HerMES: The SPIRE confusion limit

Astronomy and Astrophysics 518:8 (2010)

Authors:

HT Nguyen, B Schulz, L Levenson, A Amblard, V Arumugam, H Aussel, T Babbedge, A Blain, J Bock, A Boselli, V Buat, N Castro-Rodriguez, A Cava, P Chanial, E Chapin, DL Clements, A Conley, L Conversi, A Cooray, CD Dowell, E Dwek, S Eales, D Elbaz, M Fox, A Franceschini, W Gear, J Glenn, M Griffin, M Halpern, E Hatziminaoglou, E Ibar, K Isaak, RJ Ivison, G Lagache, N Lu, S Madden, B Maffei, G Mainetti, L Marchetti, G Marsden, J Marshall, B O'Halloran, SJ Oliver, A Omont, MJ Page, P Panuzzo, A Papageorgiou, CP Pearson, I Perez Fournon, M Pohlen, N Rangwala, D Rigopoulou, D Rizzo, IG Roseboom, M Rowan-Robinson, D Scott, N Seymour, DL Shupe, AJ Smith, JA Stevens, M Symeonidis, M Trichas, KE Tugwell, M Vaccari, I Valtchanov, L Vigroux, L Wang, R Ward, D Wiebe, G Wright, CK Xu, M Zemcov

Abstract:

We report on the sensitivity of SPIRE photometers on the Herschel Space Observatory. Specifically, we measure the confusion noise from observations taken during the science demonstration phase of the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey. Confusion noise is defined to be the spatial variation of the sky intensity in the limit of infinite integration time, and is found to be consistent among the different fields in our survey at the level of 5.8, 6.3 and 6.8 mJy/beam at 250, 350 and 500 μm, respectively. These results, together with the measured instrument noise, may be used to estimate the integration time required for confusion limited maps, and provide a noise estimate for maps obtained by SPIRE. © 2010 ESO.

Herschel reveals a Tdust-unbiased selection of z~ 2 ultraluminous infrared galaxies

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 409:1 (2010) 22-28

Authors:

GE Magdis, D Elbaz, HS Hwang, A Amblard, V Arumugam, H Aussel, A Blain, J Bock, A Boselli, V Buat, N Castro-Rodríguez, A Cava, P Chanial, DL Clements, A Conley, L Conversi, A Cooray, CD Dowell, E Dwek, S Eales, D Farrah, A Franceschini, J Glenn, M Griffin, M Halpern, E Hatziminaoglou, J Huang, E Ibar, K Isaak, E Le Floc'h, G Lagache, L Levenson, CJ Lonsdale, N Lu, S Madden, B Maffei, G Mainetti, L Marchetti, GE Morrison, HT Nguyen, B O'Halloran, SJ Oliver, A Omont, FN Owen, MJ Page, M Pannella, P Panuzzo, A Papageorgiou, CP Pearson, I Pérez-Fournon, M Pohlen, D Rigopoulou, D Rizzo, IG Roseboom, M Rowan-Robinson, B Schulz, D Scott, N Seymour, DL Shupe, AJ Smith, JA Stevens, V Strazzullo, M Symeonidis, M Trichas, KE Tugwell, M Vaccari, I Valtchanov, L Vigroux, L Wang, G Wright, CK Xu, M Zemcov

Abstract:

Using Herschel Photodetector Array Camera (PACS) and Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (SPIRE) observations of Lockman Hole-North and Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey-North (GOODS-N) as part of the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES) project, we explore the far-infrared (IR) properties of a sample of mid-IR-selected starburst-dominated ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) at z~ 2. The selection of the sample is based on the detection of the stellar bump that appears in the spectral energy distribution of star-forming galaxies at 1.6 μm. We derive robust estimates of infrared luminosities (LIR) and dust temperatures (Td) of the population and find that while the luminosities in our sample span less than an order of magnitude (12.24 ≤ log(LIR/L·) ≤ 12.94), they cover a wide range of dust temperatures (25 ≤Td≤ 62 K). Galaxies in our sample range from those that are as cold as high-z submillimetre galaxies (SMGs) to those that are as warm as optically faint radio galaxies (OFRGs) and local ULIRGs. Nevertheless, our sample has median Td= 42.3 K, filling the gap between SMGs and OFRGs, bridging the two populations. We demonstrate that a significant fraction of our sample would be missed from ground-based (sub)mm surveys (850-1200 μm), showing that the latter introduce a bias towards the detection of colder sources. We conclude that Herschel observations confirm the existence of high-z ULIRGs warmer than SMGs, show that the mid-IR selection of high-z ULIRGs is not Td dependent, reveal a large dispersion in Td of high-z ULIRGs and provide the means to characterize the bulk of the ULIRG population, free from selection biases introduced by ground-based (sub)mm surveys. © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2010 RAS.

Herschel-ATLAS: Far-infrared properties of radio-selected galaxies

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 409:1 (2010) 122-131

Authors:

MJ Hardcastle, JS Virdee, MJ Jarvis, DG Bonfield, L Dunne, S Rawlings, JA Stevens, NM Christopher, I Heywood, T Mauch, D Rigopoulou, A Verma, IK Baldry, SP Bamford, S Buttiglione, A Cava, DL Clements, A Cooray, SM Croom, A Dariush, G De Zotti, S Eales, J Fritz, DT Hill, D Hughes, R Hopwood, E Ibar, RJ Ivison, DH Jones, J Loveday, SJ Maddox, MJ Michałowski, M Negrello, P Norberg, M Pohlen, M Prescott, EE Rigby, ASG Robotham, G Rodighiero, D Scott, R Sharp, DJB Smith, P Temi, E Van Kampen

Abstract:

We use the Herschel-Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey (ATLAS) science demonstration data to investigate the star formation properties of radio-selected galaxies in the GAMA-9h field as a function of radio luminosity and redshift. Radio selection at the lowest radio luminosities, as expected, selects mostly starburst galaxies. At higher radio luminosities, where the population is dominated by active galactic nuclei (AGN), we find that some individual objects are associated with high far-infrared luminosities. However, the far-infrared properties of the radio-loud population are statistically indistinguishable from those of a comparison population of radio-quiet galaxies matched in redshift and K-band absolute magnitude. There is thus no evidence that the host galaxies of these largely low-luminosity (Fanaroff-Riley class I), and presumably low-excitation, AGN, as a population, have particularly unusual star formation histories. Models in which the AGN activity in higher luminosity, high-excitation radio galaxies is triggered by major mergers would predict a luminosity-dependent effect that is not seen in our data (which only span a limited range in radio luminosity) but which may well be detectable with the full Herschel-ATLAS data set. © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2010 RAS.

Keck spectroscopy of faint 3 < z < 7 Lyman break galaxies - I. New constraints on cosmic reionization from the luminosity and redshift-dependent fraction of Lyman α emission

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 408:3 (2010) 1628-1648

Authors:

DP Stark, RS Ellis, K Chiu, M Ouchi, A Bunker

Abstract:

We present the first results of a new Keck spectroscopic survey of UV faint Lyman break galaxies in the redshift range 3 < z < 7. Combined with earlier Keck and published European Southern Observatory (ESO) VLT data, our spectroscopic sample contains more than 600 dropouts offering new insight into the nature of sub-L* sources typical of those likely to dominate the cosmic reionization process. In this first paper, in a series discussing these observations, we characterize the fraction of strong Lyα emitters within the continuum-selected dropout population. By quantifying how the 'Lyα fraction', xLyα, varies with redshift, we seek to constrain changes in Lyα transmission associated with reionization. In order to distinguish the effects of reionization from other factors which affect the Lyα fraction [e.g. dust, interstellar medium (ISM) kinematics], we study the luminosity and redshift-dependence of the Lyα fraction over 3 ≲z≲ 6, when the intergalactic medium (IGM) is known to be ionized. These results reveal that low-luminosity galaxies show strong Lyα emission much more frequently (xLyα= 0.47 ± 0.16 at MUV=-19) than luminous systems (xLyα= 0.08 ± 0.02 at MUV=-21), and that at fixed luminosity, the prevalence of strong Lyman α emission increases moderately with redshift over 3 < z < 6 (d xLyα/d z= 0.05 ± 0.03). Based on the bluer mean UV slopes of the strong Lyα emitting galaxies in our data set (〈Β〉Lyα-〈Β〉noLyα=-0.33 ± 0.09 at MUV=-20.5) we argue that the Lyα fraction trends are governed by redshift and luminosity-dependent variations in the dust obscuration, with likely additional contributions from trends in the kinematics and covering fraction of neutral hydrogen. Using the limited infrared spectroscopy of candidate z{reversed tilde} 7 galaxies, we find a tentative decrease in the Lyα fraction by a factor of >1.9 with respect to the predicted z{reversed tilde} 7 value, a result which, if confirmed with future surveys, would suggest an increase in the neutral fraction by this epoch. Given the abundant supply of z and Y drops now available from deep Hubble WFC3/IR surveys, we show it will soon be possible to significantly improve estimates of the Lyα fraction using optical and near-infrared multi-object spectrographs, thereby extending the study conducted in this paper to 7 ≲z≲ 8. © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2010 RAS.

LOFAR and the low frequency universe. Probing the formation and evolution of massive galaxies, AGN and clusters

Proceedings of Science 112 (2010)

Authors:

H Röttgering, RJ Van Weeren, G Miley, I Snellen, D Rafferty, S Van Der Tol, L Birzan, A Shulevski, M Haverkorn, G Heald, J McKean, R Morganti, R Pizzo, G Van Diepen, M Wise, JE Van Zwieten, P Best, L Ker, M Jarvis, M Brüggen, E Orrù, F De Gasperin, A Bonafede, G Brunetti, G Macario, C Ferrari, P Barthel, K Chyży, J Conway, M Lehnert, C Tasse, N Jackson, D Bacon, G White

Abstract:

One of the most fundamental problems in modern astrophysics concerns the formation of galaxies and clusters of galaxies. The Dutch-European radio telescope LOFAR will open up the last unexplored window of the electromagnetic spectrum for astrophysical studies and make important contributions to our knowledge of the structure formation in the universe. LOFAR's world-class observational capabilities will be used to survey the entire Northern low-frequency sky at a number of key frequencies. Studies of the most distant radio galaxies, clusters of galaxies and the cosmic star formation history and the exploration of new parameter space for serendipitous discovery were the four key topics that drove the areas, depths and frequency coverage of the proposed surveys. In addition to the key topics, the LOFAR surveys will provide a wealth of unique data for a huge number of additional important topics, including: detailed studies of AGN, and AGN physics, AGN evolution and black hole accretion history, nearby galaxies, strong gravitational lenses, cosmological parameters and large-scale structure formation, and Galactic radio sources. In this contribution we will first briefly discuss the scientific topics that have driven the design of the surveys. Subsequently we will present the design of the surveys. We will then briefly report on commissioning work carried out to prepare the instrument and the software pipelines for carrying out these surveys. At the end we will elaborate on LOFAR studies on clusters and show some first LOFAR results related to the nearby rich cluster Abell 2256. With at the time of writing only 15 out of the planned 36 Dutch stations working and several aspects of the calibration pipleline not fully functional, the obtained 135 MHz image already is among the deepest ever produced at low frequencies. The central halo of A2256 is well detected, illustrating the potential of LOFAR to map diffuse steep spectrum radio emission.