888 research outputs found
Design and construction of the IMACS-IFU, a 2000-element integral field unit
The IMACS-IFU is an Integral Field Unit built for the IMACS spectrograph at
the Magellan-I-Telescope at Las Campanas Observatory. It consists of two
rectangular fields of 5 by 7 arcseconds, separated by roughly one arcminute.
With a total number of 2000 spatial elements it is the second largest
fiber-lenslet based IFU worldwide, working in a wavelength range between 400
and 900 nm. Due to the equally sized fields classical background subtraction,
beam switching and shuffling are possible observation techniques. One
particular design challenge was the single, half a metre long curved slit in
combination with a non telecentric output. Besides the construction some
preliminary results are described.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, 1 table. Proceedings for SPIE poster 5492-175 of
SPIE Symposium "Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation", June 2004,
Glasgo
A faint galaxy redshift survey to B=24
Using the multislit LDSS-2 spectrograph on the {\it William Herschel
Telescope} we have completed a redshift survey in the magnitude range which has produced 73 redshifts representing a 73\% complete sample
uniformly-selected from four deep fields at high Galactic latitude. The survey
extends out to and includes the highest redshift galaxy () yet
discovered in a field sample. The median redshift, \zmed=0.46, and form of
the redshift distribution constitute compelling evidence against simple
luminosity evolution as an explanation of the large excess of faint galaxies
(2--4 no-evolution) seen in this magnitude range. Rather we
identify the excess population as blue objects with and \,
luminosities similar to local galaxies indicating a dramatic decrease in
the density of such objects over the last Hubble time, confirming the trends
found in brighter redshift surveys. We also find a marked absence of {\it very}
low redshift galaxies (0.1) at faint limits, severely constraining any
significant steepening of the local field galaxy luminosity function at low
luminosities.Comment: uuencoded compressed postscript. The preprint are also available at
URL http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/preprint/PrePrint.htm
Further redshifts of 1-Jy radio sources
We have firm redshifts for a further 12 faint radio source identifications from the ‘1-Jy’ complete radio-selected sample, two of which are galaxies with redshifts z > 1.5. Another object has a provisional redshift that requires confirmation. Five of these identifications had previously been classified as QSOs on the basis of their optical morphology. Our spectroscopy shows that of these, one is definitely a galaxy and two have characteristics intermediate between those of ‘normal’ radio galaxies and those of ‘normal’ quasars, for instance broad Balmer emission but an extended optical image. Two of the eight identifications previously classified as galaxies have similar ‘intermediate’ properties. The remaining identifications have low-excitation narrow emission-line systems of the type seen in other 1-Jy radio sources by Allington-Smith et al. We confirm that the 1-Jy emission lines are a factor 2 weaker than those of 3C galaxies in the same redshift interval
Spectral Mapping Reconstruction of Extended Sources
Three dimensional spectroscopy of extended sources is typically performed
with dedicated integral field spectrographs. We describe a method of
reconstructing full spectral cubes, with two spatial and one spectral
dimension, from rastered spectral mapping observations employing a single slit
in a traditional slit spectrograph. When the background and image
characteristics are stable, as is often achieved in space, the use of
traditional long slits for integral field spectroscopy can substantially reduce
instrument complexity over dedicated integral field designs, without loss of
mapping efficiency -- particularly compelling when a long slit mode for single
unresolved source followup is separately required. We detail a custom
flux-conserving cube reconstruction algorithm, discuss issues of extended
source flux calibration, and describe CUBISM, a tool which implements these
methods for spectral maps obtained with ther Spitzer Space Telescope's Infrared
Spectrograph.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, accepted by PAS
GMOS Integral Field Spectroscopy of a Merging System with Enhanced Balmer Absorption
In this paper we present the three dimensional dynamics of the galaxy SDSS
J101345.39+011613.66, selected for its unusually strong Balmer absorption lines
(Wo(H-delta)=7.5A). Using the GMOS-South IFU in Nod & Shuffle mode we have
mapped the continuum and optical absorption lines of this z=0.1055 field
galaxy. This galaxy has a disturbed morphology, with a halo of diffuse material
distributed asymmetrically toward the north. Using the [OII] emission line
(Wo([OII])=4.1A) we find that the gas and hot OB stars are offset from the
older stars in the system. The gas also has a spatially extended and elongated
morphology with a velocity gradient of 100+/-20km/s across 6kpc in projection.
Using the strong H-gamma and H-delta absorption lines we find that the A- stars
are widely distributed across the system and are not centrally concentrated
arguing that the A-star population has formed in molecular clouds outside the
nucleus. By cross correlating the spectra from the datacube with an A-star
template we find evidence that the A-star population has a 40km/s shear in the
same direction as the gas. The disturbed morphology, strong colour gradients
and strong H-delta and H-gamma absorption lines in SDSS J101345.39 argue that
this is a recent tidal interaction/merger between a passive elliptical and
star-forming galaxy. Although based on a single object, these results show that
we can spatially resolve and constrain the dynamics of this short lived (yet
important) phase of galaxy formation in which the evolutionary process take
galaxies from star-forming to their quiescent end products.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
A systematic cross-search for radio/infrared counterparts of XMM-Newton sources
We present a catalog of cross-correlated radio, infrared and X-ray sources
using a very restrictive selection criteria with an IDL-based code developed by
us. The significance of the observed coincidences was evaluated through Monte
Carlo simulations of synthetic sources following a well-tested protocol. We
found 3320 coincident radio/X-ray sources with a high statistical significance
characterized by the sum of error-weighted coordinate differences. For 997 of
them, 2MASS counterparts were found. The percentage of chance coincidences is
less than 1%. X-ray hardness ratios of well-known populations of objects were
used to provide a crude representation of their X-ray spectrum and to make a
preliminary diagnosis of the possible nature of unidentified X-ray sources. The
results support the fact that the X-ray sky is largely dominated by Active
Galactic Nuclei at high galactic latitudes (|b| >= 10^\circ). At low galactic
latitudes (|b| <= 10^\circ) most of unidentified X-ray sources (~94%) lie at
|b| <= 2^\circ. This result suggests that most of the unidentified sources
found toward the Milky Way plane are galactic objects. Well-known and
unidentified sources were classified in different tables with their
corresponding radio/infrared and X-ray properties. These tables are intended as
a useful tool for researchers interested in particular identifications.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap&SS. 47 pages, 10 figures. On-line
material: figures and table
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