1,490 research outputs found
Precision cosmography with stacked voids
We present a purely geometrical method for probing the expansion history of
the Universe from the observation of the shape of stacked voids in
spectroscopic redshift surveys. Our method is an Alcock-Paczynski (AP) test
based on the average sphericity of voids posited on the local isotropy of the
Universe. It works by comparing the temporal extent of cosmic voids along the
line of sight with their angular, spatial extent. We describe the algorithm
that we use to detect and stack voids in redshift shells on the light cone and
test it on mock light cones produced from N-body simulations. We establish a
robust statistical model for estimating the average stretching of voids in
redshift space and quantify the contamination by peculiar velocities. Finally,
assuming that the void statistics that we derive from N-body simulations is
preserved when considering galaxy surveys, we assess the capability of this
approach to constrain dark energy parameters. We report this assessment in
terms of the figure of merit (FoM) of the dark energy task force and in
particular of the proposed EUCLID mission which is particularly suited for this
technique since it is a spectroscopic survey. The FoM due to stacked voids from
the EUCLID wide survey may double that of all other dark energy probes derived
from EUCLID data alone (combined with Planck priors). In particular, voids seem
to outperform Baryon Acoustic Oscillations by an order of magnitude. This
result is consistent with simple estimates based on mode-counting. The AP test
based on stacked voids may be a significant addition to the portfolio of major
dark energy probes and its potentialities must be studied in detail.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures, 2 tables; accepted by ApJ; this version
reflects the accepted version, conclusions unchange
Cataclysmic Variables and a New Class of Faint UV Stars in the Globular Cluster NGC 6397
We present evidence that the globular cluster NGC 6397 contains two distinct
classes of centrally-concentrated UV-bright stars. Color-magnitude diagrams
constructed from U, B, V, and I data obtained with the HST/WFPC2 reveal seven
UV-bright stars fainter than the main-sequence turnoff, three of which had
previously been identified as cataclysmic variables (CVs). Lightcurves of these
stars show the characteristic ``flicker'' of CVs, as well as longer-term
variability. A fourth star is identified as a CV candidate on the basis of its
variability and UV excess. Three additional UV-bright stars show no photometric
variability and have broad-band colors characteristic of B stars. These
non-flickering UV stars are too faint to be extended horizontal branch stars.
We suggest that they could be low-mass helium white dwarfs, formed when the
evolution of a red giant is interrupted, due either to Roche-lobe overflow onto
a binary companion, or to envelope ejection following a common-envelope phase
in a tidal-capture binary. Alternatively, they could be very-low-mass
core-He-burning stars. Both the CVs and the new class of faint UV stars are
strongly concentrated toward the cluster center, to the extent that mass
segregation from 2-body relaxation alone may be unable to explain their
distribution.Comment: 11 pages plus 3 eps figures; LaTeX using aaspp4.sty; to appear in The
Astrophysical Journal Letter
PRIMUS: The Effect of Physical Scale on the Luminosity-Dependence of Galaxy Clustering via Cross-Correlations
We report small-scale clustering measurements from the PRIMUS spectroscopic
redshift survey as a function of color and luminosity. We measure the
real-space cross-correlations between 62,106 primary galaxies with PRIMUS
redshifts and a tracer population of 545,000 photometric galaxies over
redshifts from z=0.2 to z=1. We separately fit a power-law model in redshift
and luminosity to each of three independent color-selected samples of galaxies.
We report clustering amplitudes at fiducial values of z=0.5 and L=1.5 L*. The
clustering of the red galaxies is ~3 times as strong as that of the blue
galaxies and ~1.5 as strong as that of the green galaxies. We also find that
the luminosity dependence of the clustering is strongly dependent on physical
scale, with greater luminosity dependence being found between r=0.0625 Mpc/h
and r=0.25 Mpc/h, compared to the r=0.5 Mpc/h to r=2 Mpc/h range. Moreover,
over a range of two orders of magnitude in luminosity, a single power-law fit
to the luminosity dependence is not sufficient to explain the increase in
clustering at both the bright and faint ends at the smaller scales. We argue
that luminosity-dependent clustering at small scales is a necessary component
of galaxy-halo occupation models for blue, star-forming galaxies as well as for
red, quenched galaxies.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, 5 tables; published in ApJ (revised to match
published version
A MMT/Hectospec Redshift Survey of 24 Micron Sources in the Spitzer First Look Survey
We present a spectroscopic survey using the MMT/Hectospec fiber spectrograph
of 24 micron sources selected with the Spitzer Space Telescope in the Spitzer
First Look Survey. We report 1296 new redshifts for 24 micron sources,
including 599 with f(24micron) > 1 mJy. Combined with 291 additional redshifts
for sources from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), our observing program was
highly efficient and is ~90% complete for i' 1 mJy,
and is 35% complete for i' < 20.5 mag and 0.3 mJy < f(24micron) < 1 mJy. Our
Hectospec survey includes 1078 and 168 objects spectroscopically classified as
galaxies and QSOs, respectively. Combining the Hectospec and SDSS samples, we
find 24 micron-selected galaxies to z < 0.98 and QSOs to z < 3.6, with mean
redshifts of = 0.27 and =1.1. As part of this publication, we
include the redshift catalogs and the reduced spectra; these are also available
online (http://mips.as.arizona.edu/~papovich/fls) and through the NASA/IPAC
Infrared Science Archive (http://irsa.ipac.caltech.edu).Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal, AASTEX format,
23 pages, 7 figures (some in color). This replacement is the accepted
version, and includes minor changes from previous version. Data tables and
spectra available at http://mips.as.arizona.edu/~papovich/fls or at
http://irsa.ipac.caltech.ed
XMM-Newton X-ray and optical observations of the globular clusters M 55 and NGC 3201
We have observed two low concentration Galactic globular clusters with the
X-ray observatory XMM-Newton. We detect 47 faint X-ray sources in the direction
of M 55 and 62 in the field of view of NGC 3201. Using the statistical Log
N-Log S relationship of extragalactic sources derived from XMM-Newton Lockman
Hole observations, to estimate the background source population, we estimate
that very few of the sources (1.5+/-1.0) in the field of view of M 55 actually
belong to the cluster. These sources are located in the centre of the cluster
as we expect if the cluster has undergone mass segregation. NGC 3201 has
approximately 15 related sources, which are centrally located but are not
constrained to lie within the half mass radius. The sources belonging to this
cluster can lie up to 5 core radii from the centre of the cluster which could
imply that this cluster has been perturbed. Using X-ray (and optical, in the
case of M 55) colours, spectral and timing analysis (where possible) and
comparing these observations to previous X-ray observations, we find evidence
for sources in each cluster that could be cataclysmic variables, active
binaries, millisecond pulsars and possible evidence for a quiescent low mass
X-ray binary with a neutron star primary, even though we do not expect any such
objects in either of the clusters, due to their low central concentrations. The
majority of the other sources are background sources, such as AGN.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, accepted to be published in A&
The Mid-IR and X-ray Selected QSO Luminosity Function
We present the J-band luminosity function of 1838 mid-infrared and X-ray
selected AGNs in the redshift range 0<z<5.85. These luminosity functions are
constructed by combining the deep multi-wavelength broad-band observations from
the UV to the mid-IR of the NDWFS Bootes field with the X-ray observations of
the XBootes survey and the spectroscopic observations of the same field by
AGES. Our sample is primarily composed of IRAC-selected AGNs, targeted using
modifications of the Stern et al.(2005) criteria, complemented by MIPS 24
microns and X-ray selected AGNs to alleviate the biases of IRAC mid-IR
selection against z~4.5 quasars and AGNs faint with respect to their hosts.
This sample provides an accurate link between low and high redshift AGN
luminosity functions and does not suffer from the usual incompleteness of
optical samples at z~3. We find that the space density of the brightest quasars
strongly decreases from z=3 to z=0, while the space density of faint quasars is
at least flat, and possibly increasing, over the same redshift range. At z>3 we
observe a decrease in the space density of quasars of all brightnesses. We
model the luminosity function by a double power-law and find that its evolution
cannot be described by either pure luminosity or pure density evolution, but
must be a combination of both. Our best-fit model has bright and faint
power-law indices consistent with the low redshift measurements based on the
2QZ and 2SLAQ surveys and it generally agrees with the number of bright quasars
predicted by other LFs at all redshifts. If we construct the QSO luminosity
function using only the IRAC-selected AGNs, we find that the biases inherent to
this selection method significantly modify the behavior of phi*(z) only for z<1
and have no significant impact upon the characteristic magnitude M*_J(z).Comment: Corrected minor typo in equations (4) and (6). Accepted for
publication in The Astrophysical Journal. 56 pages + 6 tables + 16 figure
Photometric redshift requirements for lens galaxies in galaxy-galaxy lensing analyses
Weak gravitational lensing is a valuable probe of galaxy formation and cosmology. Here we quantify the effects of using photometric redshifts (photo-z) in galaxy-galaxy lensing, for both sources and lenses, both for the immediate goal of using galaxies with photo-z as lenses in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and as a demonstration of methodology for large, upcoming weak lensing surveys that will by necessity be dominated by lens samples with photo-z. We calculate the bias in the lensing mass calibration as well as consequences for absolute magnitude (i.e. k-corrections) and stellar mass estimates for a large sample of SDSS Data Release 8 (DR8) galaxies. The redshifts are obtained with the template-based photo-z code zebra on the SDSS DR8 ugriz photometry. We assemble and characterize the calibration samples (∼9000 spectroscopic redshifts from four surveys) to obtain photometric redshift errors and lensing biases corresponding to our full SDSS DR8 lens and source catalogues. Our tests of the calibration sample also highlight the impact of observing conditions in the imaging survey when the spectroscopic calibration covers a small fraction of its footprint; atypical imaging conditions in calibration fields can lead to incorrect conclusions regarding the photo-z of the full survey. For the SDSS DR8 catalogue, we find σΔz/(1+z)= 0.096 and 0.113 for the lens and source catalogues, with flux limits of r= 21 and 21.8, respectively. The photo-z bias and scatter is a function of photo-z and template types, which we exploit to apply photo-z quality cuts. By using photo-z rather than spectroscopy for lenses, dim blue galaxies and L* galaxies up to z∼ 0.4 can be used as lenses, thus expanding into unexplored areas of parameter space. We also explore the systematic uncertainty in the lensing signal calibration when using source photo-z, and both lens and source photo-z; given the size of existing training samples, we can constrain the lensing signal calibration (and therefore the normalization of the surface mass density) to within 2 and 4 per cent, respectivel
Dark Matter Halo Models of Stellar Mass-Dependent Galaxy Clustering in PRIMUS+DEEP2 at 0.2<z<1.2
We utilize CDM halo occupation models of galaxy clustering to
investigate the evolving stellar mass dependent clustering of galaxies in the
PRIsm MUlti-object Survey (PRIMUS) and DEEP2 Redshift Survey over the past
eight billion years of cosmic time, between . These clustering
measurements provide new constraints on the connections between dark matter
halo properties and galaxy properties in the context of the evolving
large-scale structure of the universe. Using both an analytic model and a set
of mock galaxy catalogs, we find a strong correlation between central galaxy
stellar mass and dark matter halo mass over the range
-, approximately consistent
with previous observations and theoretical predictions. However, the
stellar-to-halo mass relation (SHMR) and the mass scale where star formation
efficiency reaches a maximum appear to evolve more strongly than predicted by
other models, including models based primarily on abundance-matching
constraints. We find that the fraction of satellite galaxies in haloes of a
given mass decreases significantly from to , partly due to
the fact that haloes at fixed mass are rarer at higher redshift and have lower
abundances. We also find that the ratio, a model parameter
that quantifies the critical mass above which haloes host at least one
satellite, decreases from at to at .
Considering the evolution of the subhalo mass function vis-\`{a}-vis satellite
abundances, this trend has implications for relations between satellite
galaxies and halo substructures and for intracluster mass, which we argue has
grown due to stripped and disrupted satellites between and
.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures and 4 tables; Astrophysical Journal, publishe
The AGN Contribution to the Mid-IR Emission of Luminous Infrared Galaxies
We determine the contribution of AGN to the mid-IR emission of luminous
infrared galaxies (LIRGs) at z>0.6 by measuring the mid-IR dust continuum slope
of 20,039 mid-IR sources. The 24 micron sources are selected from a
Spitzer/MIPS survey of the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey Bo\"otes field and have
corresponding 8 micron data from the IRAC Shallow Survey. There is a clear
bimodal distribution in the 24 micron to 8 micron flux ratio. The X-ray
detected sources fall within the peak corresponding to a flat spectrum in
nufnu, implying that it is populated by AGN-dominated LIRGs, whereas the peak
corresponding to a higher 24 micron to 8 micron flux ratio is likely due to
LIRGs whose infrared emission is powered by starbursts. The 24 micron emission
is increasingly dominated by AGN at higher 24 micron flux densities (f_24): the
AGN fraction of the z>0.6 sources increases from ~9% at f_24 ~ 0.35 mJy to
74+/-20% at f_24 ~ 3 mJy in good agreement with model predictions. Deep 24
micron, small area surveys, like GOODS, will be strongly dominated by starburst
galaxies. AGN are responsible for ~ 3-7% of the total 24 micron background.Comment: 6 pages, accepted for publication in Ap
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