HerMES: The far-infrared emission from dust-obscured galaxies

Astrophysical Journal 775:1 (2013)

Authors:

JA Calanog, J Wardlow, H Fu, A Cooray, RJ Assef, J Bock, CM Casey, A Conley, D Farrah, E Ibar, J Kartaltepe, G Magdis, L Marchetti, SJ Oliver, I Pérez-Fournon, D Riechers, D Rigopoulou, IG Roseboom, B Schulz, D Scott, M Symeonidis, M Vaccari, M Viero, M Zemcov

Abstract:

Dust-obscured galaxies (DOGs) are an ultraviolet-faint, infrared-bright galaxy population that reside at z ∼ 2 and are believed to be in a phase of dusty star-forming and active galactic nucleus (AGN) activity. We present far-infrared (far-IR) observations of a complete sample of DOGs in the 2 deg2 of the Cosmic Evolution Survey. The 3077 DOGs have 〈z〉 = 1.9 ± 0.3 and are selected from 24 μm and r + observations using a color cut of r +-[24] ≥ 7.5 (AB mag) and S 24 ≥ 100 μJy. Based on the near-IR spectral energy distributions, 47% are bump DOGs (star formation dominated) and 10% are power-law DOGs (AGN-dominated). We use SPIRE far-IR photometry from the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey to calculate the IR luminosity and characteristic dust temperature for the 1572 (51%) DOGs that are detected at 250 μm (≥3σ). For the remaining 1505 (49%) that are undetected, we perform a median stacking analysis to probe fainter luminosities. Herschel-detected and undetected DOGs have average luminosities of (2.8 ± 0.4) × 1012 L⊙ and (0.77 ± 0.08) × 10 12 L⊙, and dust temperatures of (33 ± 7) K and (37 ± 5) K, respectively. The IR luminosity function for DOGs with S 24 ≥ 100 μJy is calculated, using far-IR observations and stacking. DOGs contribute 10%-30% to the total star formation rate (SFR) density of the universe at z = 1.5-2.5, dominated by 250 μm detected and bump DOGs. For comparison, DOGs contribute 30% to the SFR density for all z = 1.5-2.5 galaxies with S 24 ≥ 100 μJy. DOGs have a large scatter about the star formation main sequence and their specific SFRs show that the observed phase of star formation could be responsible for their total observed stellar mass at z ∼ 2. © 2013. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Low Masses and High Redshifts: The Evolution of the Mass-Metallicity Relation

(2013)

Authors:

Alaina Henry, Claudia Scarlata, Alberto Dominguez, Matthew Malkan, Crystal L Martin, Brian Siana, Hakim Atek, Alejandro G Bedregal, James W Colbert, Marc Rafelski, Nathaniel Ross, Harry Teplitz, Andrew J Bunker, Alan Dressler, Nimish Hathi, Daniel Masters, Patrick McCarthy, Amber Straughn

Mid- to far infrared properties of star-forming galaxies and active galactic nuclei

(2013)

Authors:

GE Magdis, D Rigopoulou, G Helou, D Farrah, P Hurley, A Alonso-Herrero, J Bock, D Burgarella, S Chapman, V Charmandaris, A Cooray, YS Dai, D Dale, D Elbaz, A Feltre, E Hatziminaoglou, J-S Huang, G Morrison, S Oliver, M Page, D Scott, Y Shi

Galaxy Masses

(2013)

Authors:

S Courteau, M Cappellari, RS de Jong, AA Dutton, E Emsellem, H Hoekstra, LVE Koopmans, GA Mamon, Claudia Maraston, T Treu, LM Widrow

The Gemini NICI Planet-Finding Campaign: The Frequency of Planets around Young Moving Group Stars

ArXiv 1309.1462 (2013)

Authors:

Beth A Biller, Michael C Liu, Zahed Wahhaj, Eric L Nielsen, Thomas L Hayward, Jared R Males, Andrew Skemer, Laird M Close, Mark Chun, Christ Ftaclas, Fraser Clarke, Niranjan Thatte, Evgenya L Shkolnik, I Neill Reid, Markus Hartung, Alan Boss, Douglas Lin, Silvia HP Alencar, Elisabete de Gouveia Dal Pino, Jane Gregorio-Hetem, Douglas Toomey

Abstract:

We report results of a direct imaging survey for giant planets around 80 members of the Beta Pic, TW Hya, Tucana-Horologium, AB Dor, and Hercules-Lyra moving groups, observed as part of the Gemini NICI Planet-Finding Campaign. For this sample, we obtained median contrasts of \Delta H=13.9 mag at 1" in combined CH4 narrowband ADI+SDI mode and median contrasts of \Delta H=15.1 mag at 2" in H-band ADI mode. We found numerous (>70) candidate companions in our survey images. Some of these candidates were rejected as common-proper motion companions using archival data; we reobserved with NICI all other candidates that lay within 400 AU of the star and were not in dense stellar fields. The vast majority of candidate companions were confirmed as background objects from archival observations and/or dedicated NICI campaign followup. Four co-moving companions of brown dwarf or stellar mass were discovered in this moving group sample: PZ Tel B (36+-6 MJup, 16.4+-1.0 AU, Biller et al. 2010), CD -35 2722B (31+-8 MJup, 67+-4 AU, Wahhaj et al. 2011), HD 12894B (0.46+-0.08 MSun, 15.7+-1.0 AU), and BD+07 1919C (0.20+-0.03 MSun, 12.5+-1.4 AU). From a Bayesian analysis of the achieved H band ADI and ASDI contrasts, using power-law models of planet distributions and hot-start evolutionary models, we restrict the frequency of 1--20 MJup companions at semi-major axes from 10--150 AU to <18% at a 95.4% confidence level using DUSTY models and to <6% at a 95.4% using COND models.