The environments of hyperluminous infrared galaxies at 0.44 < z < 1.55

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 349:2 (2004) 518-526

Authors:

D Farrah, J Geach, M Fox, S Serjeant, S Oliver, A Verma, A Kaviani, M Rowan-Robinson

Abstract:

We present deep wide-field Ks-band observations of six Hyperluminous Infrared Galaxies (HLIRGs) spanning a redshift range 0.44 < z < 1.55. The sample resides in a wide variety of environments, from the field to Abell 2 clusters, with a mean galaxy-HLIRG clustering amplitude of 〈Bgh〉 = 190 ± 45 Mpc1.77. The range in environments, and the mean clustering level, are both greater than those seen in local IR-luminous galaxies, from which we infer that the range of galaxy evolution processes driving IR-luminous galaxy evolution at z > 0.5 is greater than locally, and includes mergers between gas-rich spiral galaxies in the field, but also includes encounters in clusters and hierarchical build-up. The similarity in the range of environments and mean clustering amplitude between our sample and QSOs over a similar redshift range is consistent with the interpretation where evolutionary connections between IR-luminous galaxies and QSOs are stronger at z > 0.5 than locally, and that, at these redshifts, the processes that drive QSO evolution are similar to those that drive IR-luminous galaxy evolution. From comparison of the HLIRG and QSO host galaxies we further postulate that a larger fraction of IR-luminous galaxies pass through an optical QSO stage at z > 0.5 than locally.

Simultaneous radio and X-ray observations of the low-mass X-ray binary GX 13+1

Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences 418:1 (2004) 255-263

Authors:

J Homan, R Wijnands, MP Rupen, R Fender, RM Hjellming, T di Salvo, M van der Klis

Optimized search for single-top-quark production at the Fermilab Tevatron

Physical Review D - Particles, Fields, Gravitation and Cosmology 69:5 (2004)

Authors:

D Acosta, T Affolder, MG Albrow, D Ambrose, D Amidei, K Anikeev, J Antos, G Apollinari, T Arisawa, A Artikov, W Ashmanskas, F Azfar, P Azzi-Bacchetta, N Bacchetta, H Bachacou, W Badgett, A Barbaro-Galtieri, VE Barnes, BA Barnett, S Baroiant, M Barone, G Bauer, F Bedeschi, S Behari, S Belforte, WH Bell, G Bellettini, J Bellinger, D Benjamin, A Beretvas, A Bhatti, M Binkley, D Bisello, M Bishai, RE Blair, C Blocker, K Bloom, B Blumenfeld, A Bocci, A Bodek, G Bolla, A Bolshov, D Bortoletto, J Boudreau, C Bromberg, E Brubaker, J Budagov, HS Budd, K Burkett, G Busetto, KL Byrum, S Cabrera, M Campbell, W Carithers, D Carlsmith, A Castro, D Cauz, A Cerri, L Cerrito, J Chapman, C Chen, YC Chen, M Chertok, G Chiarelli, G Chlachidze, F Chlebana, ML Chu, JY Chung, WH Chung, YS Chung, CI Ciobanu, AG Clark, M Coca, A Connolly, M Convery, J Conway, M Cordelli, J Cranshaw, R Culbertson, D Dagenhart, S D’Auria, P Barbaro, S Cecco, S Dell’Agnello, M Dell’Orso, S Demers, L Demortier, M Deninno, D Pedis, PF Derwent, C Dionisi, JR Dittmann, A Dominguez, S Donati, M D’Onofrio, T Dorigo, N Eddy, R Erbacher, D Errede, S Errede

Abstract:

We use a neural-network technique to search for standard model single-top-quark production in the [Formula Presented] dataset accumulated by the Collider Detector at Fermilab detector during the 1992–1995 collider run (“run I”). Using a sample of 64 [Formula Presented] 2, 3 jets events, we set a 95% confidence level upper limit of 24 pb on the W-gluon and [Formula Presented] combined single-top cross section. © 2004 The American Physical Society.

Radio and X-ray observations during the outburst decay of the Black Hole Candidate XTE J1908+094

(2004)

Authors:

PG Jonker, E Gallo, V Dhawan, M Rupen, RP Fender, G Dubus

Classical novae from the POINT-AGAPE microlensing survey of M31 -- I. The nova catalogue

(2004)

Authors:

MJ Darnley, MF Bode, E Kerins, AM Newsam, J An, P Baillon, S Calchi Novati, BJ Carr, M Creze, NW Evans, Y Giraud-Heraud, A Gould, P Hewett, Ph Jetzer, J Kaplan, S Paulin-Henriksson, SJ Smartt, CS Stalin, Y Tsapras