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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

The SAMI Galaxy Survey: instrument specification and target selection

Julia J. Bryant; Matt S. Owers; Aaron S. G. Robotham; Scott M. Croom; Simon P. Driver; Michael J. Drinkwater; Nuria P. F. Lorente; Luca Cortese; Nicholas Scott; Matthew Colless; Adam L. Schaefer; Edward N. Taylor; I. S. Konstantopoulos; J. T. Allen; Ivan K. Baldry; Luke A. Barnes; Amanda E. Bauer; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; J. V. Bloom; Alyson M. Brooks; Sarah Brough; Gerald Cecil; Warrick J. Couch; Darren J. Croton; Roger L. Davies; Simon C. Ellis; L. M. R. Fogarty; Caroline Foster; Karl Glazebrook; Michael Goodwin

The SAMI Galaxy Survey will observe 3400 galaxies with the Sydney-AAO Multi- object Integral-field spectrograph (SAMI) on the Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT) in a 3-year survey which began in 2013. We present the throughput of the SAMI system, the science basis and specifications for the target selection, the survey observation plan and the combined properties of the selected galaxies. The survey includes four volume-limited galaxy samples based on cuts in a proxy for stellar mass, along with low-stellar-mass dwarf galaxies all selected from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey. The GAMA regions were selected because of the vast array of ancillary data available, including ultraviolet through to radio bands. These fields are on the celestial equator at 9, 12, and 14.5 hours, and cover a total of 144 square degrees (in GAMA-I). Higher density environments are also included with the addition of eight clusters. The clusters have spectroscopy from 2dFGRS and SDSS and photometry in regions covered by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and/or VLT Survey Telescope/ATLAS. The aim is to cover a broad range in stellar mass and environment, and therefore the primary survey targets cover redshifts 0.004 < z < 0.095, magnitudes rpet < 19.4, stellar masses 107– 1012M⊙, and environments from isolated field galaxies through groups to clusters of _ 1015M⊙.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

The SAMI Galaxy Survey: shocks and outflows in a normal star-forming galaxy

I-Ting Ho; Lisa J. Kewley; Michael A. Dopita; Anne M. Medling; James T. Allen; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; J. V. Bloom; Julia J. Bryant; Scott M. Croom; L. M. R. Fogarty; Michael Goodwin; Andrew W. Green; I. S. Konstantopoulos; Jon Lawrence; A. R. Lopez-Sanchez; Matt S. Owers; Samuel Richards; Rob Sharp

We demonstrate the feasibility and potential of using large integral field spectroscopic surveys to investigate the prevalence of galactic-scale outflows in the local Universe. Using integral field data from SAMI and the Wide Field Spectrograph, we study the nature of an isolated disk galaxy, SDSS J090005.05+000446.7 (z = 0.05386). In the integral field datasets, the galaxy presents skewed line profiles changing with position in the galaxy. The skewed line profiles are caused by different kinematic components overlapping in the line-of-sight direction. We perform spectral decomposition to separate the line profiles in each spatial pixel as combinations of (1) a narrow kinematic component consistent with HII regions, (2) a broad kinematic component consistent with shock excitation, and (3) an intermediate component consistent with shock excitation and photoionisation mixing. The three kinematic components have distinctly different velocity fields, velocity dispersions, line ratios, and electron densities. We model the line ratios, velocity dispersions, and electron densities with our MAPPINGS IV shock and photoionisation models, and we reach remarkable agreement between the data and the models. The models demonstrate that the different emission line properties are caused by major galactic outflows that introduce shock excitation in addition to photoionisation by star-forming activities. Interstellar shocks embedded in the outflows shock-excite and compress the gas, causing the elevated line ratios, velocity dispersions, and electron densities observed in the broad kinematic component. We argue from energy considerations that, with the lack of a powerful active galactic nucleus, the outflows are likely to be driven by starburst activities. Our results set a benchmark of the type of analysis that can be achieved by the SAMI Galaxy Survey on large numbers of galaxies.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

The SAMI Galaxy Survey: Early Data Release

J. T. Allen; Scott M. Croom; I. S. Konstantopoulos; Julia J. Bryant; Rob Sharp; G. N. Cecil; L. M. R. Fogarty; Caroline Foster; Andrew W. Green; I-Ting Ho; Matt S. Owers; Adam L. Schaefer; Nicholas Scott; Amanda E. Bauer; Ivan K. Baldry; L. A. Barnes; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; J. V. Bloom; Sarah Brough; Matthew Colless; Luca Cortese; Warrick J. Couch; Michael J. Drinkwater; Simon P. Driver; Michael Goodwin; M. L. P. Gunawardhana; Elise Hampton; Andrew M. Hopkins; Lisa J. Kewley; Jon Lawrence

We present the Early Data Release of the Sydney–AAO Multi-object Integral field spectrograph (SAMI) Galaxy Survey. The SAMI Galaxy Survey is an ongoing integral field spectroscopic survey of _3400 low-redshift (z < 0:12) galaxies, covering galaxies in the field and in groups within the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey regions, and a sample of galaxies in clusters. In the Early Data Release, we publicly release the fully calibrated datacubes for a representative selection of 107 galaxies drawn from the GAMA regions, along with information about these galaxies from the GAMA catalogues. All datacubes for the Early Data Release galaxies can be downloaded individually or as a set from the SAMI Galaxy Survey website. In this paper we also assess the quality of the pipeline used to reduce the SAMI data, giving metrics that quantify its performance at all stages in processing the raw data into calibrated datacubes. The pipeline gives excellent results throughout, with typical sky subtraction residuals in the continuum of 0.9–1.2 per cent, a relative flux calibration uncertainty of 4.1 per cent (systematic) plus 4.3 per cent (statistical), and atmospheric dispersion removed with an accuracy of 0:0009, less than a fifth of a spaxel.


Nature | 2010

High star formation rates as the origin of turbulence in early and modern disk galaxies

Andrew W. Green; Karl Glazebrook; Peter J. McGregor; Roberto G. Abraham; Gregory B. Poole; Ivana Damjanov; Patrick J. McCarthy; Matthew Colless; Rob Sharp

Observations of star formation and kinematics in early galaxies at high spatial and spectral resolution have shown that two-thirds are massive rotating disk galaxies, with the remainder being less massive non-rotating objects. The line-of-sight-averaged velocity dispersions are typically five times higher than in today’s disk galaxies. This suggests that gravitationally unstable, gas-rich disks in the early Universe are fuelled by cold, dense accreting gas flowing along cosmic filaments and penetrating hot galactic gas halos. These accreting flows, however, have not been observed, and cosmic accretion cannot power the observed level of turbulence. Here we report observations of a sample of rare, high-velocity-dispersion disk galaxies in the nearby Universe where cold accretion is unlikely to drive their high star formation rates. We find that their velocity dispersions are correlated with their star formation rates, but not their masses or gas fractions, which suggests that star formation is the energetic driver of galaxy disk turbulence at all cosmic epochs.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

DYNAMO – I. A sample of Hα-luminous galaxies with resolved kinematics

Andrew W. Green; Karl Glazebrook; Peter J. McGregor; Ivana Damjanov; Emily Wisnioski; Roberto G. Abraham; Matthew Colless; Rob Sharp; Robert A. Crain; Gregory B. Poole; Patrick J. McCarthy

DYNAMO is a multiwavelength, spatially resolved survey of local (z ∼ 0.1) star-forming galaxies designed to study evolution through comparison with samples at z _ 2. Half of the sample has integrated Hα luminosities of >1042 erg s−1, the typical lower limit for resolved spectroscopy at z _ 2. The sample covers a range in stellar mass (109–1011M_) and star formation rate (0.2–100M_ yr−1). In this first paper of a series, we present integral-field spectroscopy of Hα emission for the sample of 67 galaxies. We infer gas fractions in our sample as high as _0.8, higher than typical for local galaxies. Gas fraction correlates with stellarmass in galaxies with star formation rates below 10M_ yr−1, as found by COLDGASS, but galaxies with higher star formation rates have higher than expected gas fractions. There is only a weak correlation, if any, between gas fraction and gas velocity dispersion. Galaxies in the sample visually classified as disc-like are offset from the local stellar mass Tully–Fisher relation to higher circular velocities, but this offset vanishes when both gas and stars are included in the baryonic Tully–Fisher relation. The mean gas velocity dispersion of the sample is_50 km s−1, and V/σ ranges from 2 to 10 for most of the discs, similar to ‘turbulent’ galaxies at high redshift. Half of our sample show disc-like rotation, while ∼20 per cent show no signs of rotation. The division between rotating and non-rotating is approximately equal for the sub-samples with either star formation rates >10M_ yr−1, or specific star formation rates typical of the star formation ‘main sequence’ at z _ 2. Across our whole sample, we find good correlation between the dominance of ‘turbulence’ in galaxy discs (as expressed by V/σ ) and gas fraction as has been predicted for marginally stable Toomre discs. Comparing our sample with many others at low- and high-redshift reveals a correlation between gas velocity dispersion and star formation rate. These findings suggest the DYNAMO discs are excellent candidates for local galaxies similar to turbulent z _ 2 disc galaxies.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

The SAMI Galaxy Survey: cubism and covariance, putting round pegs into square holes

Rob Sharp; J. T. Allen; L. M. R. Fogarty; Scott M. Croom; Luca Cortese; Andrew W. Green; J. Nielsen; Samuel Richards; Nicholas Scott; Edward N. Taylor; Luke A. Barnes; Amanda E. Bauer; Michael N. Birchall; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; J. V. Bloom; Sarah Brough; Julia J. Bryant; Gerald Cecil; Matthew Colless; Warrick J. Couch; Michael J. Drinkwater; S. Driver; Caroline Foster; Michael Goodwin; M. L. P. Gunawardhana; I-Ting Ho; Elise Hampton; Andrew M. Hopkins; Heath Jones; I. S. Konstantopoulos

We present a methodology for the regularization and combination of sparse sampled and irregularly gridded observations from fibre-optic multiobject integral field spectroscopy. The approach minimizes interpolation and retains image resolution on combining subpixel dithered data. We discuss the methodology in the context of the Sydney–AAO multiobject integral field spectrograph (SAMI) Galaxy Survey underway at the Anglo-Australian Telescope. The SAMI instrument uses 13 fibre bundles to perform high-multiplex integral field spectroscopy across a 1° diameter field of view. The SAMI Galaxy Survey is targeting ∼3000 galaxies drawn from the full range of galaxy environments. We demonstrate the subcritical sampling of the seeing and incomplete fill factor for the integral field bundles results in only a 10 per cent degradation in the final image resolution recovered. We also implement a new methodology for tracking covariance between elements of the resulting data cubes which retains 90 per cent of the covariance information while incurring only a modest increase in the survey data volume.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

The SAMI Pilot Survey : the kinematic morphology-density relation in Abell 85, Abell 168 and Abell 2399

L. M. R. Fogarty; Nicholas Scott; Matt S. Owers; Sarah Brough; Scott M. Croom; Michael Pracy; Ryan C. W. Houghton; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Matthew Colless; Roger L. Davies; D. Heath Jones; J. T. Allen; Julia J. Bryant; Michael Goodwin; Andrew W. Green; I. S. Konstantopoulos; Jon Lawrence; Samuel Richards; Luca Cortese; Rob Sharp

We examine the kinematic morphology of early-type galaxies (ETGs) in three galaxy clusters Abell 85, 168 and 2399. Using data from the Sydney-AAO Multiobject Integral eld spectrograph (SAMI) we measured spatially-resolved kinematics for 79 ETGs in these clusters. We calculate R, a proxy for the projected specic stellar angular momentum, for each galaxy and classify the 79 ETGs in our samples as fast or slow rotators. We calculate the fraction of slow rotators in the ETG populations (fSR) of the clusters to be 0:21 0:08, 0:08 0:08 and 0:12 0:06 for Abell 85, 168 and 2399 respectively, with an overall fraction of 0:15 0:04. These numbers are broadly consistent with the values found in the literature, conrming recent work asserting that the fraction of slow rotators in the ETG population is constant across many orders of magnitude in global environment. We examine the distribution of kinematic classes in each cluster as a function of environment using the projected density of galaxies: the kinematic morphologydensity relation. We nd that in Abell 85 fSR increases in higher density regions but in Abell 168 and Abell 2399 this trend is not seen. We examine the dierences between the individual clusters to explain this. In addition, we nd slow rotators on the outskirts of two of the clusters studied, Abell 85 and 2399. These galaxies reside in intermediate to low density regions and have clearly not formed at the centre of a cluster environment. We hypothesise that they formed at the centres of groups and are falling into the clusters for the rst time.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

First Science with SAMI: A Serendipitously Discovered Galactic Wind in ESO 185-G031

L. M. R. Fogarty; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Scott M. Croom; Andrew W. Green; Julia J. Bryant; Jon Lawrence; Samuel Richards; James T. Allen; Amanda E. Bauer; Michael N. Birchall; Sarah Brough; Matthew Colless; Simon C. Ellis; Tony Farrell; Michael Goodwin; Ron Heald; Andrew M. Hopkins; Anthony Horton; D. Heath Jones; Steve Lee; Geraint F. Lewis; A. R. Lopez-Sanchez; Stan Miziarski; Holly E. Trowland; Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Seong-sik Min; Christopher Trinh; Gerald Cecil; Sylvain Veilleux; Kory Kreimeyer

We present the first scientific results from the Sydney-AAO Multi-Object IFS (SAMI) at the Anglo-Australian Telescope. This unique instrument deploys 13 fused fiber bundles (hexabundles) across a one-degree field of view allowing simultaneous spatially resolved spectroscopy of 13 galaxies. During the first SAMI commissioning run, targeting a single galaxy field, one object (ESO 185-G031) was found to have extended minor axis emission with ionization and kinematic properties consistent with a large-scale galactic wind. The importance of this result is twofold: (1) fiber bundle spectrographs are able to identify low surface brightness emission arising from extranuclear activity and (2) such activity may be more common than presently assumed because conventional multi-object spectrographs use single-aperture fibers and spectra from these are nearly always dominated by nuclear emission. These early results demonstrate the extraordinary potential of multi-object hexabundle spectroscopy in future galaxy surveys.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

The SAMI Galaxy Survey: the link between angular momentum and optical morphology

Luca Cortese; L. M. R. Fogarty; Kenji Bekki; J. van de Sande; Warrick J. Couch; Barbara Catinella; Matthew Colless; Danail Obreschkow; Dan S. Taranu; Edoardo Tescari; Dilyar Barat; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; J. V. Bloom; Julia J. Bryant; Michelle E. Cluver; Scott M. Croom; Michael J. Drinkwater; F. D'Eugenio; I. S. Konstantopoulos; A. R. Lopez-Sanchez; Smriti Mahajan; Nicholas Scott; Chiara Tonini; O. I. Wong; J. T. Allen; Sarah Brough; Michael Goodwin; Andrew W. Green; I-Ting Ho; Lee S. Kelvin

We investigate the relationship between stellar and gas specific angular momentum j, stellar mass M-* and optical morphology for a sample of 488 galaxies extracted from the Sydney-AAO Multi-object Integral field Galaxy Survey. We find that j, measured within one effective radius, monotonically increases with M-* and that, for M-* > 10(9.5) M-aS (TM), the scatter in this relation strongly correlates with optical morphology (i.e. visual classification and S,rsic index). These findings confirm that massive galaxies of all types lie on a plane relating mass, angular momentum and stellar-light distribution, and suggest that the large-scale morphology of a galaxy is regulated by its mass and dynamical state. We show that the significant scatter in the M-*-j relation is accounted for by the fact that, at fixed stellar mass, the contribution of ordered motions to the dynamical support of galaxies varies by at least a factor of 3. Indeed, the stellar spin parameter (quantified via lambda(R)) correlates strongly with S,rsic and concentration indices. This correlation is particularly strong once slow rotators are removed from the sample, showing that late-type galaxies and early-type fast rotators form a continuous class of objects in terms of their kinematic properties.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

The SAMI Galaxy Survey: Extraplanar gas, galactic winds and their association with star formation history

I-Ting Ho; Anne M. Medling; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Brent Groves; Lisa J. Kewley; Chiaki Kobayashi; Michael A. Dopita; Sarah K. Leslie; Rob Sharp; James T. Allen; N. Bourne; Julia J. Bryant; Luca Cortese; Scott M. Croom; Loretta Dunne; L. M. R. Fogarty; Michael Goodwin; Andrew W. Green; I. S. Konstantopoulos; Jon Lawrence; Nuria P. F. Lorente; Matt S. Owers; Samuel Richards; Sarah M. Sweet; Edoardo Tescari; Elisabetta Valiante

We investigate a sample of 40 local, main-sequence, edge-on disc galaxies using integral field spectroscopy with the Sydney-AAO Multi-object Integral field spectrograph (SAMI) Galaxy Survey to understand the link between properties of the extraplanar gas and their host galaxies. The kinematics properties of the extraplanar gas, including velocity asymmetries and increased dispersion, are used to differentiate galaxies hosting large-scale galactic winds from those dominated by the extended diffuse ionized gas. We find rather that a spectrum of diffuse gas-dominated to wind-dominated galaxies exist. The wind-dominated galaxies span a wide range of star formation rates (SFRs; −1 ≲ log (SFR/M⊙ yr−1) ≲ 0.5) across the whole stellar mass range of the sample (8.5 ≲ log (M*/M⊙) ≲ 11). The wind galaxies also span a wide range in SFR surface densities (10− 3–10− 1.5 M⊙ yr− 1 kpc− 2) that is much lower than the canonical threshold of 0.1 M⊙ yr− 1 kpc− 2. The wind galaxies on average have higher SFR surface densities and higher HδA values than those without strong wind signatures. The enhanced HδA indicates that bursts of star formation in the recent past are necessary for driving large-scale galactic winds. We demonstrate with Sloan Digital Sky Survey data that galaxies with high SFR surface density have experienced bursts of star formation in the recent past. Our results imply that the galactic winds revealed in our study are indeed driven by bursts of star formation, and thus probing star formation in the time domain is crucial for finding and understanding galactic winds.

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Michael Goodwin

Australian Astronomical Observatory

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Matt S. Owers

Australian Astronomical Observatory

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I. S. Konstantopoulos

Australian Astronomical Observatory

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Sarah Brough

University of New South Wales

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Luca Cortese

University of Western Australia

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