798 research outputs found
UVOT Measurements of Dust and Star Formation in the SMC and M33
When measuring star formation rates using ultraviolet light, correcting for
dust extinction is a critical step. However, with the variety of dust
extinction curves to choose from, the extinction correction is quite uncertain.
Here, we use Swift/UVOT to measure the extinction curve for star-forming
regions in the SMC and M33. We find that both the slope of the curve and the
strength of the 2175 Angstrom bump vary across both galaxies. In addition, as
part of our modeling, we derive a detailed recent star formation history for
each galaxy.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, conference proceedings from Swift: 10 years of
Discovery, held in Rome (2-5 Dec. 2014
Swift, UVOT and Hot Stars
We present the results of our ongoing investigation into the properties of
hot stars and young stellar populations using the Swift/UVOT telescope. We
present UVOT photometry of open and globular clusters and show that UVOT is
capable of characterizing a variety of rare hot stars, including
Post-Asymptotic Giant Branch and Extreme Horizontal Branch Stars. We also
present very early reults of our survey of stellar populations in the Small
Magellanic Cloud. We find that the SMC has experienced recent bouts of star
formation but constraining the exact star formation history will depend on
finding an effective model of the reddening within the SMC.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, conference proceeding from Swift: 10 years of
Discovery, held in Rome (2-5 Dec. 2014
The Wyoming Survey for H-alpha. I. Initial Results at z ~ 0.16 and 0.24
The Wyoming Survey for H-alpha, or WySH, is a large-area, ground-based,
narrowband imaging survey for H-alpha-emitting galaxies over the latter half of
the age of the Universe. The survey spans several square degrees in a set of
fields of low Galactic cirrus emission. The observing program focuses on
multiple dz~0.02 epochs from z~0.16 to z~0.81 down to a uniform
(continuum+line) luminosity at each epoch of ~10^33 W uncorrected for
extinction (3sigma for a 3" diameter aperture). First results are presented
here for 98+208 galaxies observed over approximately 2 square degrees at
redshifts z~0.16 and 0.24, including preliminary luminosity functions at these
two epochs. These data clearly show an evolution with lookback time in the
volume-averaged cosmic star formation rate. Integrals of Schechter fits to the
extinction-corrected H-alpha luminosity functions indicate star formation rates
per co-moving volume of 0.009 and 0.014 h_70 M_sun/yr/Mpc^3 at z~0.16 and 0.24,
respectively. The formal uncertainties in the Schechter fits, based on this
initial subset of the survey, correspond to uncertainties in the cosmic star
formation rate density at the >~40% level; the tentative uncertainty due to
cosmic variance is 25%, estimated from separately carrying out the analysis on
data from the first two fields with substantial datasets.Comment: To appear in the Astronomical Journa
The Evolution of the Far-UV Luminosity Function and Star Formation Rate Density of the Chandra Deep Field South from z=0.2-1.2 with Swift/UVOT
We use deep Swift UV/Optical Telescope (UVOT) near-ultraviolet (1600A to
4000A) imaging of the Chandra Deep Field South to measure the rest-frame far-UV
(FUV; 1500A) luminosity function (LF) in four redshift bins between z=0.2 and
1.2. Our sample includes 730 galaxies with u < 24.1 mag. We use two methods to
construct and fit the LFs: the traditional V_max method with bootstrap errors
and a maximum likelihood estimator. We observe luminosity evolution such that
M* fades by ~2 magnitudes from z~1 to z~0.3 implying that star formation
activity was substantially higher at z~1 than today. We integrate our LFs to
determine the FUV luminosity densities and star formation rate densities from
z=0.2 to 1.2. We find evolution consistent with an increase proportional to
(1+z)^1.9 out to z~1. Our luminosity densities and star formation rates are
consistent with those found in the literature, but are, on average, a factor of
~2 higher than previous FUV measurements. In addition, we combine our UVOT data
with the MUSYC survey to model the galaxies' ultraviolet-to-infrared spectral
energy distributions and estimate the rest-frame FUV attenuation. We find that
accounting for the attenuation increases the star formation rate densities by
~1 dex across all four redshift bins.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, 6 tables; accepted for publication in Ap
A Large Catalog of Homogeneous Ultra-Violet/Optical GRB Afterglows: Temporal and Spectral Evolution
We present the second Swift Ultra-Violet/Optical Telescope (UVOT) gamma-ray
burst (GRB) afterglow catalog, greatly expanding on the first Swift UVOT GRB
afterglow catalog. The second catalog is constructed from a database containing
over 120,000 independent UVOT observations of 538 GRBs first detected by Swift,
the High Energy Transient Explorer 2 (HETE2), the INTErnational Gamma-Ray
Astrophysics Laboratory (INTEGRAL), the Interplanetary Network (IPN), Fermi,
and Astro-rivelatore Gamma a Immagini Leggero (AGILE). The catalog covers GRBs
discovered from 2005 Jan 17 to 2010 Dec 25. Using photometric information in
three UV bands, three optical bands, and a `white' or open filter, the data are
optimally co-added to maximize the number of detections and normalized to one
band to provide a detailed light curve. The catalog provides positional,
temporal, and photometric information for each burst, as well as Swift Burst
Alert Telescope (BAT) and X-Ray Telescope (XRT) GRB parameters. Temporal slopes
are provided for each UVOT filter. The temporal slope per filter of almost half
the GRBs are fit with a single power-law, but one to three breaks are required
in the remaining bursts. Morphological comparisons with the X-ray reveal that
approximately 75% of the UVOT light curves are similar to one of the four
morphologies identified by Evans et al. (2009). The remaining approximately 25%
have a newly identified morphology. For many bursts, redshift and extinction
corrected UV/optical spectral slopes are also provided at 2000, 20,000, and
200,000 seconds.Comment: 44 pages, 14 figures, to be published in Astrophysical Journal
Supplementa
Emission-Line Galaxies from the HST PEARS Grism Survey I: The South Fields
We present results of a search for emission-line galaxies in the Southern
Fields of the Hubble Space Telescope PEARS (Probing Evolution And Reionization
Spectroscopically) grism survey. The PEARS South Fields consist of five ACS
pointings (including the Hubble Ultra Deep Field) with the G800L grism for a
total of 120 orbits, revealing thousands of faint object spectra in the
GOODS-South region of the sky. Emission-line galaxies (ELGs) are one subset of
objects that are prevalent among the grism spectra. Using a 2-dimensional
detection and extraction procedure, we find 320 emission lines orginating from
226 galaxy "knots'' within 192 individual galaxies. Line identification results
in 118 new grism-spectroscopic redshifts for galaxies in the GOODS-South Field.
We measure emission line fluxes using standard Gaussian fitting techniques. At
the resolution of the grism data, the H-beta and [OIII] doublet are blended.
However, by fitting two Gaussian components to the H-beta and [OIII] features,
we find that many of the PEARS ELGs have high [OIII]/H-beta ratios compared to
other galaxy samples of comparable luminosities. The star-formation rates
(SFRs) of the ELGs are presented, as well as a sample of distinct giant
star-forming regions at z~0.1-0.5 across individual galaxies. We find that the
radial distances of these HII regions in general reside near the galaxies'
optical continuum half-light radii, similar to those of giant HII regions in
local galaxies.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures; Accepted for publication in A
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