Herschel ATLAS: The cosmic star formation history of quasar host galaxies

Astronomy and Astrophysics 518:8 (2010)

Authors:

S Serjeant, F Bertoldi, AW Blain, DL Clements, A Cooray, L Danese, J Dunlop, L Dunne, S Eales, J Falder, E Hatziminaoglou, DH Hughes, E Ibar, MJ Jarvis, A Lawrence, MG Lee, M Michałowski, M Negrello, A Omont, M Page, C Pearson, P Van Der Werf, G White, A Amblard, R Auld, M Baes, DG Bonfield, D Burgarella, S Buttiglione, A Cava, A Dariush, G De Zotti, S Dye, D Frayer, J Fritz, J Gonzalez-Nuevo, D Herranz, RJ Ivison, G Lagache, L Leeuw, M Lopez-Caniego, S Maddox, E Pascale, M Pohlen, E Rigby, G Rodighiero, S Samui, B Sibthorpe, DJB Smith, P Temi, M Thompson, I Valtchanov, A Verma

Abstract:

We present a derivation of the star formation rate per comoving volume of quasar host galaxies, derived from stacking analyses of far-infrared to mm-wave photometry of quasars with redshifts 0 < z < 6 and absolute I-band magnitudes -22 > IAB > -32 We use the science demonstration observations of the first ∼ 16 deg2 from the Herschel Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey (H-ATLAS) in which there are 240 quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and a further 171 from the 2dF-SDSS LRG and QSO (2SLAQ) survey. We supplement this data with a compilation of data from IRAS, ISO, Spitzer, SCUBA and MAMBO. H-ATLAS alone statistically detects the quasars in its survey area at > 5σ at 250, 350 and 500 μ m. From the compilation as a whole we find striking evidence of downsizing in quasar host galaxy formation: low-luminosity quasars with absolute magnitudes in the range -22 > IAB > -24 have a comoving star formation rate (derived from 100 μ m rest-frame luminosities) peaking between redshifts of 1 and 2, while high-luminosity quasars with IAB < -26 have a maximum contribution to the star formation density at z ∼ 3. The volume-averaged star formation rate of -22 > IAB > -24 quasars evolves as (1 + z)2.3±0.7 at z < 2, but the evolution at higher luminosities is much faster reaching (1 + z) 10±1 at -26 > IAB > -28. We tentatively interpret this as a combination of a declining major merger rate with time and gas consumption reducing fuel for both black hole accretion and star formation. © 2010 ESO.

Investigating accretion disk - radio jet coupling across the stellar mass scale

(2010)

Authors:

James CA Miller-Jones, Gregory R Sivakoff, Diego Altamirano, Elmar G Körding, Hans A Krimm, Dipankar Maitra, Ron A Remillard, David M Russell, Valeriu Tudose, Vivek Dhawan, Rob P Fender, Sebastian Heinz, Sera Markoff, Simone Migliari, Michael P Rupen, Craig L Sarazin

The commensal real-time ASKAP fast-transients (CRAFT) survey

Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia 27:3 (2010) 272-282

Authors:

JP Macquart, M Bailes, NDR Bhat, GC Bower, JD Bunton, S Chatterjee, T Colegate, JM Cordes, L D'addario, A Deller, R Dodson, R Fender, K Haines, P Halll, C Harris, A Hotan, S Jonston, DL Jones, M Keith, JY Koay, TJW Lazio, W Majid, T Murphy, R Navarro, C Phillips, P Quinn, RA Preston, B Stansby, I Stairs, B Stappers, L Staveley-Smith, S Tingay, D Thompson, W Van Straten, K Wagstaff, M Warren, R Wayth, L Wen

Abstract:

We are developing a purely commensal survey experiment for fast (<5 s) transient radio sources. Short-timescale transients are associated with the most energetic and brightest single events in the Universe. Our objective is to cover the enormous volume of transients parameter space made available by ASKAP, with an unprecedented combination of sensitivity and field of view. Fast timescale transients open new vistas on the physics of high brightness temperature emission,extreme states of matter and the physics of strong gravitational fields. In addition, the detection of extragalactic objects affords us an entirely new and extremely sensitive probe on the huge reservoir of baryons present in the IGM. We outline here our approach to the considerable challenge involved in detecting fast transients, particularly the development of hardware fast enough to dedisperse and search the ASKAP data stream at or near real-time rates. Through CRAFT, ASKAP will provide the testbed of many of the key technologies and survey modes proposed for high time resolution science with the SKA. © Astronomical Society of Australia 2010.

A Global Study of the Behaviour of Black Hole X-ray Binary Discs

(2010)

Authors:

Robert Dunn, Rob Fender, Elmar Koerding, Tomaso Belloni, Andrea Merloni

X-ray and radio variability in the low luminosity Active Galactic Nucleus NGC 7213

(2010)

Authors:

ME Bell, T Tzioumis, P Uttley, RP Fender, P Arevalo, E Breedt, I McHardy, DE Calvelo, O Jamil, E Koerding