KROSS: Mapping the Ha emission across the star-formation sequence at z~1

Monthly Notices Of The Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 456:4 (2016) 4533-4541

Authors:

Georgios E Magdis, Martin Bureau, JP Stott, A Tiley, AM Swinbank, R Bower, AJ Bunker, Matthew Jarvis, H Johnson, R Sharples

Abstract:

We present first results from the KMOS Redshift One Spectroscopic Survey (KROSS), an ongoing large kinematical survey of a thousand, z~1 star forming galaxies, with VLT KMOS. Out of the targeted galaxies (~500 so far), we detect and spatially resolve Ha emission in ~90% and 77% of the sample respectively. Based on the integrated Ha flux measurements and the spatially resolved maps we derive a median star formation rate (SFR) of ~7.0 Msun/yr and a median physical size of = 5.1kpc. We combine the inferred SFRs and effective radii measurements to derive the star formation surface densities ({\Sigma}SFR) and present a "resolved" version of the star formation main sequence (MS) that appears to hold at sub-galactic scales, with similar slope and scatter as the one inferred from galaxy integrated properties. Our data also yield a trend between {\Sigma}SFR and {\Delta}(sSFR) (distance from the MS) suggesting that galaxies with higher sSFR are characterised by denser star formation activity. Similarly, we find evidence for an anti-correlation between the gas phase metallicity (Z) and the {\Delta}(sSFR), suggesting a 0.2dex variation in the metal content of galaxies within the MS and significantly lower metallicities for galaxies above it. The origin of the observed trends between {\Sigma}SFR - {\Sigma}(sSFR) and Z - {\Delta}(sSFR) could be driven by an interplay between variations of the gas fraction or the star formation efficiency of the galaxies along and off the MS. To address this, follow-up observations of the our sample that will allow gas mass estimates are necessary.

Footprints of Loop I on cosmic microwave background maps

Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics IOP Publishing 2016:3 (2016) 023

Authors:

Sv Hausegger, H Liu, P Mertsch, Subir Sarkar

Abstract:

Cosmology has made enormous progress through studies of the cosmic microwave background, however the subtle signals being now sought such as B-mode polarisation due to primordial gravitational waves are increasingly hard to disentangle from residual Galactic foregrounds in the derived CMB maps. We revisit our finding that on large angular scales there are traces of the nearby old supernova remnant Loop I in the WMAP 9-year map of the CMB and confirm this with the new SMICA map from the Planck satellite.

Simulated stellar kinematics studies of high-redshift galaxies with the HARMONI Integral Field Spectrograph

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 458:3 (2016) 2405-2422

Authors:

S Kendrew, S Zieleniewski, RCW Houghton, Niranjan Thatte, J Devriendt, M Tecza, F Clarke, K O'Brien, B Häussler

Abstract:

We present a study into the capabilities of integrated and spatially resolved integral field spectroscopy of galaxies at z = 2–4 with the future HARMONI spectrograph for the European Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT) using the simulation pipeline, HSIM. We focus particularly on the instrument's capabilities in stellar absorption line integral field spectroscopy, which will allow us to study the stellar kinematics and stellar population characteristics. Such measurements for star-forming and passive galaxies around the peak star formation era will provide a critical insight into the star formation, quenching and mass assembly history of high-z, and thus present-day galaxies. First, we perform a signal-to-noise study for passive galaxies at a range of stellar masses for z = 2–4, assuming different light profiles; for this population, we estimate that integrated stellar absorption line spectroscopy with HARMONI will be limited to galaxies with M* ≳ 1010.7 M⊙. Secondly, we use HSIM to perform a mock observation of a typical star-forming 1010 M⊙ galaxy at z = 3 generated from the high-resolution cosmological simulation NUTFB. We demonstrate that the input stellar kinematics of the simulated galaxy can be accurately recovered from the integrated spectrum in a 15-h observation, using common analysis tools. Whilst spatially resolved spectroscopy is likely to remain out of reach for this particular galaxy, we estimate HARMONI's performance limits in this regime from our findings. This study demonstrates how instrument simulators such as HSIM can be used to quantify instrument performance and study observational biases on kinematics retrieval; and shows the potential of making observational predictions from cosmological simulation output data.

LOFAR FACET CALIBRATION

The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series American Astronomical Society 223:1 (2016) 2

Authors:

RJ van Weeren, WL Williams, MJ Hardcastle, TW Shimwell, DA Rafferty, J Sabater, G Heald, SS Sridhar, TJ Dijkema, G Brunetti, M Brüggen, F Andrade-Santos, GA Ogrean, HJA Röttgering, WA Dawson, WR Forman, F de Gasperin, C Jones, GK Miley, L Rudnick, CL Sarazin, A Bonafede, PN Best, L Bîrzan, R Cassano, KT Chyży, JH Croston, T Ensslin, C Ferrari, M Hoeft, C Horellou, MJ Jarvis, RP Kraft, M Mevius, HT Intema, SS Murray, E Orrú, R Pizzo, A Simionescu, A Stroe, S van der Tol, GJ White

Redshift and luminosity evolution of the intrinsic alignments of galaxies in Horizon-AGN

(2016)

Authors:

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