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Dive into the research topics where A. Kathy Romer is active.

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Featured researches published by A. Kathy Romer.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2003

Galaxy Star Formation as a Function of Environment in the Early Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey

Percy Luis Gomez; Robert C. Nichol; Christopher J. Miller; Michael L. Balogh; Tomotsugu Goto; Ann I. Zabludoff; A. Kathy Romer; Mariangela Bernardi; Ravi K. Sheth; Andrew M. Hopkins; Francisco J. Castander; Andrew J. Connolly; Donald P. Schneider; J. Brinkmann; D. Q. Lamb; Mark SubbaRao; Donald G. York

We study the galaxy star formation rate (SFR) as a function of environment using the SDSS EDR data. We nd that the SFR is depressed in dense environments (clusters and groups) compared to the eld. We nd that the suppression of the SFR starts to be noticeable at around 4 virial radii. We nd no evidence for SF triggering as galaxies fall into the clusters. We also present a project to study these eects in cluster pairs systems where the eects of lamen ts and large scale structure may be noticeable.


The Astronomical Journal | 2008

The Sloan Digital Sky Survey - II:supernova survey: technical summary

Joshua A. Frieman; Bruce A. Bassett; Andrew Cameron Becker; Changsu Choi; D. Cinabro; F. DeJongh; D. L. DePoy; Ben Dilday; Mamoru Doi; Peter Marcus Garnavich; Craig J. Hogan; Jon A. Holtzman; Myungshin Im; Saurabh W. Jha; Richard Kessler; Kohki Konishi; Hubert Lampeitl; John P. Marriner; J. L. Marshall; David P. McGinnis; Gajus A. Miknaitis; Robert C. Nichol; Jose Luis Palacio Prieto; Adam G. Riess; Michael W. Richmond; Roger W. Romani; Masao Sako; Donald P. Schneider; Mathew Smith; Naohiro Takanashi

The Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II (SDSS-II) has embarked on a multi-year project to identify and measure light curves for intermediate-redshift (0.05 < z < 0.35) Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) using repeated five-band (ugriz) imaging over an area of 300 sq. deg. The survey region is a stripe 2.5° wide centered on the celestial equator in the Southern Galactic Cap that has been imaged numerous times in earlier years, enabling construction of a deep reference image for the discovery of new objects. Supernova imaging observations are being acquired between September 1 and November 30 of 2005-7. During the first two seasons, each region was imaged on average every five nights. Spectroscopic follow-up observations to determine supernova type and redshift are carried out on a large number of telescopes. In its first two three-month seasons, the survey has discovered and measured light curves for 327 spectroscopically confirmed SNe Ia, 30 probable SNe Ia, 14 confirmed SNe Ib/c, 32 confirmed SNe II, plus a large number of photometrically identified SNe Ia, 94 of which have host-galaxy spectra taken so far. This paper provides an overview of the project and briefly describes the observations completed during the first two seasons of operation.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Galaxy Zoo: Passive Red Spirals .

Karen L. Masters; Moein Mosleh; A. Kathy Romer; Robert C. Nichol; Steven P. Bamford; Kevin Schawinski; Chris Lintott; Dan Andreescu; Heather Campbell; Ben Crowcroft; Isabelle Doyle; Edward M. Edmondson; Phil Murray; M. Jordan Raddick; Anÿze Slosar; Alexander S. Szalay; Jan Vandenberg

We study the spectroscopic properties and environments of red (or passive) spiral galaxies found by the Galaxy Zoo project. By carefully selecting face-on disc-dominated spirals, we construct a sample of truly passive discs (i.e. they are not dust reddened spirals, nor are they dominated by old stellar populations in a bulge). As such, our red spirals represent an interesting set of possible transition objects between normal blue spiral galaxies and red early types, making up ∼6 per cent of late-type spirals. We use optical images and spectra from Sloan Digital Sky Survey to investigate the physical processes which could have turned these objects red without disturbing their morphology. We find red spirals preferentially in intermediate density regimes. However, there are no obvious correlations between red spiral properties and environment suggesting that environment alone is not sufficient to determine whether a galaxy will become a red spiral. Red spirals are a very small fraction of all spirals at low masses (M★ < 1010 M⊙), but are a significant fraction of the spiral population at large stellar masses showing that massive galaxies are red independent of morphology. We confirm that as expected, red spirals have older stellar populations and less recent star formation than the main spiral population. While the presence of spiral arms suggests that a major star formation could not have ceased a long ago (not more than a few Gyr), we show that these are also not recent post-starburst objects (having had no significant star formation in the last Gyr), so star formation must have ceased gradually. Intriguingly, red spirals are roughly four times as likely than the normal spiral population to host optically identified Seyfert/low-ionization nuclear emission region (LINER; at a given stellar mass and even accounting for low-luminosity lines hidden by star formation), with most of the difference coming from the objects with LINER-like emission. We also find a curiously large optical bar fraction in the red spirals (70 ± 5 verses 27 ± 5 per cent in blue spirals) suggesting that the cessation of star formation and bar instabilities in spirals are strongly correlated. We conclude by discussing the possible origins of these red spirals. We suggest that they may represent the very oldest spiral galaxies which have already used up their reserves of gas – probably aided by strangulation or starvation, and perhaps also by the effect of bar instabilities moving material around in the disc. We provide an online table listing our full sample of red spirals along with the normal/blue spirals used for comparison.


Nature | 2009

Early assembly of the most massive galaxies

Chris A. Collins; John P. Stott; Matt Hilton; Scott T. Kay; S. Adam Stanford; M. Davidson; Mark Hosmer; Ben Hoyle; Andrew R. Liddle; Ed Lloyd-Davies; Robert G. Mann; Nicola Mehrtens; Christopher J. Miller; Robert C. Nichol; A. Kathy Romer; Martin Sahlén; Pedro T. P. Viana; Michael J. West

The current consensus is that galaxies begin as small density fluctuations in the early Universe and grow by in situ star formation and hierarchical merging. Stars begin to form relatively quickly in sub-galactic-sized building blocks called haloes which are subsequently assembled into galaxies. However, exactly when this assembly takes place is a matter of some debate. Here we report that the stellar masses of brightest cluster galaxies, which are the most luminous objects emitting stellar light, some 9 billion years ago are not significantly different from their stellar masses today. Brightest cluster galaxies are almost fully assembled 4-5 billion years after the Big Bang, having grown to more than 90 per cent of their final stellar mass by this time. Our data conflict with the most recent galaxy formation models based on the largest simulations of dark-matter halo development. These models predict protracted formation of brightest cluster galaxies over a Hubble time, with only 22 per cent of the stellar mass assembled at the epoch probed by our sample. Our findings suggest a new picture in which brightest cluster galaxies experience an early period of rapid growth rather than prolonged hierarchical assembly.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

THE XMM CLUSTER SURVEY: ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI AND STARBURST GALAXIES IN XMMXCS J2215.9-1738 AT z=1.46

Matt Hilton; E. D. Lloyd-Davies; S. Adam Stanford; John P. Stott; Chris A. Collins; A. Kathy Romer; Mark Hosmer; Ben Hoyle; Scott T. Kay; Andrew R. Liddle; Nicola Mehrtens; Christopher J. Miller; Martin Sahlén; Pedro T. P. Viana

We use Chandra X-ray and Spitzer infrared (IR) observations to explore the active galactic nucleus (AGN) and starburst populations of XMMXCS J2215.9-1738 at z = 1.46, one of the most distant spectroscopically confirmed galaxy clusters known. The high-resolution X-ray imaging reveals that the cluster emission is contaminated by point sources that were not resolved in XMM-Newton observations of the system, and have the effect of hardening the spectrum, leading to the previously reported temperature for this system being overestimated. From a joint spectroscopic analysis of the Chandra and XMM-Newton data, the cluster is found to have temperature T = 4.1(-0.9)(+0.6) keV and luminosity LX = (2.92(-0.35)(+0.24)) x 1044 erg s(-1), extrapolated to a radius of 2 Mpc. As a result of this revised analysis, the cluster is found to lie on the sigma(v)-T relation, but the cluster remains less luminous than would be expected from self-similar evolution of the local L-X-T relation. Two of the newly discovered X-ray AGNs are cluster members, while a third object, which is also a prominent 24 mu m source, is found to have properties consistent with it being a high-redshift, highly obscured object in the background. We find a total of eight > 5 sigma 24 mu m sources associated with cluster members (four spectroscopically confirmed and four selected using photometric redshifts) and one additional 24 mu m source with two possible optical/near-IR counterparts that may be associated with the cluster. Examining the Infrared Array Camera colors of these sources, we find that one object is likely to be an AGN. Assuming that the other 24 mu m sources are powered by star formation, their IR luminosities imply star formation rates similar to 100 M-circle dot yr(-1). We find that three of these sources are located at projected distances of <250 kpc from the cluster center, suggesting that a large amount of star formation may be taking place in the cluster core, in contrast to clusters at low redshift.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

The XMM Cluster Survey: X‐ray analysis methodology

Edward Lloyd-Davies; A. Kathy Romer; Nicola Mehrtens; Mark Hosmer; M. Davidson; Kivanc Sabirli; Robert G. Mann; Matt Hilton; Andrew R. Liddle; Pedro T. P. Viana; Heather Campbell; Chris A. Collins; E. Naomi Dubois; Peter E. Freeman; Craig D. Harrison; Ben Hoyle; Scott T. Kay; Emma Kuwertz; Christopher J. Miller; Robert C. Nichol; Martin Sahlén; S. A. Stanford; John P. Stott

The XMM Cluster Survey (XCS) is a serendipitous search for galaxy clusters using all publicly available data in the XMM-Newton Science Archive. Its main aims are to measure cosmological parameters and trace the evolution of X-ray scaling relations. In this paper we describe the data processing methodology applied to the 5776 XMM observations used to construct the current XCS source catalogue. A total of 3675 > 4σ cluster candidates with >50 background-subtracted X-ray counts are extracted from a total non-overlapping area suitable for cluster searching of 410 deg2. Of these, 993 candidates are detected with >300 background-subtracted X-ray photon counts, and we demonstrate that robust temperature measurements can be obtained down to this count limit. We describe in detail the automated pipelines used to perform the spectral and surface brightness fitting for these candidates, as well as to estimate redshifts from the X-ray data alone. A total of 587 (122) X-ray temperatures to a typical accuracy of <40 (<10) per cent have been measured to date. We also present the methodology adopted for determining the selection function of the survey, and show that the extended source detection algorithm is robust to a range of cluster morphologies by inserting mock clusters derived from hydrodynamical simulations into real XMMimages. These tests show that the simple isothermal β-profiles is sufficient to capture the essential details of the cluster population detected in the archival XMM observations. The redshift follow-up of the XCS cluster sample is presented in a companion paper, together with a first data release of 503 optically confirmed clusters.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

The XMM Cluster Survey: The Dynamical State of XMMXCS J2215.9-1738 at z = 1.457

Matt Hilton; Chris A. Collins; S. Adam Stanford; C. Lidman; Kyle S. Dawson; M. Davidson; Scott T. Kay; Andrew R. Liddle; Robert G. Mann; Christopher J. Miller; Robert C. Nichol; A. Kathy Romer; Kivanc Sabirli; Pedro T. P. Viana; Michael J. West

We present new spectroscopic observations of the most distant X-ray-selected galaxy cluster currently known, XMMXCS J2215.9-1738 at z = 1.457, obtained with the DEIMOS instrument at the W. M. Keck Observatory and the FORS2 instrument on the ESO Very Large Telescope. Within the cluster virial radius, as estimated from the cluster X-ray properties, we increase the number of known spectroscopic cluster members to 17 objects, and calculate the line-of-sight velocity dispersion of the cluster to be 580 ± 140 km s-1. We find mild evidence that the velocity distribution of galaxies within the virial radius deviates from a single Gaussian. We show that the properties of J2215.9-1738 are inconsistent with self-similar evolution of local X-ray scaling relations, finding that the cluster is underluminous given its X-ray temperature, and that the intracluster medium contains ~2-3 times the kinetic energy per unit mass of the cluster galaxies. These results can perhaps be explained if the cluster is observed in the aftermath of an off-axis merger. Alternatively, heating of the intracluster medium through supernovae and/or active galactic nucleus activity, as is required to explain the observed slope of the local X-ray luminosity-temperature relation, may be responsible.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

The XMM Cluster Survey: The Stellar Mass Assembly of Fossil Galaxies

Craig D. Harrison; Christopher J. Miller; Joseph W. Richards; Edward Lloyd-Davies; Ben Hoyle; A. Kathy Romer; Nicola Mehrtens; Matt Hilton; John P. Stott; D. Capozzi; Chris A. Collins; Paul James Deadman; Andrew R. Liddle; Martin Sahlén; S. Adam Stanford; Pedro T. P. Viana

This paper presents both the result of a search for fossil systems (FSs) within the XMM Cluster Survey and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and the results of a study of the stellar mass assembly and stellar populations of their fossil galaxies. In total, 17 groups and clusters are identified at z < 0.25 with large magnitude gaps between the first and fourth brightest galaxies. All the information necessary to classify these systems as fossils is provided. For both groups and clusters, the total and fractional luminosity of the brightest galaxy is positively correlated with the magnitude gap. The brightest galaxies in FSs (called fossil galaxies) have stellar populations and star formation histories which are similar to normal brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs). However, at fixed group/cluster mass, the stellar masses of the fossil galaxies are larger compared to normal BCGs, a fact that holds true over a wide range of group/cluster masses. Moreover, the fossil galaxies are found to contain a significant fraction of the total optical luminosity of the group/cluster within 0.5 R 200, as much as 85%, compared to the non-fossils, which can have as little as 10%. Our results suggest that FSs formed early and in the highest density regions of the universe and that fossil galaxies represent the end products of galaxy mergers in groups and clusters.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

The XMM Cluster Survey

Edward Lloyd-Davies; A. Kathy Romer; Nicola Mehrtens; Mark Hosmer; M. Davidson; Kivanc Sabirli; Robert G. Mann; Matt Hilton; Andrew R. Liddle; Pedro T. P. Viana; Heather Campbell; Chris A. Collins; E. Naomi Dubois; Peter E. Freeman; Craig D. Harrison; Ben Hoyle; Scott T. Kay; Emma Kuwertz; Christopher J. Miller; Robert C. Nichol; Martin Sahlén; S. A. Stanford; John P. Stott

The XMM Cluster Survey (XCS) is a serendipitous search for galaxy clusters using all publicly available data in the XMM-Newton Science Archive. Its main aims are to measure cosmological parameters and trace the evolution of X-ray scaling relations. In this paper we describe the data processing methodology applied to the 5776 XMM observations used to construct the current XCS source catalogue. A total of 3675 > 4σ cluster candidates with >50 background-subtracted X-ray counts are extracted from a total non-overlapping area suitable for cluster searching of 410 deg2. Of these, 993 candidates are detected with >300 background-subtracted X-ray photon counts, and we demonstrate that robust temperature measurements can be obtained down to this count limit. We describe in detail the automated pipelines used to perform the spectral and surface brightness fitting for these candidates, as well as to estimate redshifts from the X-ray data alone. A total of 587 (122) X-ray temperatures to a typical accuracy of <40 (<10) per cent have been measured to date. We also present the methodology adopted for determining the selection function of the survey, and show that the extended source detection algorithm is robust to a range of cluster morphologies by inserting mock clusters derived from hydrodynamical simulations into real XMMimages. These tests show that the simple isothermal β-profiles is sufficient to capture the essential details of the cluster population detected in the archival XMM observations. The redshift follow-up of the XCS cluster sample is presented in a companion paper, together with a first data release of 503 optically confirmed clusters.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2009

The XMM Cluster Survey: forecasting cosmological and cluster scaling‐relation parameter constraints

Martin Sahlén; Pedro T. P. Viana; Andrew R. Liddle; A. Kathy Romer; M. Davidson; Mark Hosmer; Ed Lloyd-Davies; Kivanc Sabirli; Chris A. Collins; Peter E. Freeman; Matt Hilton; Ben Hoyle; Scott T. Kay; Robert G. Mann; Nicola Mehrtens; Christopher J. Miller; Robert C. Nichol; S. Adam Stanford; Michael J. West

We forecast the constraints on the values of s8, Om and cluster scaling-relation parameters which we expect to obtain from the XMM Cluster Survey (XCS). We assume a flat cold dark matter Universe and perform a Monte Carlo Markov Chain analysis of the evolution of the number density of galaxy clusters that takes into account a detailed simulated selection function. Comparing our current observed number of clusters shows good agreement with predictions. We determine the expected degradation of the constraints as a result of self-calibrating the luminositytemperature relation (with scatter), including temperature measurement errors, and relying on photometric methods for the estimation of galaxy cluster redshifts. We examine the effects of systematic errors in scaling relation and measurement error assumptions. Using only (T, z) self-calibration, we expect to measure Om to 0.03 (and O to the same accuracy assuming flatness), and s8 to 0.05, also constraining the normalization and slope of the luminositytemperature relation to 6 and 13 per cent (at 1s), respectively, in the process. Self-calibration fails to jointly constrain the scatter and redshift evolution of the luminositytemperature relation significantly. Additional archival and/or follow-up data will improve on this. We do not expect measurement errors or imperfect knowledge of their distribution to degrade constraints significantly. Scaling-relation systematics can easily lead to cosmological constraints 2s or more away from the fiducial model. Our treatment is the first exact treatment to this level of detail, and introduces a new `smoothed ML (Maximum Likelihood) estimate of expected constraints.

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Chris A. Collins

Liverpool John Moores University

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Matt Hilton

University of KwaZulu-Natal

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Scott T. Kay

University of Manchester

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