerae
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Venkat, Kavyaa, Hoyos, Mona, Haycocks, James RJ, Cassidy, Liam, Engelmann, Beatrice, Rolle‐Kampczyk, Ulrike, von Bergen, Martin, Tholey, Andreas, Grainger, David C, and Papenfort, Kai
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- 2021
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17. Author Correction: Novel diagnostic and therapeutic techniques reveal changed metabolic profiles in recurrent focal segmental glomerulosclerosis
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Müller-Deile, Janina, Sarau, George, Kotb, Ahmed M., Jaremenko, Christian, Rolle-Kampczyk, Ulrike E., Daniel, Christoph, Kalkhof, Stefan, Christiansen, Silke H., and Schiffer, Mario
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- 2021
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18. Gut microbiota link dietary fiber intake and short-chain fatty acid metabolism with eating behavior
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Medawar, Evelyn, Haange, Sven-Bastiaan, Rolle-Kampczyk, Ulrike, Engelmann, Beatrice, Dietrich, Arne, Thieleking, Ronja, Wiegank, Charlotte, Fries, Charlotte, Horstmann, Annette, Villringer, Arno, von Bergen, Martin, Fenske, Wiebke, and Veronica Witte, A.
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- 2021
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19. Novel diagnostic and therapeutic techniques reveal changed metabolic profiles in recurrent focal segmental glomerulosclerosis
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Müller-Deile, Janina, Sarau, George, Kotb, Ahmed M., Jaremenko, Christian, Rolle-Kampczyk, Ulrike E., Daniel, Christoph, Kalkhof, Stefan, Christiansen, Silke H., and Schiffer, Mario
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- 2021
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20. The Colors of Central and Satellite Galaxies in zCOSMOS out to z ~ 0.8 and Implications for Quenching
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Knobel, C., Lilly, S. J., Kovac, K., Peng, Y., Bschorr, T. J., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Montero, E. Perez, Presotto, V., Silverman, J., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Barnes, L., Bordoloi, R., Cappi, A., Cimatti, A., Coppa, G., Koekemoer, A. M., Lopez-Sanjuan, C., McCracken, H. J., Moresco, M., Nair, P., Pozzetti, L., and Welikala, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We examine the red fraction of central and satellite galaxies in the large zCOSMOS group catalog out to z ~ 0.8 correcting for both the incompleteness in stellar mass and for the less than perfect purities of the central and satellite samples. We show that, at all masses and at all redshifts, the fraction of satellite galaxies that have been quenched, i.e., are red, is systematically higher than that of centrals, as seen locally in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The satellite quenching efficiency, which is the probability that a satellite is quenched because it is a satellite rather than a central, is, as locally, independent of stellar mass. Furthermore, the average value is about 0.5, which is also very similar to that seen in the SDSS. We also construct the mass functions of blue and red centrals and satellites and show that these broadly follow the predictions of the Peng et al. analysis of the SDSS groups. Together, these results indicate that the effect of the group environment in quenching satellite galaxies was very similar when the universe was about a half its present age, as it is today., Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, published in ApJ
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- 2012
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21. Proto-groups at 1.8<z<3 in the zCOSMOS-deep sample
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Diener, C., Lilly, S. J., Knobel, C., Zamorani, G., Lemson, G., Kampczyk, P., Scoville, N., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kovač, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Presotto, V., Silverman, J., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Bordoloi, R., Cappi, A., Cimatti, A., Coppa, G., Koekemoer, A. M., López-Sanjuan, C., McCracken, H. J., Moresco, M., Nair, P., Pozzetti, L., and Welikala, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We identify 42 candidate groups lying between 1.8
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- 2012
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22. The cosmic evolution of oxygen and nitrogen abundances in star-forming galaxies over the past 10 Gyrs
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Perez-Montero, E., Contini, T., Lamareille, F., Maier, C., Carollo, C. M., Kneib, J. P., Fevre, O. Le, Lilly, S., Mainieiri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Borgne, J. F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Presotto, V., Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L. A. M., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., and Zucca, E.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The chemical evolution of galaxies on a cosmological timescale is still a matter of debate despite the increasing number of available data provided by spectroscopic surveys of star-forming galaxies at different redshifts. The fundamental relations involving metallicity, such as the mass-metallicity relation (MZR) or the fundamental-metallicity relation, give controversial results about the reality of evolution of the chemical content of galaxies at a given stellar mass. In this work we shed some light on this issue using the completeness reached by the 20k bright sample of the zCOSMOS survey and using for the first time the nitrogen-to-oxygen ratio (N/O) as a tracer of the gas phase chemical evolution of galaxies that is independent of the star formation rate. Emission-line galaxies both in the SDSS and 20k zCOSMOS bright survey were used to study the evolution from the local Universe of the $MZR up to a redshift of 1.32 and the relation between stellar mass and nitrogen-to-oxygen ratio (MNOR) up to a redshift of 0.42 using the N2S2 parameter. All the physical properties derived from stellar continuum and gas emission-lines, including stellar mass, star formation rates, metallicity and N/O, were calculated in a self-consistent way over the full redshift range. We confirm the trend to find lower metallicities in galaxies of a given stellar mass in a younger Universe. This trend is even observed when taking possible selection effects into account that are due to the observed larger median star formation rates for galaxies at higher redshifts. We also find a significant evolution of the MNOR up to z = 0.4. Taking the slope of the O/H vs. N/O relation into account for the secondary-nitrogen production regime, the observed evolution of the MNOR is consistent with the trends found for both the MZR and its equivalent relation using new expressions to reduce its dependence on SFR., Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics. Replaced to match published version and references corrected
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23. Accreting SMBHs in the COSMOS field and the connection to their host galaxies
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Bongiorno, A., Merloni, A., Brusa, M., Magnelli, B., Salvato, M., Mignoli, M., Zamorani, G., Fiore, F., Rosario, D., Mainieri, V., Comastri, A., Vignali, C., Balestra, I., Bardelli, S., Berta, S., Civano, F., Kampczyk, P., Floc'h, E. Le, Lusso, E., Lutz, D., Pozzetti, L., Pozzi, F., Riguccini, L., Shankar, F., and Silverman, J.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Using the wide multi-band photometry available in the COSMOS field we explore the host galaxy properties of a large sample of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) obtained by combining X-ray and optical spectroscopic selections. Based on a careful study of their Spectral Energy Distribution (SED), which has been parametrized using a 2-component (AGN+galaxy) model fit, we derived dust-corrected rest-frame magnitudes, colors, stellar masses and star formation rates (SFRs). We find that AGN hosts span a large range of stellar masses and SFRs. No color-bimodality is seen at any redshift in the AGN hosts, which are found to be mainly massive, red galaxies. Once accounting for the color-mass degeneracy in well defined mass-matched samples, we find a residual marginal enhancement of AGN incidence in redder galaxies with lower specific star formation rates, and we argue that this result might emerge because of our ability to properly account for AGN light contamination and dust extinction. Interestingly, we find that the probability for a galaxy to host a black hole growing at any given "specific accretion rate" (i.e. the ratio of X-ray luminosity to the host stellar mass) is almost independent of the host galaxy mass, while it decreases as a power-law with Lx/M. By analyzing the normalization of such probability distribution, we show how the incidence of AGN increases with redshift as rapidly as (1+z)^4, in close resemblance with the overall evolution of the specific star formation rate of the entire galaxy population. Although AGN activity and star formation in galaxies do appear to have a common triggering mechanism, at least in a statistical sense, within the COSMOS sample we do not find strong evidence of any 'smoking gun' signaling powerful AGN influence on the star-forming properties of their hosts galaxies., Comment: 32 pages, 25 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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24. A group-galaxy cross-correlation function analysis in zCOSMOS
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Knobel, C., Lilly, S. J., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Presotto, V., Silverman, J., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Barnes, L., Bordoloi, R., Cappi, A., Cimatti, A., Coppa, G., Koekemoer, A. M., López-Sanjuan, C., McCracken, H. J., Moresco, M., Nair, P., Pozzetti, L., and Welikala, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a group-galaxy cross-correlation analysis using a group catalog produced from the 16,500 spectra from the optical zCOSMOS galaxy survey. Our aim is to perform a consistency test in the redshift range 0.2 < z < 0.8 between the clustering strength of the groups and mass estimates that are based on the richness of the groups. We measure the linear bias of the groups by means of a group-galaxy cross-correlation analysis and convert it into mass using the bias-mass relation for a given cosmology, checking the systematic errors using realistic group and galaxy mock catalogs. The measured bias for the zCOSMOS groups increases with group richness as expected by the theory of cosmic structure formation and yields masses that are reasonably consistent with the masses estimated from the richness directly, considering the scatter that is obtained from the 24 mock catalogs. An exception are the richest groups at high redshift (estimated to be more massive than 10^13.5 M_sun), for which the measured bias is significantly larger than for any of the 24 mock catalogs (corresponding to a 3-sigma effect), which is attributed to the extremely large structure that is present in the COSMOS field at z ~ 0.7. Our results are in general agreement with previous studies that reported unusually strong clustering in the COSMOS field., Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, published in ApJ
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25. The zCOSMOS 20k Group Catalog
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Knobel, C., Lilly, S. J., Iovino, A., Kovac, K., Bschorr, T. J., Presotto, V., Oesch, P. A., Kampczyk, P., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Silverman, J., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Barnes, L., Bordoloi, R., Cappi, A., Cimatti, A., Coppa, G., Koekemoer, A. M., López-Sanjuan, C., McCracken, H. J., Moresco, M., Nair, P., Pozzetti, L., and Welikala, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an optical group catalog between 0.1 < z < 1 based on 16,500 high-quality spectroscopic redshifts in the completed zCOSMOS-bright survey. The catalog published herein contains 1498 groups in total and 192 groups with more than five observed members. The catalog includes both group properties and the identification of the member galaxies. Based on mock catalogs, the completeness and purity of groups with three and more members should be both about 83% with respect to all groups that should have been detectable within the survey, and more than 75% of the groups should exhibit a one-to-one correspondence to the "real" groups. Particularly at high redshift, there are apparently more galaxies in groups in the COSMOS field than expected from mock catalogs. We detect clear evidence for the growth of cosmic structure over the last seven billion years in the sense that the fraction of galaxies that are found in groups (in volume-limited samples) increases significantly with cosmic time. In the second part of the paper, we develop a method for associating galaxies that only have photo-z to our spectroscopically identified groups. We show that this leads to improved definition of group centers, improved identification of the most massive galaxies in the groups, and improved identification of central and satellite galaxies, where we define the former to be galaxies at the minimum of the gravitational potential wells. Subsamples of centrals and satellites in the groups can be defined with purities up to 80%, while a straight binary classification of all group and non-group galaxies into centrals and satellites achieves purities of 85% and 75%, respectively, for the spectroscopic sample., Comment: 26 pages, 21 figures, published in ApJ (along with machine-readable tables)
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26. Environmental effects in the interaction and merging of galaxies in zCOSMOS survey
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Kampczyk, P., Lilly, S. J., and Collaboration, the zCOSMOS
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The zCOSMOS-bright 10k spectroscopic sample reveals a strong environmental dependence of close kinematic galaxy pair fractions in the redshift range 0.2 < z < 1. The fraction of close pairs is three times higher in the top density quartile than in the lowest one. This environmental variation in pair fractions will translate into merger fractions since merger timescales are shown, based on Millennium simulation catalogs, to be largely independent of environment. While galactic properties of close kinematic pairs (morphologies and star formation rates) may seem to be non-representative of an underlying galaxy population, they can be explained by taking into account well-known effects of environment, and changes caused by interactions. The latter is responsible for an increase of irregular galaxies in pairs by a factor of 50-75%, with a disproportionate increase in the number of irregular-irregular pairs (4-8 times), due to disturbance of about 15% of the disk galaxies in pairs. Another sign of interaction is an observed boost in specific star formation rate (factor 2-4) for the closest pairs. While significant for paired galaxies, this triggered star-formation due to interactions represents only about 5% of the integrated star-formation activity in our volume-limited sample. Although majority of close kinematic pairs are in dense environments, the effects of interactions appear to be strongest in the lower density environments. This may introduce strong biases into observational studies of mergers, especially those based on morphological criteria. Relative excess of post-starburst galaxies observed in paired galaxies (factor \sim2) as well as excess of AGNs (factor of over 2), linked with environmental dependence of the pair fractions could indicate that early phases of interactions and merging are plausible candidates for environmental quenching, observed in the global galaxy populations., Comment: To appear on the Proceedings of the Conference "Galaxy Mergers in an Evolving Universe", held in Hualien, Taiwan, on October 23-28, 2011
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- 2012
27. Comparison of star formation rates from Halpha and infrared luminosities as seen by Herschel
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Domínguez, H., Mignoli, M., Pozzi, F., Calura, F., Cimatti, A., Gruppioni, C., Cepa, J., Sánchez-Portal, M., Zamorani, G., Berta, S., Elbaz, D., LeFloc'h, E., Granato, G. L., Lutz, D., Maiolino, R., Mateucci, F., Nair, P., Nordon, R., Pozzetti, L., Silva, L., Silverman, J., Wuyts, S., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., LeFevrè, O., Lilly, S. J., Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Maier, V. le Brun. C., Magnelli, B., Pellò, R., Peng, Y., Pérez-Montero, E., Riccardelli, E., Riguccini, L., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L. A. M., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., and Zucca, E.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We empirically test the relation between the SFR(LIR) derived from the infrared luminosity, LIR, and the SFR(Ha) derived from the Ha emission line luminosity using simple conversion relations. We use a sample of 474 galaxies at z = 0.06 - 0.46 with both Ha detection (from 20k zCOSMOS survey) and new far-IR Herschel data (100 and 160 {\mu}m). We derive SFR(Ha) from the Ha extinction corrected emission line luminosity. We find a very clear trend between E(B - V) and LIR that allows to estimate extinction values for each galaxy even if the Ha emission line measurement is not reliable. We calculate the LIR by integrating from 8 up to 1000 {\mu}m the SED that is best fitting our data. We compare SFR(Ha) with the SFR(LIR). We find a very good agreement between the two SFR estimates, with a slope of m = 1.01 \pm 0.03 in the SFR(LIR) vs SFR(Ha) diagram, a normalization constant of a = -0.08 \pm 0.03 and a dispersion of sigma = 0.28 dex.We study the effect of some intrinsic properties of the galaxies in the SFR(LIR)-SFR(Ha) relation, such as the redshift, the mass, the SSFR or the metallicity. The metallicity is the parameter that affects most the SFR comparison. The mean ratio of the two SFR estimators log[SFR(LIR)/SFR(Ha)] varies by approx. 0.6 dex from metal-poor to metal-rich galaxies (8.1 < log(O/H) + 12 < 9.2). This effect is consistent with the prediction of a theoretical model for the dust evolution in spiral galaxies. Considering different morphological types, we find a very good agreement between the two SFR indicators for the Sa, Sb and Sc morphologically classified galaxies, both in slope and normalization. For the Sd, irregular sample (Sd/Irr), the formal best-fit slope becomes much steeper (m = 1.62 \pm 0.43), but it is still consistent with 1 at the 1.5 sigma level, because of the reduced statistics of this sub-sample., Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2012
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28. The COSMOS Density Field: A Reconstruction Using Both Weak Lensing and Galaxy Distributions
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Amara, A., Lilly, S., Kovac, K., Rhodes, J., Massey, R., Zamorani, G., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Presotto, V., Silverman, J., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Barnes, L., Bordoloi, R., Cappi, A., Cimatti, A., Coppa, G., Koekoemoer, A., Lopez-Sanjuan, C., McCracken, H. J., Moresco, M., Nair, P., Pozzetti, L., and Welikala, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The COSMOS field has been the subject of a wide range of observations, with a number of studies focusing on reconstructing the 3D dark matter density field. Typically, these studies have focused on one given method or tracer. In this paper, we reconstruct the distribution of mass in the COSMOS field out to a redshift z=1 by combining Hubble Space Telescope weak lensing measurements with zCOSMOS spectroscopic measurements of galaxy clustering. The distribution of galaxies traces the distribution of mass with high resolution (particularly in redshift, which is not possible with lensing), and the lensing data empirically calibrates the mass normalisation (bypassing the need for theoretical models). Two steps are needed to convert a galaxy survey into a density field. The first step is to create a smooth field from the galaxy positions, which is a point field. We investigate four possible methods for this: (i) Gaussian smoothing, (ii) convolution with truncated isothermal sphere, (iii) fifth nearest neighbour smoothing and (iv) a muliti-scale entropy method. The second step is to rescale this density field using a bias prescription. We calculate the optimal bias scaling for each method by comparing predictions from the smoothed density field with the measured weak lensing data, on a galaxy-by-galaxy basis. In general, we find scale-independent bias for all the smoothing schemes, to a precision of 10%. For the nearest neighbour smoothing case, we find the bias to be 2.51\pm 0.25. We also find evidence for a strongly evolving bias, increasing by a factor of ~3.5 between redshifts 0
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29. The dominant role of mergers in the size evolution of massive early-type galaxies since z ~ 1
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López-Sanjuan, C., Fèvre, O. Le, Ilbert, O., Tasca, L. A. M., Bridge, C., Cucciati, O., Kampczyk, P., Pozzetti, L., Xu, C. K., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Lilly, S. J., Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Sanders, D., Scodeggio, M., Scoville, N. Z., Taniguchi, Y., Zamorani, G., Aussel, H., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Capak, P., Caputi, K., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Knobel, C., Kovač, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Floc'h, E. Le, Maier, C., McCracken, H. J., Mignoli, M., Pelló, R., Peng, Y., Pérez-Montero, E., Presotto, V., Ricciardelli, E., Salvato, M., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Barnes, L., Bordoloi, R., Cappi, A., Cimatti, A., Coppa, G., Koekemoer, A., Liu, C. T., Moresco, M., Nair, P., Oesch, P., Schawinski, K., and Welikala, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
In this paper we measure the merger fraction and rate, both minor and major, of massive early-type galaxies (M_star >= 10^11 M_Sun) in the COSMOS field, and study their role in mass and size evolution. We use the 30-band photometric catalogue in COSMOS, complemented with the spectroscopy of the zCOSMOS survey, to define close pairs with a separation 10h^-1 kpc <= r_p <= 30h-1 kpc and a relative velocity Delta v <= 500 km s^-1. We measure both major (stellar mass ratio mu = M_star,2/M_star,1 >= 1/4) and minor (1/10 <= mu < 1/4) merger fractions of massive galaxies, and study their dependence on redshift and on morphology. The merger fraction and rate of massive galaxies evolves as a power-law (1+z)^n, with major mergers increasing with redshift, n_MM = 1.4, and minor mergers showing little evolution, n_mm ~ 0. When split by their morphology, the minor merger fraction for early types is higher by a factor of three than that for spirals, and both are nearly constant with redshift. Our results show that massive early-type galaxies have undergone 0.89 mergers (0.43 major and 0.46 minor) since z ~ 1, leading to a mass growth of ~30%. We find that mu >= 1/10 mergers can explain ~55% of the observed size evolution of these galaxies since z ~ 1. Another ~20% is due to the progenitor bias (younger galaxies are more extended) and we estimate that very minor mergers (mu < 1/10) could contribute with an extra ~20%. The remaining ~5% should come from other processes (e.g., adiabatic expansion or observational effects). This picture also reproduces the mass growth and velocity dispersion evolution of these galaxies. We conclude from these results that merging is the main contributor to the size evolution of massive ETGs at z <= 1, accounting for ~50-75% of that evolution in the last 8 Gyr. Nearly half of the evolution due to mergers is related to minor (mu < 1/4) events., Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics, in press. 18 pages, 12 figures, 4 tables
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30. Improved constraints on the expansion rate of the Universe up to z~1.1 from the spectroscopic evolution of cosmic chronometers
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Moresco, M., Cimatti, A., Jimenez, Raul, Pozzetti, L., Zamorani, G., Bolzonella, M., Dunlop, J., Lamareille, F., Mignoli, M., Pearce, H., Rosati, P., Stern, D., Verde, L., Zucca, E., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Lilly, S. J., Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Balestra, I., Gobat, R., McLure, R., Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Pelló, R., Peng, Y., Perez-Montero, E., Presotto, V., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L. A. M., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Almaini, O., Barnes, L., Bordoloi, R., Bradshaw, E., Cappi, A., Chuter, R., Cirasuolo, M., Coppa, G., Diener, C., Foucaud, S., Hartley, W., Kamionkowski, M., Koekemoer, A. M., López-Sanjuan, C., McCracken, H. J., Nair, P., Oesch, P., Stanford, A., and Welikala, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present new improved constraints on the Hubble parameter H(z) in the redshift range 0.15 < z < 1.1, obtained from the differential spectroscopic evolution of early-type galaxies as a function of redshift. We extract a large sample of early-type galaxies (\sim11000) from several spectroscopic surveys, spanning almost 8 billion years of cosmic lookback time (0.15 < z < 1.42). We select the most massive, red elliptical galaxies, passively evolving and without signature of ongoing star formation. Those galaxies can be used as standard cosmic chronometers, as firstly proposed by Jimenez & Loeb (2002), whose differential age evolution as a function of cosmic time directly probes H(z). We analyze the 4000 {\AA} break (D4000) as a function of redshift, use stellar population synthesis models to theoretically calibrate the dependence of the differential age evolution on the differential D4000, and estimate the Hubble parameter taking into account both statistical and systematical errors. We provide 8 new measurements of H(z) (see Tab. 4), and determine its change in H(z) to a precision of 5-12% mapping homogeneously the redshift range up to z \sim 1.1; for the first time, we place a constraint on H(z) at z \neq 0 with a precision comparable with the one achieved for the Hubble constant (about 5-6% at z \sim 0.2), and covered a redshift range (0.5 < z < 0.8) which is crucial to distinguish many different quintessence cosmologies. These measurements have been tested to best match a \Lambda CDM model, clearly providing a statistically robust indication that the Universe is undergoing an accelerated expansion. This method shows the potentiality to open a new avenue in constrain a variety of alternative cosmologies, especially when future surveys (e.g. Euclid) will open the possibility to extend it up to z \sim 2., Comment: 34 pages, 15 figures, 6 tables, published in JCAP. It is a companion to Moresco et al. (2012b, http://arxiv.org/abs/1201.6658) and Jimenez et al. (2012, http://arxiv.org/abs/1201.3608). The H(z) data can be downloaded at http://www.physics-astronomy.unibo.it/en/research/areas/astrophysics/cosmology-with-cosmic-chronometers
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31. A journey from the outskirts to the cores of groups I: Color- and mass-segregation in 20K-zCOSMOS groups
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Presotto, V., Iovino, A., Scodeggio, M., Cucciati, O., Knobel, C., Bolzonella, M., Oesch, P., Finoguenov, A., Tanaka, M., Kovač, K., Peng, Y., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Pozzetti, L., Kampczyk, P., López-Sanjuan, C., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Tasca, L. A. M., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fèvre, O. Le, Lilly, S., Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pellò, R., Perez-Montero, E., Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J. D., Tresse, L., Barnes, L., Bordoloi, R., Cappi, A., Cimatti, A., Coppa, G., Koekemoer, A. M., McCracken, H. J., Moresco, M., Nair, P., and Welikala, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Using the group catalog obtained from zCOSMOS spectroscopic data and the complementary photometric data from the COSMOS survey, we explore segregation effects occurring in groups of galaxies at intermediate/high redshifts. We built two composite groups at intermediate (0.2 <= z <= 0.45) and high (0.45 < z <= 0.8) redshifts, and we divided the corresponding composite group galaxies into three samples according to their distance from the group center. We explored how galaxy stellar masses and colors - working in narrow bins of stellar masses - vary as a function of the galaxy distance from the group center. We found that the most massive galaxies in our sample (Log(M_gal/M_sun) >= 10.6) do not display any strong group-centric dependence of the fractions of red/blue objects. For galaxies of lower masses (9.8 <= Log(M_gal/M_sun) <= 10.6) there is a radial dependence in the changing mix of red and blue galaxies. This dependence is most evident in poor groups, whereas richer groups do not display any obvious trend of the blue fraction. Interestingly, mass segregation shows the opposite behavior: it is visible only in rich groups, while poorer groups have a a constant mix of galaxy stellar masses as a function of radius. We suggest a simple scenario where color- and mass-segregation originate from different physical processes. While dynamical friction is the obvious cause for establishing mass segregation, both starvation and galaxy-galaxy collisions are plausible mechanisms to quench star formation in groups at a faster rate than in the field. In poorer groups the environmental effects are caught in action superimposed to secular galaxy evolution. Their member galaxies display increasing blue fractions when moving from the group center to more external regions, presumably reflecting the recent accretion history of these groups., Comment: Accepted for publication on A&A on 22/12/2011, 19 pages, 11 figures
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- 2012
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32. Environmental effects in the interaction and merging of galaxies in zCOSMOS
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Kampczyk, P., Lilly, S. J., de Ravel, L., Fèvre, O. Le, Bolzonella, M., Carollo, C. M., Diener, C., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Maier, C., Renzini, A., Sargent, M. T., Vergani, D., Abbas, U., Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Bordoloi, R., Caputi, K., Contini, T., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kneib, J. -P., Koekemoer, A. M., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Leauthaud, A., Mainieri, V., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Ricciardelli, E., Scodeggio, M., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Zamorani, G., Zucca, E., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Fumana, M., Guzzo, L., Kartaltepe, J., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Oesch, P., Porciani, C., Pozzetti, L., and Scaramella, R.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
(Abridged) We analyze the environments and galactic properties (morphologies and star-formation histories) of a sample of 153 close kinematic pairs in the redshift range 0.2 < z < 1 identified in the zCOSMOS-bright 10k spectroscopic sample of galaxies. Correcting for projection effects, the fraction of close kinematic pairs is three times higher in the top density quartile than in the lowest one. This translates to a three times higher merger rate because the merger timescales are shown, from mock catalogues based on the Millennium simulation, to be largely independent of environment once the same corrections for projection is applied. We then examine the morphologies and stellar populations of galaxies in the pairs, comparing them to control samples that are carefully matched in environment so as to remove as much as possible the well-known effects of environment on the properties of the parent population of galaxies. Once the environment is properly taken into account in this way, we find that the early-late morphology mix is the same as for the parent population, but that the fraction of irregular galaxies is boosted by 50-75%, with a disproportionate increase in the number of irregular-irregular pairs (factor of 4-8 times), due to the disturbance of disk galaxies. Future dry-mergers, involving elliptical galaxies comprise less than 5% of all close kinematic pairs. In the closest pairs, there is a boost in the specific star-formation rates of star-forming galaxies of a factor of 2-4, and there is also evidence for an increased incidence of post star-burst galaxies. Although significant for the galaxies involved, the "excess" star-formation associated with pairs represents only about 5% of the integrated star-formation activity in the parent sample. Although most pair galaxies are in dense environments, the effects of interaction appear to be largest in the lower density environments., Comment: 38 pages, 17 figures, submitted to ApJ
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- 2011
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33. X-ray Groups of Galaxies at 0.5<z<1 in zCOSMOS: Increased AGN Activities in High Redshift Groups
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Tanaka, M., Finoguenov, A., Lilly, S. J., Bolzonella, M., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Iovino, A., Kneib, J. -P., Lamareille, F., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Presotto, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Silverman, J. D., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Lopez-Sanjuan, C., Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Barnes, L., Bordoloi, R., Cappi, A., Cimatti, A., Coppa, G., Koekemoer, A. M., McCracken, H. J., Moresco, M., Nair, P., Oesch, P., Pozzetti, L., and Welikala, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a photometric and spectroscopic study of galaxies at 0.5
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- 2011
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34. The impact of galaxy interactions on AGN activity in zCOSMOS
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Silverman, J. D., Kampczyk, P., Jahnke, K., Andrae, R., Lilly, S., Elvis, M., Civano, F., Mainieri, V., Vignali, C., Zamorani, G., Nair, P., Fevre, O. Le, de Ravel, L., Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Bolzonella, M., Brusa, M., Cappelluti, N., Cappi, A., Caputi, K., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Halliday, C., Hasinger, G., Iovino, A., Knobel, C., koekemoer, A., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Montero, E. Perez, Ricciardelli, E., Peng, Y., Scodeggio, M., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Comastri, A., Finoguenov, A., Fu, H., Gilli, R., Hao, H., Ho, L., and Salvato, M.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Close encounters between galaxies are expected to be a viable mechanism, as predicted by numerical simulations, by which accretion onto supermassive black holes can be initiated. To test this scenario, we construct a sample of 562 galaxies (M*>2.5x10^10 M_sun) in kinematic pairs over the redshift range 0.25 < z < 1.05 that are more likely to be interacting than a well-matched control sample of 2726 galaxies not identified as being in a pair, both from the zCOSMOS 20k spectroscopic catalog. Galaxies that harbor an active galactic nucleus (AGN) are identified on the basis of their X-ray emission (L_x>2x10^42 erg s^-1) detected by Chandra. We find a higher fraction of AGN in galaxies in pairs relative to isolated galaxies of similar stellar mass. Our result is primarily due to an enhancement of AGN activity, by a factor of 1.9 (observed) and 2.6 (intrinsic), for galaxies in pairs of projected separation less than 75 kpc and line-of-sight velocity offset less than 500 km s^-1. This study demonstrates that close kinematic pairs are conducive environments for black hole growth either indicating a causal physical connection or an inherent relation, such as, to enhanced star formation. In the Appendix, we describe a method to estimate the intrinsic fractions of galaxies (either in pairs or the field) hosting an AGN with confidence intervals, and an excess fraction in pairs. We estimate that 17.8_{-7.4}^{+8.4}% of all moderate-luminosity AGN activity takes place within galaxies undergoing early stages of interaction that leaves open the question as to what physical processes are responsible for fueling the remaining ~80% that may include late-stage mergers., Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, Accepted by The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2011
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35. The evolution of quiescent galaxies at high redshift (z > 1.4)
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Sánchez, H. Domínguez, Pozzi, F., Gruppioni, C., Cimatti, A., Ilbert, O., Pozzetti, L., McCracken, H., Capak, P., Floch, E. Le, Salvato, M., Zamorani, G., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. P., Févre, O. Le, Lilly, S. J., Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pelló, R., Peng, Y., Pérez-Montero, E., Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L. A. M., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., and Zucca, E.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We have studied the evolution of high redshift quiescent galaxies over an effective area of ~1.7 deg^2 in the COSMOS field. Galaxies have been divided according to their star-formation activity and the evolution of the different populations has been investigated in detail. We have studied an IRAC (mag_3.6 < 22.0) selected sample of ~18000 galaxies at z > 1.4 with multi-wavelength coverage. We have derived accurate photometric redshifts (sigma=0.06) and other important physical parameters through a SED-fitting procedure. We have divided our sample into actively star-forming, intermediate and quiescent galaxies depending on their specific star formation rate. We have computed the galaxy stellar mass function of the total sample and the different populations at z=1.4-3.0. We have studied the properties of high redshift quiescent galaxies finding that they are old (1-4 Gyr), massive (log(M/M_sun)~10.65), weakly star forming stellar populations with low dust extinction (E(B-V) < 0.15) and small e-folding time scales (tau ~ 0.1-0.3 Gyr). We observe a significant evolution of the quiescent stellar mass function from 2.5 < z < 3.0 to 1.4 < z < 1.6, increasing by ~ 1 dex in this redshift interval. We find that z ~ 1.5 is an epoch of transition of the GSMF. The fraction of star-forming galaxies decreases from 60% to 20% from z ~ 2.5-3.0 to z ~ 1.4-1.6 for log(M/M_sun) > 11, while the quiescent population increases from 10% to 50% at the same redshift and mass intervals. We compare the fraction of quiescent galaxies derived with that predicted by theoretical models and find that the Kitzbichler & White (2007) model is the one that better reproduces the data. Finally, we calculate the stellar mass density of the star-forming and quiescent populations finding that there is already a significant number of quiescent galaxies at z > 2.5 (rho~6.0 MsunMpc^-3)., Comment: 17 pages, 20 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2011
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36. The radial and azimuthal profiles of Mg II absorption around 0.5 < z < 0.9 zCOSMOS galaxies of different colors, masses and environments
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Bordoloi, R., Lilly, S. J., Knobel, C., Bolzonella, M., Kampczyk, P., Carollo, C. M., Iovino, A., Zucca, E., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Zamorani, G., Balestra, I., Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Garilli, B., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Presotto, V., Scarlata, C., Silverman, J., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Barnes, L., Cappi, A., Cimatti, A., Coppa, G., Diener, C., Franzetti, P., Koekemoer, A., Lopez-Sanjuan, C., McCracken, H. J., Moresco, M., Nair, P., Oesch, P., Pozzetti, L., and Welikala, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We map the radial and azimuthal distribution of Mg II gas within 200 kpc (physical) of 4000 galaxies at redshifts 0.5 < z < 0.9 using co-added spectra of more than 5000 background galaxies at z > 1. We investigate the variation of Mg II rest frame equivalent width as a function of the radial impact parameter for different subsets of foreground galaxies selected in terms of their rest-frame colors and masses. Blue galaxies have a significantly higher average Mg II equivalent width at close galactocentric radii as compared to the red galaxies. Amongst the blue galaxies, there is a correlation between Mg II equivalent width and galactic stellar mass of the host galaxy. We also find that the distribution of Mg II absorption around group galaxies is more extended than that for non-group galaxies, and that groups as a whole have more extended radial profiles than individual galaxies. Interestingly, these effects can be satisfactorily modeled by a simple superposition of the absorption profiles of individual member galaxies, assuming that these are the same as those of non-group galaxies, suggesting that the group environment may not significantly enhance or diminish the Mg II absorption of individual galaxies. We show that there is a strong azimuthal dependence of the Mg II absorption within 50 kpc of inclined disk-dominated galaxies, indicating the presence of a strongly bipolar outflow aligned along the disk rotation axis. There is no significant dependence of Mg II absorption on the apparent inclination angle of disk-dominated galaxies., Comment: 14 pages, Accepted for publication in ApJ; new section on inclination dependence added; Figure 4:- new panel added
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- 2011
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37. Black hole accretion and host galaxies of obscured quasars in XMM-COSMOS
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Mainieri, V., Bongiorno, A., Merloni, A., Aller, M., Carollo, M., Iwasawa, K., Koekemoer, A. M., Mignoli, M., Silverman, J. D., Bolzonella, M., Brusa, M., Comastri, A., Gilli, R., Halliday, C., Ilbert, O., Lusso, E., Salvato, M., Vignali, C., Zamorani, G., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Lilly, S., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Balestra, I., Bardelli, S., Caputi, K., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V . Le, Maier, C., Nair, P., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Pozzetti, L., Ricciardelli, E., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Aussel, H., Capak, P., Cappelluti, N., Elvis, M., Fiore, F., Hasinger, G., Impey, C., Floc'h, E. Le, Scoville, N., Taniguchi, Y., and Trump, J.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We explore the connection between black hole growth at the center of obscured quasars selected from the XMM-COSMOS survey and the physical properties of their host galaxies. We study a bolometric regime (
8 x 10^45 erg/s) where several theoretical models invoke major galaxy mergers as the main fueling channel for black hole accretion. We confirm that obscured quasars mainly reside in massive galaxies (Mstar>10^10 Msun) and that the fraction of galaxies hosting such powerful quasars monotonically increases with the stellar mass. We stress the limitation of the use of rest-frame color-magnitude diagrams as a diagnostic tool for studying galaxy evolution and inferring the influence that AGN activity can have on such a process. We instead use the correlation between star-formation rate and stellar mass found for star-forming galaxies to discuss the physical properties of the hosts. We find that at z ~1, ~62% of Type-2 QSOs hosts are actively forming stars and that their rates are comparable to those measured for normal star-forming galaxies. The fraction of star-forming hosts increases with redshift: ~71% at z ~2, and 100% at z ~3. We also find that the the evolution from z ~1 to z ~3 of the specific star-formation rate of the Type-2 QSO hosts is in excellent agreement with that measured for star-forming galaxies. From the morphological analysis, we conclude that most of the objects are bulge-dominated galaxies, and that only a few of them exhibit signs of recent mergers or disks. Finally, bulge-dominated galaxies tend to host Type-2 QSOs with low Eddington ratios (lambda<0.1), while disk-dominated or merging galaxies have at their centers BHs accreting at high Eddington ratios (lambda > 0.1)., Comment: Accepted by A&A. 20 pages, 16 figures, 2 tables. A version with higher resolution figures and SED fits of Appendix A is available at http://www.eso.org/~vmainier/QSO2/qso2.pdf - Published
- 2011
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38. The zCOSMOS redshift survey : Influence of luminosity, mass and environment on the galaxy merger rate
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de Ravel, L., Kampczyk, P., Fèvre, O. Le, Lilly, S. J., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Lopez-Sanjuan, C., Bolzonella, M., Kovac, K., Abbas, U., Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Contini, T., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., Dunlop, J. S., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kneib, J. -P., Koekemoer, A. M., Knobel, C., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Leauthaud, A., Maier, C., Mainieri, V., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Ricciardelli, E., Scodeggio, M., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Vergani, D., Zamorani, G., Zucca, E., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Carollo, C. M., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Fumana, M., Guzzo, L., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Oesch, P., Porciani, C., Pozzetti, L., Renzini, A., Scaramella, R., and Scarlata, C.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The contribution of major mergers to galaxy mass assembly along cosmic time is an important ingredient to the galaxy evolution scenario. We aim to measure the evolution of the merger rate for both luminosity/mass selected galaxy samples and investigate its dependence with the local environment. We use a sample of 10644 spectroscopically observed galaxies from the zCOSMOS redshift survey to identify pairs of galaxies destined to merge, using only pairs for which the velocity difference and projected separation of both components with a confirmed spectroscopic redshift indicate a high probability of merging. We have identified 263 spectroscopically confirmed pairs with r_p^{max} = 100 h^{-1} kpc. We find that the density of mergers depends on luminosity/mass, being higher for fainter/less massive galaxies, while the number of mergers a galaxy will experience does not depends significantly on its intrinsic luminosity but rather on its stellar mass. We find that the pair fraction and merger rate increase with local galaxy density, a property observed up to redshift z=1. We find that the dependence of the merger rate on the luminosity or mass of galaxies is already present up to redshifts z=1, and that the evolution of the volumetric merger rate of bright (massive) galaxies is relatively flat with redshift with a mean value of 3*10^{-4} (8*10^{-5} respectively) mergers h^3 Mpc^{-3} Gyr^{-1}. The dependence of the merger rate with environment indicates that dense environments favors major merger events as can be expected from the hierarchical scenario. The environment therefore has a direct impact in shapping-up the mass function and its evolution therefore plays an important role on the mass growth of galaxies along cosmic time., Comment: submitted to A&A, 17 pages, 12 figures
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- 2011
39. zCOSMOS 10k-bright spectroscopic sample: exploring mass and environment dependence in early-type galaxies
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Moresco, M., Pozzetti, L., Cimatti, A., Zamorani, G., Mignoli, M., Di Cesare, S., Bolzonella, M., Zucca, E., Lilly, S., Kovac, K., Scodeggio, M., Cassata, P., Tasca, L., Vergani, D., Halliday, C., Carollo, M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tresse, L., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Guzzo, L., Koekemoer, A. M., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Nair, P., Oesch, P., Porciani, C., Scaramella, R., Scarlata, C., and Scoville, N.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the analysis of the U-V rest-frame color distribution and some spectral features as a function of mass and environment for two sample of early-type galaxies up to z=1 extracted from the zCOSMOS spectroscopic survey. The first sample ("red galaxies") is defined with a photometric classification, while the second ("ETGs") by combining morphological, photometric, and spectroscopic properties to obtain a more reliable sample. We find that the color distribution of red galaxies is not strongly dependent on environment for all mass bins, with galaxies in overdense regions redder than galaxies in underdense regions with a difference of 0.027\pm0.008 mag. The dependence on mass is far more significant, with average colors of massive galaxies redder by 0.093\pm0.007 mag than low-mass galaxies throughout the entire redshift range. We study the color-mass relation, finding a mean slope 0.12\pm0.005, while the color-environment relation is flatter, with a slope always smaller than 0.04. The spectral analysis that we perform on our ETGs sample is in good agreement with our photometric results: we find for D4000 a dependence on mass between high and low-mass galaxies, and a much weaker dependence on environment (respectively a difference of of 0.11\pm0.02 and of 0.05\pm0.02); for the equivalent width of H{\delta}we measure a difference of 0.28\pm0.08 {\AA}across the same mass range and no significant dependence on environment.By analyzing the lookback time of early-type galaxies, we support the possibility of a downsizing scenario, in which massive galaxies with a stronger D4000 and an almost constant equivalent width of $H\delta$ formed their mass at higher redshift than lower mass ones. We also conclude that the main driver of galaxy evolution is the galaxy mass, the environment playing a subdominant role., Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication on Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2010
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40. The bimodality of the 10k zCOSMOS-bright galaxies up to z ~ 1: a new statistical and portable classification based on the optical galaxy properties
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Coppa, G., Mignoli, M., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Lilly, S. J., Bolzonella, M., Scodeggio, M., Vergani, D., Nair, P., Pozzetti, L., Cimatti, A., Zucca, E., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Fèvre, O. Le, Renzini, A., Mainieri, V., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Memeo, P., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Kneib, J. -P., Knobel, C., Koekemoer, A. M., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. le, Brun, V. le, Maier, C., Pellò, R., Peng, Y., Perez-Montero, E., Ricciardelli, E., Scarlata, C., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Capak, P., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Fumana, M., Guzzo, L., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., Meneux, B., Oesch, P., Porciani, C., Scaramella, R., and Scoville, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Our goal is to develop a new and reliable statistical method to classify galaxies from large surveys. We probe the reliability of the method by comparing it with a three-dimensional classification cube, using the same set of spectral, photometric and morphological parameters.We applied two different methods of classification to a sample of galaxies extracted from the zCOSMOS redshift survey, in the redshift range 0.5 < z < 1.3. The first method is the combination of three independent classification schemes, while the second method exploits an entirely new approach based on statistical analyses like Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Unsupervised Fuzzy Partition (UFP) clustering method. The PCA+UFP method has been applied also to a lower redshift sample (z < 0.5), exploiting the same set of data but the spectral ones, replaced by the equivalent width of H$\alpha$. The comparison between the two methods shows fairly good agreement on the definition on the two main clusters, the early-type and the late-type galaxies ones. Our PCA-UFP method of classification is robust, flexible and capable of identifying the two main populations of galaxies as well as the intermediate population. The intermediate galaxy population shows many of the properties of the green valley galaxies, and constitutes a more coherent and homogeneous population. The fairly large redshift range of the studied sample allows us to behold the downsizing effect: galaxies with masses of the order of $3\cdot 10^{10}$ Msun mainly are found in transition from the late type to the early type group at $z>0.5$, while galaxies with lower masses - of the order of $10^{10}$ Msun - are in transition at later epochs; galaxies with $M <10^{10}$ Msun did not begin their transition yet, while galaxies with very large masses ($M > 5\cdot 10^{10}$ Msun) mostly completed their transition before $z\sim 1$., Comment: 16 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2010
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41. The zCOSMOS 10k-sample: the role of galaxy stellar mass in the colour-density relation up to z=1
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Cucciati, O., Iovino, A., Kovac, K., Scodeggio, M., Lilly, S. J., Bolzonella, M., Bardelli, S., Vergani, D., Tasca, L. A. M., Zucca, E., Zamorani, G., Pozzetti, L., Knobel, C., Oesch, P., Lamareille, F., Caputi, K., Kampczyk, P., Tresse, L., Maier, C., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fèvre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Bongiorno, A., Coppa, G., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Mignoli, M., Pellò, R., Peng, Y., Perez-Montero, E., Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Koekemoer, A. M., Scoville, N., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Guzzo, L., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Porciani, C., and Scaramella, R.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
[Abridged] With the first 10000 spectra of the flux limited zCOSMOS sample (I<=22.5) we study the evolution of environmental effects on galaxy properties since z=1.0, and disentangle the dependence among galaxy colour, stellar mass and local density (3D local density contrast `delta', computed with the 5th nearest neighbour approach). We confirm that within a luminosity-limited sample (M_B<=-20.5-z) the fraction of red (U-B>=1) galaxies 'f_red' depends on delta at least up to z=1, with red galaxies residing mainly in high densities. This trend weakens for increasing z, and it is mirrored by the behaviour of the fraction of galaxies with D4000A break >=1.4. We also find that up to z=1 the fraction of galaxies with log(EW[OII]) >=1.15 is higher for lower delta, and also this dependence weakens for increasing z. Given the triple dependence among galaxy colours, stellar mass and delta, the colour-delta relation found in the luminosity-selected sample can be due to the broad range of stellar masses. Thus, we fix the stellar mass and we find that in this case the colour-delta relation is flat up to z=1 for galaxies with log(M/M_sun)>=10.7. This means that for these masses the colour-delta relation found in a luminosity-selected sample is the result of the combined colour-mass and mass-delta relations. In contrast, we find that for 0.1<=z<=0.5 and log(M/M_sun)<=10.7 'f_red' depends on delta even at fixed mass. In these mass and z ranges, environment affects directly also galaxy colours. We suggest a scenario in which the colour depends primarily on stellar mass, but for relatively low mass galaxies the local density modulates this dependence. These galaxies formed more recently, in an epoch when evolved structures were already in place, and their longer SFH allowed environment-driven physical processes to operate during longer periods of time., Comment: 19 pages, 12 figures, submitted to A&A, revised version after referee comments
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- 2010
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42. Understanding the shape of the galaxy two-point correlation function at z~1 in the COSMOS field
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de la Torre, S., Guzzo, L., Kovac, K., Porciani, C., Abbas, U., Meneux, B., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Lilly, S. J., Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Sanders, D., Scodeggio, M., Scoville, N., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Koekemoer, A. M., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Perez-Montero, E., Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Welikala, N., Zucca, E., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Fumana, M., Ilbert, O., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Nair, P., Oesch, P., Pozzetti, L., Presotto, V., and Scaramella, R.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate how the shape of the galaxy two-point correlation function as measured in the zCOSMOS survey depends on local environment, quantified in terms of the density contrast on scales of 5 Mpc/h. We show that the flat shape previously observed at redshifts between z=0.6 and z=1 can be explained by this volume being simply 10% over-abundant in high-density environments, with respect to a Universal density probability distribution function. When galaxies corresponding to the top 10% tail of the distribution are excluded, the measured w_p(r_p) steepens and becomes indistinguishable from LCDM predictions on all scales. This is the same effect recognised by Abbas & Sheth in the SDSS data at z~0 and explained as a natural consequence of halo-environment correlations in a hierarchical scenario. Galaxies living in high-density regions trace dark matter halos with typically higher masses, which are more correlated. If the density probability distribution function of the sample is particularly rich in high-density regions because of the variance introduced by its finite size, this produces a distorted two-point correlation function. We argue that this is the dominant effect responsible for the observed "peculiar" clustering in the COSMOS field., Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2010
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43. The XMM-Newton Wide-Field Survey in the COSMOS field (XMM-COSMOS): demography and multiwavelength properties of obscured and unobscured luminous AGN
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Brusa, M., Civano, F., Comastri, A., Miyaji, T., Salvato, M., Zamorani, G., Cappelluti, N., Fiore, F., Hasinger, G., Mainieri, V., Merloni, A., Bongiorno, A., Capak, P., Elvis, M., Gilli, R., Hao, H., Jahnke, K., Koekemoer, A. M., Ilbert, O., Floc'h, E. Le, Lusso, E., Mignoli, M., Schinnerer, E., Silverman, J. D., Treister, E., Trump, J. D., Vignali, C., Zamojski, M., Aldcroft, T., Aussel, H., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Cappi, A., Caputi, K., Contini, T., Finoguenov, A., Fruscione, A., Garilli, B., Impey, C. D., Iovino, A., Iwasawa, K., Kampczyk, P., Kartaltepe, J., Kneib, J. P., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Leborgne, J-F., Brun, V. Le, Fevre, O. Le, Lilly, S. J., Maier, C., McCracken, H. J., Pello, R., Peng, Y-J, Perez-Montero, E., de Ravel, L., Sanders, D., Scodeggio, M., Scoville, N. Z., Tanaka, M., Taniguchi, Y., Tasca, L., de la Torre, S., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., and Zucca, E.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the final optical identifications of the medium-depth (~60 ksec), contiguous (2 deg^2) XMM-Newton survey of the COSMOS field. XMM-Newton has detected ~800 X-ray sources down to limiting fluxes of ~5x10^{-16}, ~3x10^{-15}, and ~7x10^{-15} erg/cm2/s in the 0.5-2 keV, 2-10 keV and 5-10 keV bands, respectively. The work is complemented by an extensive collection of multi-wavelength data from 24 micron to UV, available from the COSMOS survey, for each of the X-ray sources, including spectroscopic redshifts for ~50% of the sample, and high-quality photometric redshifts for the rest. The XMM and multiwavelength flux limits are well matched: 1760 (98%) of the X-ray sources have optical counterparts, 1711 (~95%) have IRAC counterparts, and 1394 (~78%) have MIPS 24micron detections. Thanks to the redshift completeness (almost 100%) we were able to constrain the high-luminosity tail of the X-ray luminosity function confirming that the peak of the number density of logL_X>44.5 AGN is at z~2. Spectroscopically-identified obscured and unobscured AGN, as well as normal and starforming galaxies, present well-defined optical and infrared properties. We devised a robust method to identify a sample of ~150 high redshift (z>1), obscured AGN candidates for which optical spectroscopy is not available. We were able to determine that the fraction of the obscured AGN population at the highest (L_X>10^{44} erg s^{-1}) X-ray luminosity is ~15-30% when selection effects are taken into account, providing an important observational constraint for X-ray background synthesis. We studied in detail the optical spectrum and the overall spectral energy distribution of a prototypical Type 2 QSO, caught in a stage transitioning from being starburst dominated to AGN dominated, which was possible to isolate only thanks to the combination of X-ray and infrared observations., Comment: ApJ, in press. 59 pages, 14 figures, 2 Tables. A few typos corrected and a reference added. Table 2 is also available at http://www.mpe.mpg.de/XMMCosmos/xmm53_release ; a version of the paper in ApJ format (27 pages) is available at http://www.mpe.mpg.de/XMMCosmos/xmm53_release/brusa_xmmcosmos_optid.pdf
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- 2010
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44. Mass and environment as drivers of galaxy evolution in SDSS and zCOSMOS and the origin of the Schechter function
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Peng, Y., Lilly, S. J., Kovac, K., Bolzonella, M., Pozzetti, L., Renzini, A., Zamorani, G., Ilbert, O., Knobel, C., Iovino, A., Maier, C., Cucciati, O., Tasca, L., Carollo, C. M., Silverman, J., Kampczyk, P., de Ravel, L., Sanders, D., Scoville, N., Contini, T., Mainieri, V., Scodeggio, M., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Coppa, G., de la Torre, S., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Mignoli, M., Montero, E. Perez, Pello, R., Ricciardelli, E., Tanaka, M., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Welikala, N., Zucca, E., Oesch, P., Abbas, U., Barnes, L., Bordoloi, R., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Fumana, M., Hasinger, G., Koekemoer, A. M., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Nair, P., Porciani, C., Presotto, V., and Scaramella, R.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We explore the inter-relationships between mass, star-formation rate and environment in the SDSS, zCOSMOS and other surveys. The differential effects of mass and environment are completely separable to z ~ 1, indicating that two distinct processes are operating, "mass-quenching" and "environment-quenching". Environment-quenching, at fixed over-density, evidently does not change with epoch to z ~ 1, suggesting that it occurs as large-scale structure develops in the Universe. The observed constancy of the mass-function shape for star-forming galaxies, demands that the mass-quenching of galaxies around and above M*, must be proportional to their star-formation rates at all z < 2. We postulate that this simple mass-quenching law also holds over a much broader range of stellar mass and epoch. These two simple quenching processes, plus some additional quenching due to merging, then naturally produce (a) a quasi-static Schechter mass function for star-forming galaxies with a value of M* that is set by the proportionality between the star-formation and mass-quenching rates, (b) a double Schechter function for passive galaxies with two components: the dominant one is produced by mass-quenching and has exactly the same M* as the star-forming galaxies but an alpha shallower by +1, while the other is produced by environment effects and has the same M* and alpha as the star-forming galaxies, and is larger in high density environments. Subsequent merging of quenched galaxies modifies these predictions somewhat in the denser environments, slightly increasing M* and making alpha more negative. All of these detailed quantitative relationships between the Schechter parameters are indeed seen in the SDSS, lending strong support to our simple empirically-based model. The model naturally produces for passive galaxies the "anti-hierarchical" run of mean ages and alpha-element abundances with mass., Comment: 66 pages, 19 figures, 1 movie, accepted for publication in ApJ. The movie is also available at http://www.exp-astro.phys.ethz.ch/zCOSMOS/MF_simulation_d1_d4.mov
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- 2010
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45. The Opacity of Galactic Disks at z~0.7
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Sargent, Mark T., Carollo, C. M., Kampczyk, P., Lilly, S. J., Scarlata, C., Capak, P., Ilbert, O., Koekemoer, A. M., Kneib, J. -P., Leauthaud, A., Massey, R., Oesch, P. A., Rhodes, J., Schinnerer, E., Scoville, N., and Taniguchi, Y.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We compare the surface brightness-inclination relation for a sample of COSMOS pure disk galaxies at z~0.7 with an artificially redshifted sample of SDSS disks well matched to the COSMOS sample in terms of rest-frame photometry and morphology, as well as their selection and analysis. The offset between the average surface brightness of face-on and edge-on disks in the redshifted SDSS sample matches that predicted by measurements of the optical depth of galactic disks in the nearby universe. In contrast, large disks at z~0.7 have a virtually flat surface brightness-inclination relation, suggesting that they are more opaque than their local counterparts. This could be explained by either an increased amount of optically thick material in disks at higher redshift, or a different spatial distribution of the dust., Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJL.
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- 2010
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46. Ultraluminous X-ray sources out to z~0.3 in the COSMOS field
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Mainieri, V., Vignali, C., Merloni, A., Civano, F., Puccetti, S., Brusa, M., Gilli, R., Bolzonella, M., Comastri, A., Zamorani, G., Aller, M., Carollo, M., Scarlata, C., Elvis, M., Aldcroft, T. L., Cappelluti, N., Fabbiano, G., Finoguenov, A., Fiore, F., Fruscione, A., Koekemoer, A. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. P., Fevre, O. Le, Lilly, S., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Bardelli, S., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Capak, P., Ilbert, O., Impey, C., Salvato, M., Scoville, N., Taniguchi, Y., and Trump, J.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Using Chandra observations we have identified a sample of seven off-nuclear X-ray sources, in the redshift range z=0.072-0.283, located within optically bright galaxies in the COSMOS Survey. Using the multi-wavelength coverage available in the COSMOS field, we study the properties of the host galaxies of these ULXs. In detail, we derived their star formation rate from H_alpha measurements and their stellar masses using SED fitting techniques with the aim to compute the probability to have an off-nuclear source based on the host galaxy properties. We divide the host galaxies in different morphological classes using the available ACS/HST imaging. We find that our ULXs candidates are located in regions of the SFR versus M$_star$ plane where one or more off-nuclear detectable sources are expected. From a morphological analysis of the ACS imaging and the use of rest-frame colours, we find that our ULXs are hosted both in late and early type galaxies. Finally, we find that the fraction of galaxies hosting a ULX ranges from ~0.5% to ~0.2% going from L[0.5-2 keV]=3 x 10^39 erg s^-1 to L[0.5-2 keV]= 2 x 10^40 erg s^-1., Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2010
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47. The [OIII] emission line luminosity function of optically selected type-2 AGN from zCOSMOS
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Bongiorno, A., Mignoli, M., Zamorani, G., Lamareille, F., Lanzuisi, G., Miyaji, T., Bolzonella, M., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. P., Fevre, O. Le, Lilly, S. J., Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Bardelli, S., Brusa, M., Caputi, K., Civano, F., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Halliday, C., Hasinger, G., Koekemoer, A. M., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Merloni, A., Nair, P., Pello, R., Peng, Y., Montero, E. Perez, Ricciardelli, E., Salvato, M., Silverman, J., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Guzzo, L., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Oesch, P., Porciani, C., Pozzetti, L., and Scaramella, R.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a catalog of 213 type-2 AGN selected from the zCOSMOS survey. The selected sample covers a wide redshift range (0.15
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- 2009
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48. The zCOSMOS-Bright survey: the clustering of early and late galaxy morphological types since z~1
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de la Torre, S., Fèvre, O. Le, Porciani, C., Guzzo, L., Meneux, B., Abbas, U., Tasca, L., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Lilly, S. J., Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Caputi, K., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Halliday, C., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Koekemoer, A. M., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Maier, C., Mignoli, M., Pelló, R., Peng, Y., Perez-Montero, E., Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J., Tanaka, M., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Oesch, P., Pozzetti, L., and Scaramella, R.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We measure the spatial clustering of galaxies as a function of their morphological type at z~0.8, for the first time in a deep redshift survey with full morphological information. This is obtained by combining high-resolution HST imaging and VLT spectroscopy for about 8,500 galaxies to I_AB=22.5 with accurate spectroscopic redshifts from the zCOSMOS-Bright redshift survey. At this epoch, early-type galaxies already show a significantly stronger clustering than late-type galaxies on all probed scales. A comparison to the SDSS at z~0.1, shows that the relative clustering strength between early and late morphological classes tends to increase with cosmic time at small separations, while on large scales it shows no significant evolution since z~0.8. This suggests that most early-type galaxies had already formed in intermediate and dense environments at this epoch. Our results are consistent with a picture in which the relative clustering of different morphological types between z~1 and z~0, reflects the evolving role of environment in the morphological transformation of galaxies, on top of the global mass-driven evolution., Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2009
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49. Properties and environment of Radio Emitting Galaxies in the VLA-zCOSMOS survey
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Bardelli, S., Schinnerer, E., Smolcic, V., Zamorani, G., Zucca, E., Mignoli, M., Halliday, C., Kovac, K., Ciliegi, P., Caputi, K., Koekemoer, A. M., Bongiorno, A., Bondi, M., Bolzonella, M., Vergani, D., Pozzetti, L., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., LeFevre, O., Lilly, S., Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., delaTorre, S., deRavel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Knobel, C., Lamareille, F., LeBorgne, J. -F., LeBrun, V., Maier, C., Pello`, R., Peng, Y., Perez-Montero, E., Ricciardelli, E., Silverman, J. D., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Guzzo, L., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H. J., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Oesch, P., Porciani, C., Scaramella, R., Capak, P., Sanders, D., Scoville, N., Taniguchi, Y., and Jahnke, K.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate the properties and the environment of radio sources with optical counterpart from the combined VLA-COSMOS and zCOSMOS samples. The advantage of this sample is the availability of optical spectroscopic information, high quality redshifts, and accurate density determination. By comparing the star formation rates estimated from the optical spectral energy distribution with those based on the radio luminosity, we divide the radio sources in three families, passive AGN, non-passive AGN and star forming galaxies. These families occupy specific regions of the 8.0-4.5 $\mu$m infrared color--specific star formation plane, from which we extract the corresponding control samples. Only the passive AGN have a significantly different environment distribution from their control sample. The fraction of radio-loud passive AGN increases from ~2% in underdense regions to ~15% for overdensities (1+delta) greater than 10. This trend is also present as a function of richness of the groups hosting the radio sources. Passive AGN in overdensities tend to have higher radio luminosities than those in lower density environments. Since the black hole mass distribution is similar in both environments, we speculate that, for low radio luminosities, the radio emission is controlled (through fuel disponibility or confinement of radio jet by local gas pressure) by the interstellar medium of the host galaxy, while in other cases it is determined by the structure (group or cluster) in which the galaxy resides., Comment: 17 pages, 17 figures, A&A in press
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- 2009
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50. The optical spectra of Spitzer 24 micron galaxies in the COSMOS field: II. Faint infrared sources in the zCOSMOS-bright 10k catalogue
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Caputi, K. I., Lilly, S. J., Aussel, H., Floc'h, E. Le, Sanders, D., Maier, C., Frayer, D., Carollo, C. M., Contini, T., Kneib, J. -P., Fevre, O. Le, Mainieri, V., Renzini, A., Scodeggio, M., Scoville, N., Zamorani, G., Bardelli, S., Bolzonella, M., Bongiorno, A., Coppa, G., Cucciati, O., de la Torre, S., de Ravel, L., Franzetti, P., Garilli, B., Ilbert, O., Iovino, A., Kampczyk, P., Kartaltepe, J., Knobel, C., Kovac, K., Lamareille, F., Borgne, J. -F. Le, Brun, V. Le, Mignoli, M., Peng, Y., Perez-Montero, E., Ricciardelli, E., Salvato, M., Silverman, J., Surace, J., Tanaka, M., Tasca, L., Tresse, L., Vergani, D., Zucca, E., Abbas, U., Bottini, D., Capak, P., Cappi, A., Cassata, P., Cimatti, A., Elvis, M., Hasinger, G., Koekemoer, A. M., Leauthaud, A., Maccagni, D., Marinoni, C., McCracken, H., Memeo, P., Meneux, B., Oesch, P., Pello, R., Porciani, C., Pozzetti, L., Scaramella, R., Scarlata, C., Schiminovich, D., Taniguchi, Y., and Zamojski, M.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We have used the zCOSMOS-bright 10k sample to identify 3244 Spitzer/MIPS 24-micron-selected galaxies with 0.06< S(24um)< 0.50 mJy and I(AB)<22.5, over 1.5 deg^2 of the COSMOS field, and studied different spectral properties, depending on redshift. At 0.2
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- 2009
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