ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Looking At the Distant Universe with the MeerKAT Array (LADUMA)

145   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Benne W. Holwerda
 تاريخ النشر 2011
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English
 تأليف B.W. Holwerda




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

The MeerKAT (64 x 13.5m dish radio interferometer) is South Africas precursor instrument for the Square Kilometre Array (SKA), exploring dish design, instrumentation, and the characteristics of a Karoo desert site and is projected to be on sky in 2016. One of two top-priority, Key Projects is a single deep field, integrating for 5000 hours total with the aim to detect neutral atomic hydrogen through its 21 cm line emission out to redshift unity and beyond. This first truly deep HI survey will help constrain fueling models for galaxy assembly and evolution. It will measure the evolution of the cosmic neutral gas density and its distribution over galaxies over cosmic time, explore evolution of the gas in galaxies, measure the Tully-Fisher relation, measure OH maser counts, and address many more topics. Here we present the observing strategy and envisaged science case for this unique deep field, which encompasses the Chandra Deep Field-South (and the footprints of GOODS, GEMS and several other surveys) to produce a singular legacy multi-wavelength data-set.

قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

106 - P. Petitjean 2011
We review recent results on the high-redshift universe and the cosmic evolution obtained using Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) as tracers of high-redshift galaxies. Most of the results come from photometric and spectroscopic observations of GRB host galaxies once the afterglow has faded away but also from the analysis of the GRB afterglow line of sight as revealed by absorptions in their optical spectrum.
We have undertaken a survey for HI 21-cm absorption within the host galaxies of z ~ 1.2 - 1.5 radio sources, in the search of the cool neutral gas currently missing at z > 1. This deficit is believed to be due to the optical selection of high redshif t objects biasing surveys towards sources of sufficient ultra-violet luminosity to ionise all of the gas in the surrounding galaxy. In order to avoid this bias, we have selected objects above blue magnitudes of B~20, indicating ultra-violet luminosities below the critical value above which 21-cm has never been detected. As a secondary requirement to the radio flux and faint optical magnitude, we shortlist targets with radio spectra suggestive of compact sources, in order to maximise the coverage of background emission. From this, we obtain one detection out of ten sources searched, which at z=1.278 is the third highest redshift detection of associated 21-cm absorption to date. Accounting for the spectra compromised by radio frequency interference, as well as various other possible pitfalls (reliable optical redshifts and turnover frequencies indicative of compact emission), we estimate a detection rate of ~30%, close to that expected for L_UV < 1e23 W/Hz sources.
89 - Bodo L. Ziegler 2009
We describe a method to efficiently obtain two-dimensional velocity fields of distant, faint and small, emission-line galaxies with FORS2 at the VLT. They are examined for kinematic substructure to identify possible interaction processes. Numerical s imulations of tidal interactions and ram-pressure effects reveal distinct signatures observable with our method. We detect a significant fraction of galaxies with irregular velocity fields both in the field and cluster environments.
384 - Alkistis Pourtsidou 2017
We explore the possibility of performing an HI intensity mapping survey with the South African MeerKAT radio telescope, which is a precursor to the Square Kilometre Array (SKA). We propose to use cross-correlations between the MeerKAT intensity mappi ng survey and optical galaxy surveys, in order to mitigate systematic effects and produce robust cosmological measurements. Our forecasts show that precise measurements of the HI signal can be made in the near future. These can be used to constrain HI and cosmological parameters across a wide range of redshift.
We present a search for FRI radio galaxies between 1 < z < 2 in the COSMOS field. In absence of spectroscopic redshift measurements, the selection method is based on multiple steps which make use of both radio and optical constraints. The basic assum ptions are that 1) the break in radio power between low-power FRIs and the more powerful FRIIs does not change with redshift, and 2) that the photometric properties of the host galaxies of low power radio galaxies in the distant universe are similar to those of FRIIs in the same redshift bin, as is the case for nearby radio galaxies. We describe the results of our search, which yields 37 low-power radio galaxy candidates that are possibly FRIs. We show that a large fraction of these low-luminosity radio galaxies display a compact radio morphology, that does not correspond to the FRI morphological classification. Furthermore, our objects are apparently associated with galaxies that show clear signs of interactions, at odds with the typical behavior observed in low-z FRI hosts. The compact radio morphology might imply that we are observing intrinsically small and possibly young objects, that will eventually evolve into the giant FRIs we observe in the local universe. One of the objects appears as point-like in HST images. This might belong to a population of FRI-QSOs, which however would represent a tiny minority of the overall population of high-z FRIs. As for the local FRIs, a large fraction of our objects are likely to be associated with groups or clusters, making them beacons for high redshift clusters of galaxies. Our search for candidate high-z FRIs we present in this paper constitutes a pilot study for objects to be observed with future high-resolution and high-sensitivity instruments (shortened)
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا