The KMOS Redshift One Spectroscopic Survey (KROSS): Dynamical properties, gas and dark matter fractions of typical z~1 star-forming galaxies

(2016)

Authors:

John P Stott, AM Swinbank, Helen L Johnson, Alfie Tiley, Georgios Magdis, Richard Bower, Andrew J Bunker, Martin Bureau, Chris M Harrison, Matt J Jarvis, Ray Sharples, Ian Smail, David Sobral, Philip Best, Michele Cirasuolo

10C continued: a deeper radio survey at 15.7 GHz

ArXiv 1601.00282 (2016)

Authors:

IH Whittam, JM Riley, DA Green, ML Davies, TMO Franzen, C Rumsey, MP Schammel, EM Waldram

A large sky survey with MeerKAT

Proceedings of Science Part F138095 (2016)

Authors:

MG Santos, P Bull, S Camera, S Chen, J Fonseca, I Heywood, M Hilton, M Jarvis, GIG Józsa, K Knowles, L Leeuw, R Maartens, E Malefahlo, K McAlpine, K Moodley, P Patel, A Pourtsidou, M Prescott, K Spekkens, R Taylor, A Witzemann, I Whittam

Abstract:

© Copyright owned by the author(s). We discuss the ground-breaking science that will be possible with a wide area survey, using the MeerKAT telescope, known as MeerKLASS (MeerKAT Large Area Synoptic Survey). The current specifications of MeerKAT make it a great fit for cosmological applications, which require large volumes. In particular, a large survey over ∼ 4,000deg2for ∼ 4,000 hours will potentially provide the first ever measurements of the baryon acoustic oscillations using the 21cm intensity mapping technique, with enough accuracy to impose constraints on the nature of dark energy. The combination with multi-wavelength data will give unique additional information, such as the first constraints on primordial non-Gaussianity using the multi-tracer technique, as well as a better handle on foregrounds and systematics. The survey will also produce a large continuum galaxy sample down to a depth of 5 µJy in L-band, unmatched by any other concurrent telescope, which will allow to study the large-scale structure of the Universe out to high redshifts. Finally, the same survey will supply unique information for a range of other science applications, including a large statistical investigation of galaxy clusters, and the discovery of rare high-redshift AGN that can be used to probe the epoch of reionization as well as produce a rotation measure map across a huge swathe of the sky. The MeerKLASS survey will be a crucial step on the road to using SKA1-MID for cosmological applications, as described in the top priority SKA key science projects.

A large sky survey with MeerKAT

Proceedings of Science (2016)

Authors:

MG Santos, P Bull, S Camera, S Chen, J Fonseca, I Heywood, M Hilton, M Jarvis, GIG Józsa, K Knowles, L Leeuw, R Maartens, E Malefahlo, K McAlpine, K Moodley, P Patel, A Pourtsidou, M Prescott, K Spekkens, R Taylor, A Witzemann, I Whittam

Abstract:

We discuss the ground-breaking science that will be possible with a wide area survey, using the MeerKAT telescope, known as MeerKLASS (MeerKAT Large Area Synoptic Survey). The current specifications of MeerKAT make it a great fit for cosmological applications, which require large volumes. In particular, a large survey over ∼ 4,000deg2 for ∼ 4,000 hours will potentially provide the first ever measurements of the baryon acoustic oscillations using the 21cm intensity mapping technique, with enough accuracy to impose constraints on the nature of dark energy. The combination with multi-wavelength data will give unique additional information, such as the first constraints on primordial non-Gaussianity using the multi-tracer technique, as well as a better handle on foregrounds and systematics. The survey will also produce a large continuum galaxy sample down to a depth of 5 µJy in L-band, unmatched by any other concurrent telescope, which will allow to study the large-scale structure of the Universe out to high redshifts. Finally, the same survey will supply unique information for a range of other science applications, including a large statistical investigation of galaxy clusters, and the discovery of rare high-redshift AGN that can be used to probe the epoch of reionization as well as produce a rotation measure map across a huge swathe of the sky. The MeerKLASS survey will be a crucial step on the road to using SKA1-MID for cosmological applications, as described in the top priority SKA key science projects.

Galaxy Zoo: morphological classifications for 120 000 galaxies in HST legacy imaging

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 464:4 (2016) 4176-4203

Authors:

Kyle W Willett, Melanie A Galloway, Steven P Bamford, Christopher Lintott, Karen L Masters, Claudia Scarlata, BD Simmons, Melanie Beck, Carolin N Cardamone, Edmond Cheung, Edward M Edmondson, Lucy F Fortson, Roger L Griffith, Boris Haeussler, Anna Han, Ross Hart, Thomas Melvin, Michael Parrish, Kevin Schawinski, RJ Smethurst, Arfon M Smith

Abstract:

We present the data release paper for the Galaxy Zoo: Hubble (GZH) project. This is the third phase in a large effort to measure reliable, detailed morphologies of galaxies by using crowdsourced visual classifications of colour composite images. Images in GZH were selected from various publicly-released Hubble Space Telescope Legacy programs conducted with the Advanced Camera for Surveys, with filters that probe the rest-frame optical emission from galaxies out to $z \sim 1$. The bulk of the sample is selected to have $m_{I814W} < 23.5$,but goes as faint as $m_{I814W} < 26.8$ for deep images combined over 5 epochs. The median redshift of the combined samples is $z = 0.9 \pm 0.6$, with a tail extending out to $z \sim 4$. The GZH morphological data include measurements of both bulge- and disk-dominated galaxies, details on spiral disk structure that relate to the Hubble type, bar identification, and numerous measurements of clump identification and geometry. This paper also describes a new method for calibrating morphologies for galaxies of different luminosities and at different redshifts by using artificially-redshifted galaxy images as a baseline. The GZH catalogue contains both raw and calibrated morphological vote fractions for 119,849 galaxies, providing the largest dataset to date suitable for large-scale studies of galaxy evolution out to $z \sim 1$.