ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Using a sample of 25683 star-forming and 2821 passive galaxies at $zsim2$, selected in the COSMOS field following the BzK color criterion, we study the hosting halo mass and environment of galaxies as a function of their physical properties. Spitzer and Herschel provide accurate SFR estimates for starburst galaxies. We measure the auto- and cross-correlation functions of various galaxy sub-samples and infer the properties of their hosting halos using both an HOD model and the linear bias at large scale. We find that passive and star-forming galaxies obey a similarly rising relation between the halo and stellar mass. The mean host halo mass of star forming galaxies increases with the star formation rate between 30 and 200 M$_odot$.yr$^{-1}$, but flattens for higher values, except if we select only main-sequence galaxies. This reflects the expected transition from a regime of secular co-evolution of the halos and the galaxies to a regime of episodic starburst. We find similar large scale biases for main-sequence, passive, and starburst galaxies at equal stellar mass, suggesting that these populations live in halos of the same mass. We detect an excess of clustering on small scales for passive galaxies and showed, by measuring the large-scale bias of close pairs, that this excess is caused by a small fraction ($sim16%$) of passive galaxies being hosted by massive halos ($sim 3 times 10^{13}$ M$_odot$) as satellites. Finally, extrapolating the growth of halos hosting the z$sim$2 population, we show that M$_star sim 10^{10}$ M$_odot$ galaxies at z$sim$2 will evolve, on average, into massive (M$_star sim 10^{11}$ M$_odot$), field galaxies in the local Universe and M$_star sim 10^{11}$ M$_odot$ galaxies at z=2 into local, massive, group galaxies. The most massive main-sequence galaxies and close pairs of massive, passive galaxies end up in todays clusters.
ABRIGED Herschel/SPIRE has provided confusion limited maps of deep fields at 250, 350, and 500um, as part of the HerMES survey. Due to confusion, only a small fraction of the Cosmic Infrared Background can be resolved into individually-detected sourc es. Our goal is to produce deep galaxy number counts and redshift distributions below the confusion limit, which we then use to place strong constraints on the origins of the cosmic infrared background and on models of galaxy evolution. We individually extracted the bright SPIRE with a method using the positions, the flux densities, and the redshifts of the 24um sources as a prior, and derived the number counts and redshift distributions of the bright SPIRE sources. For fainter SPIRE sources, we reconstructed the number counts and the redshift distribution below the confusion limit using the deep 24um catalogs associated with photometric redshift and information provided by the stacking of these sources into the deep SPIRE maps. Finally, by integrating all these counts, we studied the contribution of the galaxies to the CIB as a function of their flux density and redshift. Through stacking, we managed to reconstruct the source counts per redshift slice down to ~2 mJy in the three SPIRE bands, which lies about a factor 10 below the 5sigma confusion limit. None of the pre-existing population models are able to reproduce our results at better than 3sigma. Finally, we extrapolate our counts to zero flux density in order to derive an estimate of the total contribution of galaxies to the CIB, finding 10.1, 6.5, and 2.8 nW/m2/sr at 250, 350, and 500um, respectively. These values agree well with FIRAS absolute measurements, suggesting our number counts and their extrapolation are sufficient to explain the CIB. Finally, combining our results with other works, we estimate the energy budget contained in the CIB between 8 and 1000um: 26 nW/m2/sr.
154 - M. Bethermin , H. Dole , M. Cousin 2010
BLAST (Balloon-borne Large-Aperture Submillimeter Telescope) performed the first deep and wide extragalactic survey at 250, 350 and 500 um. The extragalactic number counts at these wavelengths are important constraints for modeling the infrared galax ies evolution. [...] We use three methods to identify the submillimeter sources. 1) Blind extraction. [...] The photometry is computed with a new simple and quick PSF fitting routine (FASTPHOT). [...] 2) Extraction with prior. [...] 3) A stacking analysis. [...] With the blind extraction, we reach 97, 83 and 76 mJy at resp. 250, 350 and 500 um with a 95% completeness. With the prior extraction, we reach 76 mJy (resp. 63 and 49 mJy) at 250 um (resp. 350 and 500 um). With the stacking analysis, we reach 6.2 mJy (resp. 5.2 and 3.5 mJy) at 250 um (resp. 350 and 500 um). The differential submillimeter number counts are derived, and start showing a turnover at flux densities decreasing with increasing wavelength. There is a very good agreement with the P(D) analysis of Patanchon et al. (2009). At bright fluxes (>100 mJy), the Lagache et al. (2004) and Le Borgne et al. (2009) models slightly overestimate the observed counts, but there is a very good agreement near the peak of differential number counts. [...] Counts are available at: http://www.ias.u-psud.fr/irgalaxies/downloads.php
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا