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A WEAK LENSING VIEW OF THE DOWNSIZING OF STAR-FORMING GALAXIES

Authors :
Daigo Tomono
Shintaro Koshida
Margaret J. Geller
Yoshihiko Yamada
Junya Sakurai
Ian P. Dell'Antonio
H. J. Zahid
Yutaka Komiyama
Yousuke Utsumi
Tsuyoshi Terai
Yukiko Kamata
Sogo Mineo
Philip J. Tait
Michitaro Koike
Tomonori Usuda
Satoshi Kawanomoto
Satoshi Miyazaki
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal. 833:156
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2016.

Abstract

We describe a weak lensing view of the downsizing of star forming galaxies based on cross correlating a weak lensing ($\kappa$) map with a predicted map constructed from a redshift survey. Moderately deep and high resolution images with Subaru/Hyper Suprime-Cam covering the 4 deg^2 DLS F2 field provide a $\kappa$ map with 1 arcmin resolution. A dense complete redshift survey of the F2 field including 12,705 galaxies with $R\leq20.6$ is the basis for construction of the predicted map. The zero-lag cross-correlation between the \kappa and predicted maps is significant at the $30\sigma$ level. The width of the cross-correlation peak is comparable with the angular scale of rich cluster at $z\sim0.3$, the median depth of the redshift survey. Slices of the predicted map in $\delta{z} = 0.05$ redshift bins enable exploration of the impact of structure as a function of redshift. The zero-lag normalised cross-correlation has significant local maxima at redshifts coinciding with known massive X-ray clusters. Even in slices where there are no known massive clusters, there is significant signal in the cross-correlation originating from lower mass groups that trace the large-scale of the universe. Spectroscopic $D_n4000$ measurements enable division of the sample into star-forming and quiescent populations. The significance of the cross-correlation with structure containing star-forming galaxies increases with redshift from $5\sigma$ at $z = 0.3$ to $7 \sigma$ at $z = 0.5$. The weak lensing results are consistent with the downsizing view of galaxy evolution established on the basis of many other independent studies.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ

Details

ISSN :
15384357
Volume :
833
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fbfdc96985aac25b9906ec65133d9de1