The discovery of a massive supercluster at z = 0.9 in the UKIDSS deep eXtragalactic survey

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 379:4 (2007) 1343-1351

Authors:

AM Swinbank, AC Edge, I Smail, JP Stott, M Bremer, Y Sato, C Van Breukelen, M Jarvis, I Waddington, L Clewley, J Bergeron, G Cotter, S Dye, JE Geach, E Gonzalez-Solares, P Hirst, RJ Ivison, S Rawlings, C Simpson, GP Smith, A Verma, T Yamada

Abstract:

We analyse the first publicly released deep field of the UK Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) Deep eXtragalactic Survey to identify candidate galaxy overdensities at z ∼ 1 across ∼1 deg2 in the ELAIS-N1 field. Using I - K, J - K and K - 3.6 μm colours, we identify and spectroscopically follow up five candidate structures with Gemini/Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph and confirm that they are all true overdensities with between five and 19 members each. Surprisingly, all five structures lie in a narrow redshift range at z = 0.89 ± 0.01, although they are spread across 30 Mpc on the sky. We also find a more distant overdensity at z = 1.09 in one of the spectroscopic survey regions. These five overdense regions lying in a narrow redshift range indicate the presence of a supercluster in this field and by comparing with mock cluster catalogues from N-body simulations we discuss the likely properties of this structure. Overall, we show that the properties of this supercluster are similar to the well-studied Shapley and Hercules superclusters at lower redshift. © 2007 RAS.

The Type Ia Supernova 2004S, a Clone of SN 2001el, and the Optimal Photometric Bands for Extinction Estimation**Based in part on observations taken at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, National Optical Astronomy Observatory, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA), Inc., under cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation. Also based on observations made with ESO telescopes at the La Silla and Paranal Observatories under program IDs 074.D-0340 and 074.A-9008.

The Astronomical Journal American Astronomical Society 133:1 (2007) 58-72

Authors:

Kevin Krisciunas, Peter M Garnavich, Vallery Stanishev, Nicholas B Suntzeff, Jose Luis Prieto, Juan Espinoza, David Gonzalez, Maria Elena Salvo, Nancy Elias de la Rosa, Stephen J Smartt, Justyn R Maund, Rolf-Peter Kudritzki

Evidence for cold accretion onto a massive galaxy at high redshift?

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 378:1 (2007) L49-L53

Authors:

Daniel JB Smith, Matt J Jarvis

Integral-field studies of the high-redshift universe

ESO ASTROPHY SYMP (2007) 381-385

Authors:

MJ Jarvis, C van Breukelen, BP Venemans, RJ Wilman

Abstract:

We present results from a new method of exploring the distant Universe. We use 3-D spectroscopy to sample a large cosmological volume at a time when the Universe was less than 3 billion years old to investigate the evolution of star-formation activity. Within this study we also discovered a high redshift type-II quasar which would not have been identified with imaging studies alone. This highlights the crucial role that integral-field spectroscopy may play in surveying the distant Universe in the future.

Molecular gas and star formation in the SAURON early-type galaxies

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 377:4 (2007) 1795-1807

Authors:

Francoise Combes, Lisa M Young, Martin Bureau