Photometric redshifts for the next generation of deep radio continuum surveys - II. Gaussian processes and hybrid estimates

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 477:4 (2018) 5177-5190

Authors:

KJ Duncan, Matthew Jarvis, MJI Brown, HJAR Röttgeringg

Abstract:

Building on the first paper in this series (Duncan et al. 2018), we present a study investigating the performance of Gaussian process photometric redshift (photo-z) estimates for galaxies and active galactic nuclei detected in deep radio continuum surveys. A Gaussian process redshift code is used to produce photo-z estimates targeting specific subsets of both the AGN population - infrared, X-ray and optically selected AGN - and the general galaxy population. The new estimates for the AGN population are found to perform significantly better at z > 1 than the template-based photo-z estimates presented in our previous study. Our new photo-z estimates are then combined with template estimates through hierarchical Bayesian combination to produce a hybrid consensus estimate that outperforms both of the individual methods across all source types. Photo-z estimates for radio sources that are X-ray sources or optical/IR AGN are significantly improved in comparison to previous template-only estimates - with outlier fractions and robust scatter reduced by up to a factor of ∼4. The ability of our method to combine the strengths of the two input photo-z techniques and the large improvements we observe illustrate its potential for enabling future exploitation of deep radio continuum surveys for both the study of galaxy and black hole co-evolution and for cosmological studies.

Discovery of a Powerful, Transient, Explosive Thermal Event at Marduk Fluctus, Io, in Galileo NIMS Data

Geophysical Research Letters American Geophysical Union (AGU) 45:7 (2018) 2926-2933

Authors:

AG Davies, RL Davies, GJ Veeder, K de Kleer, I de Pater, DL Matson, TV Johnson, L Wilson

RFI Flagging Implications for Short-Duration Transients

(2018)

Authors:

Y Cendes, P Prasad, A Rowlinson, RAMJ Wijers, JD Swinbank, CJ Law, AJ van der Horst, D Carbone, JW Broderick, TD Staley, AJ Stewart, F Huizinga, G Molenaar, A Alexov, ME Bell, T Coenen, S Corbel, J Eislöffel, R Fender, J-M Grießmeier, P Jonker, M Kramer, M Kuniyoshi, M Pietka, B Stappers, M Wise, P Zarka

Measuring Dark Energy Properties with Photometrically Classified Pan-STARRS Supernovae. II. Cosmological Parameters

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 857:1 (2018) 51

Authors:

DO Jones, DM Scolnic, AG Riess, A Rest, RP Kirshner, E Berger, R Kessler, Y-C Pan, RJ Foley, R Chornock, CA Ortega, PJ Challis, WS Burgett, KC Chambers, PW Draper, H Flewelling, ME Huber, N Kaiser, R-P Kudritzki, N Metcalfe, J Tonry, RJ Wainscoat, C Waters, EEE Gall, R Kotak, M McCrum, SJ Smartt, KW Smith

SPLASH-SXDF multi-wavelength photometric catalog

Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series American Astronomical Society 235:2 (2018) 36

Authors:

V Mehta, C Scarlata, P Capak, I Davidzon, A Faisst, BC Hsieh, O Ilbert, Matthew Jarvis, CLOTILDE Laigle, J Phillips, J Silverman, MA Strauss, M Tanaka, Rebecca Bowler, J Coupon, S Foucaud, S Hemmati, D Masters, HJ McCracken, B Mobasher, M Ouchi, T Shibuya, W-H Wang

Abstract:

We present a multi-wavelength catalog in the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field (SXDF) as part of the Spitzer Large Area Survey with Hyper-Suprime-Cam (SPLASH). We include the newly acquired optical data from the Hyper-Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program, accompanied by IRAC coverage from the SPLASH survey. All available optical and near-infrared data is homogenized and resampled on a common astrometric reference frame. Source detection is done using a multi-wavelength detection image including the u-band to recover the bluest objects. We measure multi-wavelength photometry and compute photometric redshifts as well as physical properties for ~1.17 million objects over ~4.2 deg2, with ~800,000 objects in the 2.4 deg2 HSC-Ultra-Deep coverage. Using the available spectroscopic redshifts from various surveys over the range of 0 < z < 6, we verify the performance of the photometric redshifts and we find a normalized median absolute deviation of 0.023 and outlier fraction of 3.2%. The SPLASH-SXDF catalog is a valuable, publicly available resource, perfectly suited for studying galaxies in the early universe and tracing their evolution through cosmic time.