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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2007

The UKIRT infrared deep sky survey (UKIDSS)

A. Lawrence; S. J. Warren; Omar Almaini; A. C. Edge; Nigel Hambly; R. F. Jameson; Philip W. Lucas; M. Casali; A. J. Adamson; Simon Dye; James P. Emerson; S. Foucaud; Paul C. Hewett; Paul Hirst; Simon T. Hodgkin; M. J. Irwin; N. Lodieu; Richard G. McMahon; Chris Simpson; Ian Smail; D. Mortlock; M. Folger

Final published version including significant revisions. Twenty four pages, fourteen figures. Original version April 2006; final version published in MNRAS August 2007


Nature | 1998

High-redshift star formation in the Hubble Deep Field revealed by a submillimetre-wavelength survey

David H. Hughes; S. Serjeant; James Dunlop; Michael Rowan-Robinson; A. W. Blain; Robert G. Mann; R. J. Ivison; J. A. Peacock; A. Efstathiou; Walter Kieran Gear; Seb Oliver; A. Lawrence; Malcolm Longair; Pippa Goldschmidt; Tim Jenness

The advent of sensitive sub-mm array cameras now allows a proper census of dust-enshrouded massive star-formation in very distant galaxies, previously hidden activity to which even the faintest optical images are insensitive. We present the deepest sub-mm survey of the sky to date, taken with the SCUBA camera on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope and centred on the Hubble Deep Field. The high source density found in this image implies that the survey is confusion-limited below a flux density of 2 mJy. However, within the central 80 arcsec radius independent analyses yield 5 reproducible sources with S(850um) > 2 mJy which simulations indicate can be ascribed to individual galaxies. We give positions and flux densities for these, and furthermore show using multi-frequency photometric data that the brightest sources in our map lie at redshifts z~3. These results lead to integral source counts which are completely inconsistent with a no-evolution model, and imply that massive star-formation activity continues at redshifts > 2. The combined brightness of the 5 most secure sources in our map is sufficient to account for 30 - 50% of the previously unresolved sub-mm background, and we estimate statistically that the entire background is resolved at about the 0.3 mJy level. Finally we discuss possible optical identifications and redshift estimates for the brightest sources. One source appears to be associated with an extreme starburst galaxy at z~1, whilst the remaining four appear to lie in the redshift range 2 < z < 4. This implies a star-formation density over this redshift range that is at least five times higher than that inferred from the ultraviolet output of HDF galaxies.In the local Universe, most galaxies are dominated by stars, with less than ten per cent of their visible mass in the form of gas. Determining when most of these stars formed is one of the central issues of observational cosmology. Optical and ultraviolet observations of high-redshift galaxies (particularly those in the Hubble Deep Field) have been interpreted as indicating that the peak of star formation occurred between redshifts of 1 and 1.5. But it is known that star formation takes place in dense clouds, and is often hidden at optical wavelengths because of extinction by dust in the clouds. Here we report a deep submillimetre-wavelength survey of the Hubble Deep Field; these wavelengths trace directly the emission from dust that has been warmed by massive star-formation activity. The combined radiation of the five most significant detections accounts for 30–50 per cent of the previously unresolved background emission in this area. Four of these sources appear to be galaxies in the redshift range 2< z < 4, which, assuming these objects have properties comparable to local dust-enshrouded starburst galaxies, implies a star-formation rate during that period about a factor of five higher than that inferred from the optical and ultraviolet observations.


Nature | 2011

A luminous quasar at a redshift of z = 7.085

D. Mortlock; Stephen J. Warren; B. P. Venemans; M. Patel; Paul C. Hewett; Richard G. McMahon; Chris Simpson; Tom Theuns; Eduardo Gonzales-Solares; A. J. Adamson; Simon Dye; Nigel Hambly; Paul Hirst; M. J. Irwin; Ernst Kuiper; A. Lawrence; Huub Röttgering

The intergalactic medium was not completely reionized until approximately a billion years after the Big Bang, as revealed by observations of quasars with redshifts of less than 6.5. It has been difficult to probe to higher redshifts, however, because quasars have historically been identified in optical surveys, which are insensitive to sources at redshifts exceeding 6.5. Here we report observations of a quasar (ULAS J112001.48+064124.3) at a redshift of 7.085, which is 0.77 billion years after the Big Bang. ULAS J1120+0641 has a luminosity of 6.3 × 1013L⊙ and hosts a black hole with a mass of 2 × 109M⊙ (where L⊙ and M⊙ are the luminosity and mass of the Sun). The measured radius of the ionized near zone around ULAS J1120+0641 is 1.9 megaparsecs, a factor of three smaller than is typical for quasars at redshifts between 6.0 and 6.4. The near-zone transmission profile is consistent with a Lyα damping wing, suggesting that the neutral fraction of the intergalactic medium in front of ULAS J1120+0641 exceeded 0.1.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2001

The SuperCOSMOS Sky Survey – I. Introduction and description

Nigel Hambly; H. T. MacGillivray; Mike Read; S. B. Tritton; E. B. Thomson; B. D. Kelly; D. H. Morgan; Rodney Smith; Simon P. Driver; J. Williamson; Q. A. Parker; M. R. S. Hawkins; P. M. Williams; A. Lawrence

In this, the first in a series of three papers concerning the SuperCOSMOS Sky Survey (SSS), we give an introduction and user guide to the survey programme. We briefly describe other wide-field surveys and compare them with our own. We give examples of the data, and make a comparison of the accuracies of the various image parameters available with those from the other surveys providing similar data; we show that the SSS data base and interface offer advantages over these surveys. Some science applications of the data are also described and some limitations discussed. The series of three papers constitutes a comprehensive description and user guide for the SSS.


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.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2008

The WFCAM Science Archive

Nigel Hambly; Ross Collins; N. J. G. Cross; Robert G. Mann; Mike Read; Eckhard Sutorius; I. A. Bond; J. Bryant; James P. Emerson; A. Lawrence; L. Rimoldini; Jonathan M. Stewart; P. M. Williams; A. J. Adamson; Paul Hirst; S. Dye; S. J. Warren

We describe the WFCAM Science Archive, which is the primary point of access for users of data from the wide-field infrared camera WFCAM on the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT), especially science catalogue products from the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey. We describe the database design with emphasis on those aspects of the system that enable users to fully exploit the survey data sets in a variety of different ways. We give details of the database-driven curation applications that take data from the standard nightly pipeline-processed and calibrated files for the production of science-ready survey data sets. We describe the fundamentals of querying relational databases with a set of astronomy usage examples, and illustrate the results.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2002

The SCUBA 8-mJy survey — I. Submillimetre maps, sources and number counts

S. E. Scott; M. Fox; James Dunlop; S. Serjeant; J. A. Peacock; Rob J. Ivison; Seb Oliver; Robert G. Mann; A. Lawrence; A. Efstathiou; M. Rowan-Robinson; David H. Hughes; E. N. Archibald; A. W. Blain; Malcolm Longair

We present maps, source lists and derived number counts from the largest, unbiased, extragalactic submillimetre (submm) survey so far undertaken with the SCUBA camera on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). Our maps are located in two regions of sky (ELAIS N2 and Lockman-Hole E) and cover 260arcmin2 , to a typical rms noise level of sigma 850 ~=2.5mJybeam-1 . We have reduced the data using both the standard JCMT surf procedures, and our own IDL -based pipeline which produces zero-footprint maps and noise images. The uncorrelated noise maps produced by the latter approach have enabled us to apply a maximum likelihood method to measure the statistical significance of each peak in our maps, leading to properly quantified errors on the flux density of all potential sources. We detect 19 sources with signal-to-noise ratios (S/N)>4, and 38 with S/N>3.5. To assess both the completeness of this survey and the impact of source confusion as a function of flux density, we have applied our source-extraction algorithm to a series of simulated images. The result is a new estimate of the submm source counts over the flux-density range S 850 ~=5-15mJy, which we compare with estimates derived by other workers, and with the predictions of a number of models. Our best estimate of the cumulative source count at S 850 >8mJy is per square degree. Assuming that the majority of sources lie at z >1.5, this result implies that the comoving number density of high-redshift galaxies forming stars at a rate in excess of 1000Msolar yr-1 is ~=10-5 Mpc-3 , with only a weak dependence on the precise redshift distribution. This number density corresponds to the number density of massive ellipticals with L >3-4L * in the present-day Universe , and is also the same as the comoving number density of comparably massive, passively evolving objects in the redshift band 1<z <2 inferred from recent surveys of extremely red objects. Thus the bright submm sources uncovered by this survey can plausibly account for the formation of all present-day massive ellipticals. Improved redshift constraints, and ultimately an improved measure of submm source clustering can refine or refute this picture.


Nature | 2012

An ultraviolet-optical flare from the tidal disruption of a helium-rich stellar core.

S. Gezari; Ryan Chornock; Armin Rest; M. Huber; Karl Forster; Edo Berger; Peter J. Challis; James D. Neill; D. C. Martin; Timothy M. Heckman; A. Lawrence; Colin Norman; Gautham S. Narayan; Ryan J. Foley; G. H. Marion; D. Scolnic; Laura Chomiuk; Alicia M. Soderberg; K. W. Smith; Robert P. Kirshner; Adam G. Riess; S. J. Smartt; Christopher W. Stubbs; John L. Tonry; William Michael Wood-Vasey; W. S. Burgett; K. C. Chambers; T. Grav; J. N. Heasley; N. Kaiser

The flare of radiation from the tidal disruption and accretion of a star can be used as a marker for supermassive black holes that otherwise lie dormant and undetected in the centres of distant galaxies. Previous candidate flares have had declining light curves in good agreement with expectations, but with poor constraints on the time of disruption and the type of star disrupted, because the rising emission was not observed. Recently, two ‘relativistic’ candidate tidal disruption events were discovered, each of whose extreme X-ray luminosity and synchrotron radio emission were interpreted as the onset of emission from a relativistic jet. Here we report a luminous ultraviolet–optical flare from the nuclear region of an inactive galaxy at a redshift of 0.1696. The observed continuum is cooler than expected for a simple accreting debris disk, but the well-sampled rise and decay of the light curve follow the predicted mass accretion rate and can be modelled to determine the time of disruption to an accuracy of two days. The black hole has a mass of about two million solar masses, modulo a factor dependent on the mass and radius of the star disrupted. On the basis of the spectroscopic signature of ionized helium from the unbound debris, we determine that the disrupted star was a helium-rich stellar core.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 1997

Observations of the Hubble Deep Field with the Infrared Space Observatory V. Spectral energy distributions starburst models and star formation history

M. Rowan-Robinson; Robert G. Mann; Seb Oliver; A. Efstathiou; N. Eaton; Pippa Goldschmidt; B. Mobasher; S. Serjeant; T. J. Sumner; L. Danese; D. Elbaz; Alberto Franceschini; E. Egami; M. Kontizas; A. Lawrence; Richard McMahon; H. U. Nørgaard-Nielsen; I. Perez-Fournon; J. I. González-Serrano

We have modelled the spectral energy distributions of the 13 HDF galaxies reliably detected by ISO. For 2 galaxies the emission detected by ISO is consistent with being starlight or the infrared ’cirrus’ in the galaxies. For the remaining 11 galaxies there is a clear mid-infrared excess, which we interpret as emission from dust associated with a strong starburst. 10 of these galaxies are spirals or interacting pairs, while the remaining one is an elliptical with a prominent nucleus and broad emission lines. We give a new discussion of how the star formation rate can be deduced from the far infrared luminosity and derive star formation rates for these galaxies of 8-1000 φM⊙ per yr, where φ takes account of the uncertainty in the initial mass function. The HDF galaxies detected by ISO are clearly forming stars at a prodigious rate compared with nearby normal galaxies. We discuss the implications of our detections for the history of star and heavy element formation in the universe. Although uncertainties in the calibration, reliability of source detection, associations, and starburst models remain, it is clear that dust plays an important role in star formation out to redshift 1 at least.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2006

The UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey Early Data Release

Simon Dye; S. J. Warren; Nigel Hambly; N. J. G. Cross; S. T. Hodgkin; M. J. Irwin; A. Lawrence; A. J. Adamson; Omar Almaini; A. C. Edge; Paul Hirst; R. F. Jameson; P. W. Lucas; C. van Breukelen; J. Bryant; Mark M. Casali; Ross Collins; Gavin B. Dalton; Jonathan Ivor Davies; C. J. Davis; James P. Emerson; D. W. Evans; S. Foucaud; E. Gonzales-Solares; Paul C. Hewett; Timothy Kendall; T. H. Kerr; S. K. Leggett; N. Lodieu; J. Loveday

This paper defines the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) Early Data Release (EDR). UKIDSS is a set of five large near-infrared surveys being undertaken with the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope Wide Field Camera (WFCAM). The programme began in 2005 May and has an expected duration of 7 yr. Each survey uses some or all of the broad-band filter complement ZY JHK. The EDR is the first public release of data to the European Southern Observatory (ESO) community. All worldwide releases occur after a delay of 18 months from the ESO release. The EDR provides a small sample data set, ∼50 deg(2) (about 1 per cent of the whole of UKIDSS), that is a lower limit to the expected quality of future survey data releases. In addition, an EDR+ data set contains all EDR data plus extra data of similar quality, but for areas not observed in all of the required filters (amounting to ∼220 deg(2)). The first large data release, DR1, will occur in mid-2006. We provide details of the observational implementation, the data reduction, the astrometric and photometric calibration and the quality control procedures. We summarize the data coverage and quality (seeing, ellipticity, photometricity, depth) for each survey and give a brief guide to accessing the images and catalogues from the WFCAM Science Archive.

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M. Rowan-Robinson

Queen Mary University of London

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Omar Almaini

University of Nottingham

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A. Efstathiou

European University Cyprus

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James Dunlop

University of Edinburgh

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