- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/155/110
- Title:
- Deep CFHT imaging of VVDS-F22 field. II. Quasars
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/155/110
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We report the results of a faint quasar survey in a one-square-degree field. The aim is to test the Y-K/g-z and J-K/i-Y color selection criteria for quasars at faint magnitudes to obtain a complete sample of quasars based on deep optical and near-infrared color-color selection and to measure the faint end of the quasar luminosity function (QLF) over a wide redshift range. We carried out a quasar survey based on the Y-K/g-z and J-K/i-Y quasar selection criteria, using the deep Y-band data obtained from our CFHT/WIRCam Y-band images in a two-degree field within the F22 field of the VIMOS VLT deep survey, optical co-added data from Sloan Digital Sky Survey Stripe 82 and deep near-infrared data from the UKIDSS Deep Extragalactic Survey in the same field. We discovered 25 new quasars at 0.5<z<4.5 and i<22.5 mag within one-square-degree field. The survey significantly increases the number of faint quasars in this field, especially at z~2-3. It confirms that our color selections are highly complete in a wide redshift range (z<4.5), especially over the quasar number density peak at z~2-3, even for faint quasars. Combining all previous known quasars and new discoveries, we construct a sample with 109 quasars and measure the binned QLF and parametric QLF. Although the sample is small, our results agree with a pure luminosity evolution at lower redshift and luminosity evolution and density evolution model at redshift z>2.5.
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Search Results
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/887/20
- Title:
- Deep Chandra survey of the SMC. III. HMXBs
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/887/20
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We have compiled the most complete census of high-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs) in the Small Magellanic Cloud with the aim to investigate the formation efficiency of young accreting binaries in its low-metallicity environment. In total, we use 123 X-ray sources with detections in our Chandra X-ray Visionary Program (XVP), supplemented by 14 additional (likely and confirmed) HMXBs identified by Haberl & Sturm (2016, J/A+A/586/A81) that fall within the XVP area, but are neither detected in our survey (nine sources) nor matched with any of the 127 sources identified in the XVP data (five sources). Specifically, we examine the number ratio of the HMXBs [N(HMXBs)] to (a) the number of OB stars, (b) the local star formation rate (SFR), and (c) the stellar mass produced during the specific star formation burst, all as a function of the age of their parent stellar populations. Each of these indicators serves a different role, but in all cases we find that the HMXB formation efficiency increases as a function of time (following a burst of star formation) up to ~40-60Myr, and then gradually decreases. The formation efficiency peaks at ~30-40Myr with average rates of N(HMXB)/SFR=339_-83_^+78^(M_{sun}_/yr)^-1^, and N(HMXB)/M*=(8.74_-0.92_^+1.0^)x10^-6^M_{sun}_^-1^, in good agreement with previous estimates of the average formation efficiency in the broad ~20-60Myr age range.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/654/915
- Title:
- Deep FORS1 BR photometry of omega Cen
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/654/915
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present the results of a deep photometric survey performed with the VLT FORS1 aimed at investigating the complex main-sequence structure of the stellar system Centauri. We confirm the presence of a double main sequence and identify its blue component (bMS) over a large field of view up to 26' from the cluster center. We found that bMS stars are significantly more concentrated toward the cluster center than the other "normal" MS stars. The bMS morphology and its position in the CMD have been used to constrain the helium overabundance required to explain the observed MS morphology.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/758/135
- Title:
- DEEP2 galaxies with UV spectra in the EGS
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/758/135
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We investigate galactic-scale outflowing winds in 72 star-forming galaxies at z~1 in the Extended Groth Strip. Galaxies were selected from the DEEP2 survey and follow-up LRIS spectroscopy was obtained covering Si II, C IV, Fe II, Mg II, and Mg I lines in the rest-frame ultraviolet. Using Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX), Hubble Space Telescope (HST), and Spitzer imaging available for the Extended Groth Strip, we examine galaxies on a per-object basis in order to better understand both the prevalence of galactic outflows at z~1 and the star-forming and structural properties of objects experiencing outflows. Gas velocities, measured from the centroids of Fe II interstellar absorption lines, are found to span the interval [-217,+155]km/s. We find that ~40% (10%) of the sample exhibits blueshifted Fe II lines at the 1{sigma} (3{sigma}) level. We also measure maximal outflow velocities using the profiles of the Fe II and Mg II lines; we find that Mg II frequently traces higher velocity gas than Fe II. Using quantitative morphological parameters derived from the HST imaging, we find that mergers are not a prerequisite for driving outflows. More face-on galaxies also show stronger winds than highly inclined systems, consistent with the canonical picture of winds emanating perpendicular to galactic disks. In light of clumpy galaxy morphologies, we develop a new physically motivated technique for estimating areas corresponding to star formation. We use these area measurements in tandem with GALEX-derived star formation rates (SFRs) to calculate SFR surface densities. At least 70% of the sample exceeds an SFR surface density of 0.1M_{sun}_/yr/kpc2, the threshold necessary for driving an outflow in local starbursts. At the same time, the outflow detection fraction of only 40% in Fe II absorption provides further evidence for an outflow geometry that is not spherically symmetric. We see a ~3{sigma} trend between outflow velocity and SFR surface density, but no significant trend between outflow velocity and SFR. Higher resolution data are needed in order to test the scaling relations between outflow velocity and both SFR and SFR surface density predicted by theory.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/654/115
- Title:
- DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: SDSS QSOs
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/654/115
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present the clustering of Deep Extragalactic Evolutionary Probe 2 (DEEP2) galaxies at 0.7<z<1.4 around quasars identified using both the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and DEEP2 surveys. We measure the two-point cross-correlation of a sample of 36 optically selected, spectroscopically identified quasars from the SDSS and 16 more found in the DEEP2 survey with the full DEEP2 galaxy sample over scales 0.1h^-1^MPc<r_p_<10h^-1^Mpc.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/813/100
- Title:
- Deep GALEX NUV survey of the Kepler field. I.
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/813/100
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We report observations of a deep near-ultraviolet (NUV) survey of the Kepler field made in 2012 with the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Complete All-Sky UV Survey Extension (CAUSE). The GALEX-CAUSE Kepler survey (GCK) covers 104 square degrees of the Kepler field and reaches a limiting magnitude of NUV~=22.6 at 3{sigma}. Analysis of the GCK survey has yielded a catalog of 660928 NUV sources, of which 475164 are cross-matched with stars in the Kepler Input Catalog. Approximately 327 of 451 confirmed exoplanet host stars and 2614 of 4696 candidate exoplanet host stars identified by Kepler have NUV photometry in the GCK survey. The GCK catalog should enable the identification and characterization of UV-excess stars in the Kepler field (young solar-type and low-mass stars, chromospherically active binaries, white dwarfs, horizontal branch stars, etc.), and elucidation of various astrophysics problems related to the stars and planetary systems in the Kepler field.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/190/43
- Title:
- Deep GALEX observations of the Coma cluster
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/190/43
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a source catalog from a deep 26ks Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) observation of the Coma cluster in the far-UV (FUV; 1530{AA}) and near-UV (NUV; 2310{AA}) wavebands. The observed field is centered ~0.9{deg} (1.6Mpc) southwest of the Coma core in a well-studied region of the cluster known as "Coma-3". The entire field is located within the apparent virial radius of the Coma cluster, and has optical photometric coverage with Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and deep spectroscopic coverage to r~21. We detect GALEX sources to NUV=24.5 and FUV=25.0, which corresponds to a star formation rate of ~10^-3^M_{sun}_/yr for galaxies at the distance of Coma. We have assembled a catalog of 9700 galaxies with GALEX and SDSS photometry, including 242 spectroscopically confirmed Coma member galaxies (in fig. 1) that span a large range of galaxy types from giant spirals and elliptical galaxies to dwarf irregular and early-type galaxies. The full multi-wavelength catalog (cluster plus background galaxies) is ~80% complete to NUV=23 and FUV=23.5. The GALEX images presented here are very deep and include detections of many resolved cluster members superposed on a dense field of unresolved background galaxies.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/235/34
- Title:
- Deep JVLA imaging of GOODS-N at 20cm
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/235/34
- Date:
- 08 Mar 2022 13:27:20
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- New wideband continuum observations in the 1-2GHz band of the GOODS-N field using NSF's Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) are presented. The best image with an effective frequency of 1525MHz reaches an rms noise in the field center of 2.2{mu}Jy, with 1.6" resolution. A catalog of 795 sources is presented covering a radius of 9 arcminutes centered near the nominal center for the GOODS-N field, very near the nominal VLA pointing center for the observations. Optical/NIR identifications and redshift estimates both from ground-based and HST observations are discussed. Using these optical/NIR data, it is most likely that fewer than 2% of the sources without confusion problems do not have a correct identification. A large subset of the detected sources have radio sizes >1". It is shown that the radio orientations for such sources correlate well with the HST source orientations, especially for z<1. This suggests that a least a large subset of the 10kpc-scale disks of luminous infrared/ultraluminous infrared galaxies (LIRG/ULIRG) have strong star formation, not just in the nucleus. For the half of the objects with z>1, the sample must be some mixture of very high star formation rates, typically 300M_{sun}_/yr, assuming pure star formation, and an active galactic nucleus (AGN) or a mixed AGN/star formation population.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/863/25
- Title:
- Deep Magellan/Megacam obs. of 4 MW satellites
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/863/25
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present deep Magellan/Megacam stellar photometry of four recently discovered faint Milky Way satellites: Sagittarius II (Sgr II), Reticulum II (Ret II), Phoenix II (Phe II), and Tucana III (Tuc III). Our photometry reaches ~2-3 magnitudes deeper than the discovery data, allowing us to revisit the properties of these new objects (e.g., distance, structural properties, luminosity measurements, and signs of tidal disturbance). The satellite color-magnitude diagrams show that they are all old (~13.5Gyr) and metal poor ([Fe/H]<~-2.2). Sgr II is particularly interesting, as it sits in an intermediate position between the loci of dwarf galaxies and globular clusters in the size-luminosity plane. The ensemble of its structural parameters is more consistent with a globular cluster classification, indicating that Sgr II is the most extended globular cluster in its luminosity range. The other three satellites land directly on the locus defined by Milky Way ultra-faint dwarf galaxies of similar luminosity. Ret II is the most elongated nearby dwarf galaxy currently known for its luminosity range. Our structural parameters for Phe II and Tuc III suggest that they are both dwarf galaxies. Tuc III is known to be associated with a stellar stream, which is clearly visible in our matched-filter stellar density map. The other satellites do not show any clear evidence of tidal stripping in the form of extensions or distortions. Finally, we also use archival HI data to place limits on the gas content of each object.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/465/1807
- Title:
- Deep OB star population in Carina
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/465/1807
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Massive OB stars are critical to the ecology of galaxies, and yet our knowledge of OB stars in the Milky Way, fainter than V~12, remains patchy. Data from the VST Photometric H-alpha Survey (VPHAS+) permit the construction of the first deep catalogues of blue excess-selected OB stars, without neglecting the stellar field. A total of 14900 candidates with 2MASS cross-matches are blue-selected from a 42 square-degree region in the Galactic longitude range 282{deg}<l<293{deg} Spectral energy distribution fitting is performed on these candidates' combined VPHAS+ u/g/r/i and 2MASS J/H/K magnitudes. This delivers: effective temperature constraints, statistically separating O from early-B stars; high-quality extinction parameters, A_0_ and R_V_ (random errors typically <0.1). The high confidence O-B2 candidates number 5915 and a further 5170 fit to later B spectral type. Spectroscopy of 276 of the former confirms 97% of them. The fraction of emission line stars among all candidate B stars is 7-8%. Greyer (R_V_>3.5) extinction laws are ubiquitous in the region, over the distance range 2.5-3kpc to ~10kpc. Near prominent massive clusters, R_V_ tends to rise, with particularly large and chaotic excursions to R_V_~5 seen in the Carina Nebula. The data reveal a hitherto unnoticed association of 108 O-B2 stars around the O5If+ star LSS 2063 (l=289.77{deg}, b=-1.22{deg}). Treating the OB star scale-height as a constant within the thin disk, we find an orderly mean relation between extinction (A_0_) and distance in the Galactic longitude range, 287.6{deg}<l< 293.5{deg}, and infer the subtle onset of thin-disk warping. A halo around NGC 3603, roughly a degree in diameter, of ~500 O-B2 stars with 4<A_0_(mag)<7 is noted.