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Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2010

The Herschel ATLAS

Stephen Anthony Eales; Loretta Dunne; D. L. Clements; A. Cooray; G. De Zotti; Simon Dye; R. J. Ivison; M. J. Jarvis; Guilaine Lagache; Steve Maddox; M. Negrello; S. Serjeant; M. A. Thompson; E. van Kampen; A. Amblard; Paola Andreani; M. Baes; A. Beelen; G. J. Bendo; Dominic J. Benford; Frank Bertoldi; James J. Bock; D. G. Bonfield; A. Boselli; C. Bridge; V. Buat; D. Burgarella; R. Carlberg; A. Cava; P. Chanial

The Herschel ATLAS is the largest open-time key project that will be carried out on the Herschel Space Observatory. It will survey 570 deg2 of the extragalactic sky, 4 times larger than all the other Herschel extragalactic surveys combined, in five far-infrared and submillimeter bands. We describe the survey, the complementary multiwavelength data sets that will be combined with the Herschel data, and the six major science programs we are undertaking. Using new models based on a previous submillimeter survey of galaxies, we present predictions of the properties of the ATLAS sources in other wave bands.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

HerMES: The SPIRE confusion limit

H. T. Nguyen; Bernhard Schulz; L. Levenson; A. Amblard; V. Arumugam; H. Aussel; T. Babbedge; A. W. Blain; J. J. Bock; A. Boselli; V. Buat; N. Castro-Rodriguez; A. Cava; P. Chanial; Edward L. Chapin; D. L. Clements; A. Conley; L. Conversi; A. Cooray; C. D. Dowell; Eli Dwek; Stephen Anthony Eales; D. Elbaz; M. Fox; A. Franceschini; Walter Kieran Gear; J. Glenn; Matthew Joseph Griffin; M. Halpern; E. Hatziminaoglou

We report on the sensitivity of SPIRE photometers on the Herschel Space Observatory. Specifically, we measure the confusion noise from observations taken during the Science Demonstration Phase of the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey. Confusion noise is defined to be the spatial variation of the sky intensity in the limit of infinite integration time, and is found to be consistent among the different fields in our survey at the level of 5.8, 6.3 and 6.8 mJy/beam at 250, 350 and 500 microns, respectively. These results, together with the measured instrument noise, may be used to estimate the integration time required for confusion-limited maps, and provide a noise estimate for maps obtained by SPIRE.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

HerMES : SPIRE galaxy number counts at 250, 350, and 500 μm

Seb Oliver; L. Wang; A. J. Smith; B. Altieri; A. Amblard; V. Arumugam; Robbie Richard Auld; H. Aussel; T. Babbedge; A. W. Blain; J. J. Bock; A. Boselli; V. Buat; D. Burgarella; N. Castro-Rodríguez; A. Cava; P. Chanial; D. L. Clements; A. Conley; L. Conversi; A. Cooray; C. D. Dowell; Eli Dwek; Stephen Anthony Eales; D. Elbaz; M. Fox; A. Franceschini; Walter Kieran Gear; J. Glenn; Matthew Joseph Griffin

Emission at far-infrared wavelengths makes up a significant fraction of the total light detected from galaxies over the age of Universe. Herschel provides an opportunity for studying galaxies at the peak wavelength of their emission. Our aim is to provide a benchmark for models of galaxy population evolution and to test pre-existing models of galaxies. With the Herschel Multi-tiered Extra-galactic survey, HerMES, we have observed a number of fields of different areas and sensitivity using the SPIRE instrument on Herschel. We have determined the number counts of galaxies down to ~20 mJy. Our constraints from directly counting galaxies are consistent with, though more precise than, estimates from the BLAST fluctuation analysis. We have found a steep rise in the Euclidean normalised counts <100 mJy. We have directly resolved ~15% of the infrared extra-galactic background at the wavelength near where it peaks.


arXiv: Astrophysics | 2008

CMBPol Mission Concept Study Probing Ination with CMB Polarization

Daniel Baumann; Mark G. Jackson; Peter Adshead; A. Amblard; Nicola Bartolo; Rachel Bean; Maria Beltr; Francesco De Bernardis; Simeon Bird; Xingang Chen; Daniel J. H. Chung; L. P. L. Colombo; A. Cooray; Paolo Creminelli; Scott Dodelson; Joanna Dunkley; Cora Dvorkin; Richard Easther; F. Finelli; Raphael Flauger; Mark P. Hertzberg; Katherine Jones-Smith

We summarize the utility of precise cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarization measurements as probes of the physics of ination. We focus on the prospects for using CMB measurementsWe summarize the utility of precise cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarization measurements as probes of the physics of inflation. We focus on the prospects for using CMB measurements to differentiate various inflationary mechanisms. In particular, a detection of primordial B‐mode polarization would demonstrate that inflation occurred at a very high energy scale, and that the inflaton traversed a super‐Planckian distance in field space. We explain how such a detection or constraint would illuminate aspects of physics at the Planck scale. Moreover, CMB measurements can constrain the scale‐dependence and non‐Gaussianity of the primordial fluctuations and limit the possibility of a significant isocurvature contribution. Each such limit provides crucial information on the underlying inflationary dynamics. Finally, we quantify these considerations by presenting forecasts for the sensitivities of a future satellite experiment to the inflationary parameters.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

HerMES: Far infrared properties of known AGN in the HerMES fields

E. Hatziminaoglou; A. Omont; J. A. Stevens; A. Amblard; V. Arumugam; Robbie Richard Auld; H. Aussel; T. Babbedge; A. W. Blain; J. J. Bock; A. Boselli; V. Buat; D. Burgarella; N. Castro-Rodriguez; A. Cava; P. Chanial; D. L. Clements; A. Conley; L. Conversi; A. Cooray; C. D. Dowell; Eli Dwek; Simon Dye; Stephen Anthony Eales; D. Elbaz; D. Farrah; M. Fox; A. Franceschini; Walter Kieran Gear; J. Glenn

Nuclear and starburst activity are known to often occur concomitantly. Herschel-SPIRE provides sampling of the FIR SEDs of type 1 and type 2 AGN, allowing for the separation between the hot dust (torus) and cold dust (starburst) emission. We study large samples of spectroscopically confirmed type 1 and type 2 AGN lying within the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES) fields observed during the science demonstration phase, aiming to understand their FIR colour distributions and constrain their starburst contributions. We find that one third of the spectroscopically confirmed AGN in the HerMES fields have 5-sigma detections at 250um, in agreement with previous (sub)mm AGN studies. Their combined Spitzer-MIPS and Herschel-SPIRE colours - specifically S(250)/S(70) vs. S(70)/S(24) - quite clearly separate them from the non-AGN, star-forming galaxy population, as their 24-um flux is dominated by the hot torus emission. However, their SPIRE colours alone do not differ from those of non-AGN galaxies. SED fitting shows that all those AGN need a starburst component to fully account for their FIR emission. For objects at z > 2, we find a correlation between the infrared luminosity attributed to the starburst component, L(SB), and the AGN accretion luminosity, L(acc), with L(SB) propto L(acc)^0.35. Type 2 AGN detected at 250um show on average higher L(SB) than type 1 objects but their number is still too low to establish whether this trend indicates stronger star-formation activity.


Nature | 2012

The suppression of star formation by powerful active galactic nuclei.

M. J. Page; M. Symeonidis; J. D. Vieira; B. Altieri; A. Amblard; V. Arumugam; H. Aussel; T. Babbedge; A. W. Blain; J. J. Bock; A. Boselli; V. Buat; N. Castro-Rodriguez; A. Cava; P. Chanial; D. L. Clements; A. Conley; L. Conversi; A. Cooray; C. D. Dowell; E. N. Dubois; James Dunlop; Eli Dwek; Simon Dye; Stephen Anthony Eales; David Elbaz; D. Farrah; M. Fox; A. Franceschini; Walter Kieran Gear

The old, red stars that constitute the bulges of galaxies, and the massive black holes at their centres, are the relics of a period in cosmic history when galaxies formed stars at remarkable rates and active galactic nuclei (AGN) shone brightly as a result of accretion onto black holes. It is widely suspected, but unproved, that the tight correlation between the mass of the black hole and the mass of the stellar bulge results from the AGN quenching the surrounding star formation as it approaches its peak luminosity. X-rays trace emission from AGN unambiguously, whereas powerful star-forming galaxies are usually dust-obscured and are brightest at infrared and submillimetre wavelengths. Here we report submillimetre and X-ray observations that show that rapid star formation was common in the host galaxies of AGN when the Universe was 2–6 billion years old, but that the most vigorous star formation is not observed around black holes above an X-ray luminosity of 1044 ergs per second. This suppression of star formation in the host galaxy of a powerful AGN is a key prediction of models in which the AGN drives an outflow, expelling the interstellar medium of its host and transforming the galaxy’s properties in a brief period of cosmic time.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

HerMES: deep number counts at 250 μm, 350 μm and 500 μm in the COSMOS and GOODS-N fields and the build-up of the cosmic infrared background

M. Béthermin; E. Le Floc'h; O. Ilbert; A. Conley; G. Lagache; A. Amblard; V. Arumugam; H. Aussel; S. Berta; J. J. Bock; A. Boselli; V. Buat; Caitlin M. Casey; N. Castro-Rodríguez; A. Cava; D. L. Clements; A. Cooray; C. D. Dowell; Stephen Anthony Eales; D. Farrah; A. Franceschini; J. Glenn; Matthew Joseph Griffin; E. Hatziminaoglou; S. Heinis; E. Ibar; R. J. Ivison; J. S. Kartaltepe; L. Levenson; G. Magdis

Aims. The Spectral and Photometric Imaging REceiver (SPIRE) onboard the Herschel space telescope has provided confusion limited maps of deep fields at 250 μm, 350 μm, and 500 μm, as part of the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES). Unfortunately, due to confusion, only a small fraction of the cosmic infrared background (CIB) can be resolved into individually-detected sources. Our goal is to produce deep galaxy number counts and redshift distributions below the confusion limit at SPIRE wavelengths (~20 mJy), which we then use to place strong constraints on the origins of the cosmic infrared background and on models of galaxy evolution. Methods. We individually extracted the bright SPIRE sources (>20 mJy) in the COSMOS field with a method using the positions, the flux densities, and the redshifts of the 24 μm sources as a prior, and derived the number counts and redshift distributions of the bright SPIRE sources. For fainter SPIRE sources (<20 mJy), we reconstructed the number counts and the redshift distribution below the confusion limit using the deep 24 μm catalogs associated with photometric redshift and information provided by the stacking of these sources into the deep SPIRE maps of the GOODS-N and COSMOS fields. 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. Results. 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 5σ confusion limit. Our measurements place tight constraints on source population models. None of the pre-existing models are able to reproduce our results at better than 3-σ. 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_(-2.3)^(+2.6) nW m^(-2) sr^(-1), 6.5_(-1.6)^(+1.7) nW m^(-2) sr^(-1), and 2.8_(-0.8)^(+0.9) nW m^(-2) sr^(-1) at 250 μm, 350 μm, and 500 μm, respectively. These values agree well with FIRAS absolute measurements, suggesting our number counts and their extrapolation are sufficient to explain the CIB. We find that half of the CIB is emitted at z = 1.04, 1.20, and 1.25, respectively. Finally, combining our results with other works, we estimate the energy budget contained in the CIB between 8 μm and 1000 μm: 26_(-3)^(+7) nW m^(-2) sr^(-1).


web science | 2010

The Herschel Multi-Tiered Extragalactic Survey: source extraction and cross-identifications in confusion-dominated SPIRE images

Seb Oliver; Martin Kunz; B. Altieri; A. Amblard; V. Arumugam; Robbie Richard Auld; H. Aussel; T. Babbedge; M. Béthermin; A. W. Blain; James J. Bock; A. Boselli; D. Brisbin; V. Buat; D. Burgarella; N. Castro-Rodriguez; A. Cava; P. Chanial; Edward L. Chapin; D. L. Clements; A. Conley; L. Conversi; A. Cooray; C. D. Dowell; E. Dwek; S. Dye; Stephen Anthony Eales; D. Elbaz; D. Farrah; M. Fox

We present the cross-identification and source photometry techniques used to process Herschel SPIRE imaging taken as part of the Herschel Multi-Tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES). Cross-identifications are performed in map-space so as to minimize source-blending effects. We make use of a combination of linear inversion and model selection techniques to produce reliable cross-identification catalogues based on Spitzer MIPS 24-mu m source positions. Testing on simulations and real Herschel observations shows that this approach gives robust results for even the faintest sources (S-250 similar to 10 mJy). We apply our new technique to HerMES SPIRE observations taken as part of the science demonstration phase of Herschel. For our real SPIRE observations, we show that, for bright unconfused sources, our flux density estimates are in good agreement with those produced via more traditional point source detection methods (SUSSEXtractor) by Smith et al. When compared to the measured number density of sources in the SPIRE bands, we show that our method allows the recovery of a larger fraction of faint sources than these traditional methods. However, this completeness is heavily dependent on the relative depth of the existing 24-mu m catalogues and SPIRE imaging. Using our deepest multiwavelength data set in the GOODS-N, we estimate that the use of shallow 24-mu m catalogues in our other fields introduces an incompleteness at faint levels of between 20-40 per cent at 250 mu m.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

HerMES: deep galaxy number counts from a P(D) fluctuation analysis of SPIRE Science Demonstration Phase observations

J. Glenn; A. Conley; M. Béthermin; B. Altieri; A. Amblard; V. Arumugam; H. Aussel; T. Babbedge; A. W. Blain; James J. Bock; A. Boselli; V. Buat; N. Castro-Rodríguez; A. Cava; P. Chanial; D. L. Clements; L. Conversi; A. Cooray; C. D. Dowell; Eli Dwek; Stephen Anthony Eales; D. Elbaz; T. P. Ellsworth-Bowers; M. Fox; A. Franceschini; Walter Kieran Gear; Matthew Joseph Griffin; M. Halpern; Evanthia Hatziminaoglou; E. Ibar

Dusty, star-forming galaxies contribute to a bright, currently unresolved cosmic far-infrared background. Deep Herschel-Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (SPIRE) images designed to detect and characterize the galaxies that comprise this background are highly confused, such that the bulk lies below the classical confusion limit. We analyse three fields from the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES) programme in all three SPIRE bands (250, 350 and 500 μm); parametrized galaxy number count models are derived to a depth of ~2 mJy beam^(−1), approximately four times the depth of previous analyses at these wavelengths, using a probability of deflection [P(D)] approach for comparison to theoretical number count models. Our fits account for 64, 60 and 43 per cent of the far-infrared background in the three bands. The number counts are consistent with those based on individually detected SPIRE sources, but generally inconsistent with most galaxy number count models, which generically overpredict the number of bright galaxies and are not as steep as the P(D)-derived number counts. Clear evidence is found for a break in the slope of the differential number counts at low flux densities. Systematic effects in the P(D) analysis are explored. We find that the effects of clustering have a small impact on the data, and the largest identified systematic error arises from uncertainties in the SPIRE beam.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Herschel-ATLAS: Dust Temperature and Redshift Distribution of SPIRE and PACS Detected Sources Using Submillimetre Colours

A. Amblard; A. Cooray; Paolo Serra; P. Temi; Elizabeth J. Barton; M. Negrello; Robbie Richard Auld; M. Baes; Ivan K. Baldry; Steven P. Bamford; A. W. Blain; J. J. Bock; D. G. Bonfield; D. Burgarella; S. Buttiglione; E. Cameron; A. Cava; D. L. Clements; Scott M. Croom; Aliakbar Dariush; G. De Zotti; Simon P. Driver; James Dunlop; Loretta Dunne; Simon Dye; Stephen Anthony Eales; David T. Frayer; J. Fritz; Jonathan P. Gardner; J. González-Nuevo

We present colour-colour diagrams of detected sources in the Herschel-ATLAS science demonstration field from 100 to 500 mu m using both PACS and SPIRE. We fit isothermal modified black bodies to the spectral energy distribution (SED) to extract the dust temperature of sources with counterparts in Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) or SDSS surveys with either a spectroscopic or a photometric redshift. For a subsample of 330 sources detected in at least three FIR bands with a significance greater than 3 sigma, we find an average dust temperature of (28 +/- 8) K. For sources with no known redshift, we populate the colour-colour diagram with a large number of SEDs generated with a broad range of dust temperatures and emissivity parameters, and compare to colours of observed sources to establish the redshift distribution of this sample. For another subsample of 1686 sources with fluxes above 35 mJy at 350 mu m and detected at 250 and 500 mu m with a significance greater than 3s, we find an average redshift of 2.2 +/- 0.6.

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A. Cooray

University of California

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A. Cava

University of Geneva

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A. W. Blain

University of Leicester

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D. Burgarella

Aix-Marseille University

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A. Conley

University of Colorado Boulder

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C. D. Dowell

California Institute of Technology

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J. J. Bock

California Institute of Technology

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V. Buat

Aix-Marseille University

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P. Chanial

Imperial College London

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