The morphology of the Anomalous Microwave Emission in the Planck 2015 data release

Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics IOP Publishing 2015:08 (2015) 029-029

Authors:

Sebastian von Hausegger, Hao Liu

Galaxy merger histories and the role of merging in driving star formation at z > 1

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 452:3 (2015) 2845-2850

Authors:

S Kaviraj, Julien Devriendt, Y Dubois, Adrianne Slyz, C Welker, C Pichon, S Peirani, DL Borgne

Abstract:

We use Horizon-AGN, a hydrodynamical cosmological simulation, to explore the role of mergers in the evolution of massive (M* > 1010 M) galaxies around the epoch of peak cosmic star formation (1 < z < 4). The fraction of massive galaxies in major mergers (mass ratio R < 4: 1) is around 3 per cent, a factor of ∼2.5 lower than minor mergers (4: 1 < R < 10: 1) at these epochs, with no trend with redshift. At z ∼ 1, around a third of massive galaxies have undergone a major merger, while all remaining systems have undergone a minor merger. While almost all major mergers at z > 3 are ‘blue’ (i.e. have significant associated star formation), the proportion of ‘red’ mergers increases rapidly at z < 2, with most merging systems at z ∼ 1.5 producing remnants that are red in rest-frame UV–optical colours. The star formation enhancement during major mergers is mild (∼20–40 per cent) which, together with the low incidence of such events, implies that this process is not a significant driver of early stellar mass growth. Mergers (R < 10: 1) host around a quarter of the total star formation budget in this redshift range, with major mergers hosting around two-thirds of this contribution. Notwithstanding their central importance to the standard Λ cold dark matter paradigm, mergers are minority players in driving star formation at the epochs where the bulk of today's stellar mass was formed.

Intrinsic alignments of galaxies in the Horizon-AGN cosmological hydrodynamical simulation

(2015)

Authors:

Nora Elisa Chisari, Sandrine Codis, Clotilde Laigle, Yohan Dubois, Christophe Pichon, Julien Devriendt, Adrianne Slyz, Lance Miller, Raphael Gavazzi, Karim Benabed

Contamination of early-type galaxy alignments to galaxy lensing-CMB lensing cross-correlation

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 453:1 (2015) 682-689

Authors:

NE Chisari, J Dunkley, L Miller, R Allison

Abstract:

Galaxy shapes are subject to distortions due to the tidal field of the Universe. The crosscorrelation of galaxy lensing with the lensing of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) cannot easily be separated from the cross-correlation of galaxy intrinsic shapes with CMB lensing. Previous work suggested that the intrinsic alignment contamination can be 15 per cent of this cross-spectrum for the CFHT Stripe 82 (CS82) and Atacama Cosmology Telescope surveys. Here we re-examine these estimates using up-to-date observational constraints of intrinsic alignments at a redshift more similar to that of CS82 galaxies. We find an ≈ 10 per cent contamination of the cross-spectrum from red galaxies, with ≈ 3 per cent uncertainty due to uncertainties in the redshift distribution of source galaxies and the modelling of the spectral energy distribution. Blue galaxies are consistent with being unaligned, but could contaminate the cross-spectrum by an additional 9.5 per cent within current 95 per cent confidence levels. While our fiducial estimate of alignment contamination is similar to previous work, our work suggests that the relevance of alignments for CMB lensing-galaxy lensing cross-correlation remains largely unconstrained. Little information is currently available about alignments at z > 1.2. We consider the upper limiting case where all z > 1.2 galaxies are aligned with the same strength as low-redshift luminous red galaxies, finding as much as ≈ 60 per cent contamination.

A CMB GIBBS SAMPLER FOR LOCALIZED SECONDARY ANISOTROPIES

The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series American Astronomical Society 219:1 (2015) 10

Authors:

Philip Bull, Ingunn K Wehus, Hans Kristian Eriksen, Pedro G Ferreira, Unni Fuskeland, Krzysztof M Górski, Jeffrey B Jewell