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Dive into the research topics where B. Milvang-Jensen is active.

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Featured researches published by B. Milvang-Jensen.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

UltraVISTA: a new ultra-deep near-infrared survey in COSMOS

H. J. McCracken; B. Milvang-Jensen; James Dunlop; Marijn Franx; J. P. U. Fynbo; O. Le Fèvre; J. Holt; Karina Caputi; Y. Goranova; Fernando Buitrago; James P. Emerson; Wolfram Freudling; P. Hudelot; C. López-Sanjuan; F. Magnard; Y. Mellier; P. Møller; Kim K. Nilsson; W. Sutherland; L. Tasca; J. Zabl

In this paper we describe the first data release of the UltraVISTA near-infrared imaging survey of the COSMOS field. We summarise the key goals and design of the survey and provide a detailed description of our data reduction techniques. We provide stacked, sky-subtracted images in YJHK_s and narrow-band filters constructed from data collected during the first year of UltraVISTA observations. Our stacked images reach 5σAB depths in an aperture of 2″ diameter of ~25 in Y and ~24 in JHK_s bands and all have sub-arcsecond seeing. To this 5σ limit, our K_s catalogue contains 216 268 sources. We carry out a series of quality assessment tests on our images and catalogues, comparing our stacks with existing catalogues. The 1σ astrometric rms in both directions for stars selected with 17.0 < K_s(AB) < 19.5 is ~0.08″ in comparison to the publicly-available COSMOS ACS catalogues. Our images are resampled to the same pixel scale and tangent point as the publicly available COSMOS data and so may be easily used to generate multi-colour catalogues using this data. All images and catalogues presented in this paper are publicly available through ESO’s “phase 3” archiving and distribution system and from the UltraVISTA web site.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2009

Low-resolution Spectroscopy of Gamma-ray Burst Optical Afterglows : Biases in the Swift Sample and Characterization of the Absorbers

J. P. U. Fynbo; P. Jakobsson; Jason X. Prochaska; Daniele Malesani; Cedric Ledoux; A. de Ugarte Postigo; M. Nardini; Paul M. Vreeswijk; K. Wiersema; J. Hjorth; Jesper Sollerman; H.-. W. Chen; C. C. Thöne; G. Björnsson; J. S. Bloom; A. J. Castro-Tirado; L. Christensen; A. De Cia; Andrew S. Fruchter; J. Gorosabel; John F. Graham; Andreas O. Jaunsen; B. L. Jensen; D. A. Kann; C. Kouveliotou; Andrew J. Levan; Justyn R. Maund; N. Masetti; B. Milvang-Jensen; Eliana Palazzi

We present a sample of 77 optical afterglows (OAs) of Swift detected gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) for which spectroscopic follow-up observations have been secured. Our first objective is to measure the redshifts of the bursts. For the majority (90%) of the afterglows, the redshifts have been determined from the spectra. We provide line lists and equivalent widths (EWs) for all detected lines redward of Lyα covered by the spectra. In addition to the GRB absorption systems, these lists include line strengths for a total of 33 intervening absorption systems. We discuss to what extent the current sample of Swift bursts with OA spectroscopy is a biased subsample of all Swift detected GRBs. For that purpose we define an X-ray-selected statistical sample of Swift bursts with optimal conditions for ground-based follow-up from the period 2005 March to 2008 September; 146 bursts fulfill our sample criteria. We derive the redshift distribution for the statistical (X-ray selected) sample and conclude that less than 18% of Swift bursts can be at z > 7. We compare the high-energy properties (e.g., γ-ray (15-350 keV) fluence and duration, X-ray flux, and excess absorption) for three subsamples of bursts in the statistical sample: (1) bursts with redshifts measured from OA spectroscopy; (2) bursts with detected optical and/or near-IR afterglow, but no afterglow-based redshift; and (3) bursts with no detection of the OA. The bursts in group (1) have slightly higher γ-ray fluences and higher X-ray fluxes and significantly less excess X-ray absorption than bursts in the other two groups. In addition, the fractions of dark bursts, defined as bursts with an optical to X-ray slope βOX 39% in group (3). For the full sample, the dark burst fraction is constrained to be in the range 25%-42%. From this we conclude that the sample of GRBs with OA spectroscopy is not representative for all Swift bursts, most likely due to a bias against the most dusty sight lines. This should be taken into account when determining, e.g., the redshift or metallicity distribution of GRBs and when using GRBs as a probe of star formation. Finally, we characterize GRB absorption systems as a class and compare them to QSO absorption systems, in particular the damped Lyα absorbers (DLAs). On average GRB absorbers are characterized by significantly stronger EWs for H I as well as for both low and high ionization metal lines than what is seen in intervening QSO absorbers. However, the distribution of line strengths is very broad and several GRB absorbers have lines with EWs well within the range spanned by QSO-DLAs. Based on the 33 z > 2 bursts in the sample, we place a 95% confidence upper limit of 7.5% on the mean escape fraction of ionizing photons from star-forming galaxies. Based on observations collected at the European Organisation for Astronomical Research in the Southern Hemisphere, Chile, under programs 275.D-5022 (PI: Chincarini), 075.D-0270 (PI: Fynbo), 077.D-0661 (PI: Vreeswijk), 077.D-0805 (PI: Tagliaferri), 177.A-0591 (PI: Hjorth), 078.D-0416 (PI: Vreeswijk), 079.D-0429 (PI: Vreeswijk), 080.D-0526 (PI: Vreeswijk), 081.A-0135 (PI: Greiner), 281.D-5002 (PI: Della Valle), and 081.A-0856 (PI: Vreeswijk). Also based on observations made with the Nordic Optical Telescope, operated on the island of La Palma jointly by Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden, in the Spanish Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos of the Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias. Some of the data obtained herein were obtained at the W.M. Keck Observatory, which is operated as a scientific partnership among the California Institute of Technology, the University of California, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The Observatory was made possible by the generous financial support of the W.M. Keck foundation.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2006

The Evolution of the Star Formation Activity in Galaxies and Its Dependence on Environment

Bianca M. Poggianti; Anja von der Linden; Gabriella De Lucia; Vandana Desai; Luc Simard; C. Halliday; Alfonso Aragon-Salamanca; Richard G. Bower; Jesus Varela; Philip Best; Douglas Clowe; Julianne J. Dalcanton; Pascale Jablonka; B. Milvang-Jensen; R. Pello; Gregory Rudnick; R. P. Saglia; Simon D. M. White; Dennis Zaritsky

We study how the proportion of star-forming galaxies evolves between z ¼ 0:8 and 0 as a function of galaxy environment,usingtheOiilineinemissionasasignatureofongoingstarformation.Our high-zdatasetcomprises16 clusters, 10 groups, and another 250 galaxies in poorer groups and the field at z ¼ 0:4 0:8 from the ESO Distant Cluster Survey, plus another 9 massive clusters at similar redshifts. As a local comparison, we use galaxy systems selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) at 0:04 < z < 0:08. At high z most systems follow a broad anticorrelation between the fraction of star-forming galaxies and the system velocity dispersion. At face value, this suggests that at z ¼ 0:4 0:8 the mass of the system largely determines the proportion of galaxies with ongoing star formation. At these redshifts the strength of star formation (as measured by the O ii equivalent width) in star-forming galaxies is also found to vary systematically with environment. SDSS clusters have much lower fractions of starforming galaxies than clusters at z ¼ 0:4 0:8 and, in contrast with the distant clusters, show a plateau for velocity dispersions � 550kms � 1 ,where thefraction ofgalaxieswithOiiemission doesnotvarysystematicallywithvelocity dispersion. We quantify the evolution of the proportion of star-forming galaxies as a function of the system velocity dispersion and find that it is strongest in intermediate-mass systems (� � 500 600 km s � 1 at z ¼ 0). To understandtheoriginoftheobservedtrends,weusethePress-Schechter formalismandtheMillenniumSimulationandshow thatgalaxystarformationhistoriesmaybecloselyrelatedtothegrowthhistoryofclustersandgroups.Ifthescenariowe propose is roughly correct, the link between galaxy properties and environment is extremely simple to predict purely from a knowledge of the growth of dark matter structures. Subject headings: cosmology: observations — galaxies: clusters: general — galaxies: evolution — galaxies: fundamental parameters — galaxies: stellar content


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

A Population of Massive, Luminous Galaxies Hosting Heavily Dust-obscured Gamma-Ray Bursts: Implications for the Use of GRBs as Tracers of Cosmic Star Formation

Daniel A. Perley; Andrew J. Levan; Nial R. Tanvir; S. B. Cenko; J. S. Bloom; J. Hjorth; T. Krühler; A. V. Filippenko; Andrew S. Fruchter; Johan Peter Uldall Fynbo; P. Jakobsson; Jason S. Kalirai; B. Milvang-Jensen; Adam N. Morgan; Jason X. Prochaska; Jeffrey M. Silverman

We present observations and analysis of the host galaxies of 23 heavily dust-obscured gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) observed by the Swift satellite during the years 2005-2009, representing all GRBs with an unambiguous host-frame extinction of AV > 1 mag from this period. Deep observations with Keck, Gemini, Very Large Telescope, Hubble Space Telescope, and Spitzer successfully detect the host galaxies and establish spectroscopic or photometric redshifts for all 23 events, enabling us to provide measurements of the intrinsic host star formation rates, stellar masses, and mean extinctions. Compared to the hosts of unobscured GRBs at similar redshifts, we find that the hosts of dust-obscured GRBs are (on average) more massive by about an order of magnitude and also more rapidly star forming and dust obscured. While this demonstrates that GRBs populate all types of star-forming galaxies, including the most massive, luminous systems at z ≈ 2, at redshifts below 1.5 the overall GRB population continues to show a highly significant aversion to massive galaxies and a preference for low-mass systems relative to what would be expected given a purely star-formation-rate-selected galaxy sample. This supports the notion that the GRB rate is strongly dependent on metallicity, and may suggest that the most massive galaxies in the universe underwent a transition in their chemical properties ~9 Gyr ago. We also conclude that, based on the absence of unobscured GRBs in massive galaxies and the absence of obscured GRBs in low-mass galaxies, the dust distributions of the lowest-mass and the highest-mass galaxies are relatively homogeneous, while intermediate-mass galaxies (~109 M ☉) have diverse internal properties.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

THE OPTICALLY UNBIASED GAMMA-RAY BURST HOST (TOUGH) SURVEY. I. SURVEY DESIGN AND CATALOGS*

J. Hjorth; Daniele Malesani; P. Jakobsson; Andreas O. Jaunsen; Johan Peter Uldall Fynbo; J. Gorosabel; T. Krühler; Andrew J. Levan; M. J. Michałowski; B. Milvang-Jensen; P. Møller; S. Schulze; Nial R. Tanvir; Darach Watson

Long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are powerful tracers of star-forming galaxies. We have defined a homogeneous subsample of 69 Swift GRB-selected galaxies spanning a very wide redshift range. Special attention has been devoted to making the sample optically unbiased through simple and well-defined selection criteria based on the high-energy properties of the bursts and their positions on the sky. Thanks to our extensive follow-up observations, this sample has now achieved a comparatively high degree of redshift completeness, and thus provides a legacy sample, useful for statistical studies of GRBs and their host galaxies. In this paper, we present the survey design and summarize the results of our observing program conducted at the ESO Very Large Telescope (VLT) aimed at obtaining the most basic properties of galaxies in this sample, including a catalog of R and Ks magnitudes and redshifts. We detect the host galaxies for 80% of the GRBs in the sample, although only 42% have Ks -band detections, which confirms that GRB-selected host galaxies are generally blue. The sample is not uniformly blue, however, with two extremely red objects detected. Moreover, galaxies hosting GRBs with no optical/NIR afterglows, whose identification therefore relies on X-ray localizations, are significantly brighter and redder than those with an optical/NIR afterglow. This supports a scenario where GRBs occurring in more massive and dusty galaxies frequently suffer high optical obscuration. Our spectroscopic campaign has resulted in 77% now having redshift measurements, with a median redshift of 2.14 ± 0.18. TOUGH alone includes 17 detected z > 2 Swift GRB host galaxies suitable for individual and statistical studies—a substantial increase over previous samples. Seven hosts have detections of the Lyα emission line and we can exclude an early indication that Lyα emission is ubiquitous among GRB hosts, but confirm that Lyα is stronger in GRB-selected galaxies than in flux-limited samples of Lyman break galaxies.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2004

The Buildup of the red sequence in galaxy clusters since z ∼ 0.8

G. De Lucia; Bianca M. Poggianti; Alfonso Aragon-Salamanca; Douglas Clowe; C. Halliday; Pascale Jablonka; B. Milvang-Jensen; R. Pello; S. Poirier; Gregory Rudnick; R. P. Saglia; Luc Simard; Simon D. M. White

We study the rest-frame ( ) color-magnitude relation in four clusters at redshifts 0.7–0.8, drawn from the U V ESO Distant Cluster Survey (EDisCS). We confirm that the red-sequence galaxies in these clusters can be described as an old, passively evolving population, and we demonstrate that, by comparison with the Coma Cluster, there has been significant evolution in the stellar mass distribution of red-sequence galaxies since . The EDisCS z ∼ 0.75 clusters exhibit a deficiency of low-luminosity passive red galaxies. Defining as “faint” all galaxies in the passive evolution–corrected range , the luminous-to-faint ratio of red-sequence galaxies varies from 0.4 L/L 0.1 ∗ for the Coma Cluster to for the high-redshift clusters. These results exclude a syn0.34 0.06 0.81 0.18 chronous formation of all red-sequence galaxies and suggest that a large fraction of the faint red galaxies in current clusters moved on to the red sequence relatively recently. Their star formation activity presumably came to an end at . z 0.8 Subject headings: galaxies: clusters: general — galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD — galaxies: evolution — galaxies: formation


The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

The Morphological Content of 10 EDisCS Clusters at 0.5 < z < 0.8

Vandana Desai; Julianne J. Dalcanton; Alfonso Aragon-Salamanca; Pascale Jablonka; Bianca M. Poggianti; Stephanie M. Gogarten; Luc Simard; B. Milvang-Jensen; Gregory Rudnick; Dennis Zaritsky; Douglas Clowe; C. Halliday; R. Pello; R. P. Saglia; Simon D. M. White

We describe Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging of 10 of the 20 ESO Distant Cluster Survey (EDisCS) fields. Each ~40 arcmin^2 field was imaged in the F814W filter with the Advanced Camera for Surveys Wide Field Camera. Based on these data, we present visual morphological classifications for the ~920 sources per field that are brighter than I_(auto) = 23 mag. We use these classifications to quantify the morphological content of 10 intermediate-redshift (0.5 < z < 0.8) galaxy clusters within the HST survey region. The EDisCS results, combined with previously published data from seven higher redshift clusters, show no statistically significant evidence for evolution in the mean fractions of elliptical, S0, and late-type (Sp+Irr) galaxies in clusters over the redshift range 0.5 < z < 1.2. In contrast, existing studies of lower redshift clusters have revealed a factor of ~2 increase in the typical S0 fraction between z = 0.4 and 0, accompanied by a commensurate decrease in the Sp+Irr fraction and no evolution in the elliptical fraction. The EDisCS clusters demonstrate that cluster morphological fractions plateau beyond z ≈ 0.4. They also exhibit a mild correlation between morphological content and cluster velocity dispersion, highlighting the importance of careful sample selection in evaluating evolution. We discuss these findings in the context of a recently proposed scenario in which the fractions of passive (E, S0) and star-forming (Sp, Irr) galaxies are determined primarily by the growth history of clusters.


Scopus | 2012

The optically unbiased gamma-ray burst host (tough) survey. I. Survey design and catalogs

J. Hjorth; Daniele Malesani; J. P. U. Fynbo; T. Krühler; B. Milvang-Jensen; D. Watson; P. Jakobsson; S. Schulze; A. O. Jaunsen; J. Gorosabel; Andrew J. Levan; M. J. Michałowski; P. Møller; Nial R. Tanvir

Long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are powerful tracers of star-forming galaxies. We have defined a homogeneous subsample of 69 Swift GRB-selected galaxies spanning a very wide redshift range. Special attention has been devoted to making the sample optically unbiased through simple and well-defined selection criteria based on the high-energy properties of the bursts and their positions on the sky. Thanks to our extensive follow-up observations, this sample has now achieved a comparatively high degree of redshift completeness, and thus provides a legacy sample, useful for statistical studies of GRBs and their host galaxies. In this paper, we present the survey design and summarize the results of our observing program conducted at the ESO Very Large Telescope (VLT) aimed at obtaining the most basic properties of galaxies in this sample, including a catalog of R and Ks magnitudes and redshifts. We detect the host galaxies for 80% of the GRBs in the sample, although only 42% have Ks -band detections, which confirms that GRB-selected host galaxies are generally blue. The sample is not uniformly blue, however, with two extremely red objects detected. Moreover, galaxies hosting GRBs with no optical/NIR afterglows, whose identification therefore relies on X-ray localizations, are significantly brighter and redder than those with an optical/NIR afterglow. This supports a scenario where GRBs occurring in more massive and dusty galaxies frequently suffer high optical obscuration. Our spectroscopic campaign has resulted in 77% now having redshift measurements, with a median redshift of 2.14 ± 0.18. TOUGH alone includes 17 detected z > 2 Swift GRB host galaxies suitable for individual and statistical studies—a substantial increase over previous samples. Seven hosts have detections of the Lyα emission line and we can exclude an early indication that Lyα emission is ubiquitous among GRB hosts, but confirm that Lyα is stronger in GRB-selected galaxies than in flux-limited samples of Lyman break galaxies.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

The relation between star formation, morphology, and local density in high-redshift clusters and groups

Bianca M. Poggianti; Vandana Desai; Rose Finn; Steven P. Bamford; Gabriella De Lucia; Jesus Varela; Alfonso Aragon-Salamanca; C. Halliday; Stefan Noll; R. P. Saglia; Dennis Zaritsky; Philip Best; Douglas Clowe; B. Milvang-Jensen; Pascale Jablonka; R. Pello; Gregory Rudnick; Luc Simard; Anja von der Linden; Simon D. M. White

We investigate how the [O II] properties and the morphologies of galaxies in clusters and groups at z = 0.4–0.8 depend on projected local galaxy density, and compare with the field at similar redshifts and clusters at low z. In both nearby and distant clusters, higher density regions contain proportionally fewer star-forming galaxies, and the average [O II] equivalent width of star-forming galaxies is independent of local density. However, in distant clusters the average current star formation rate (SFR) in star-forming galaxies seems to peak at densities ~15-40 galaxies Mpc^−2. At odds with low-z results, at high z the relation between star-forming fraction and local density varies from high- to low-mass clusters. Overall, our results suggest that at high z the current star formation (SF) activity in star-forming galaxies does not depend strongly on global or local environment, though the possible SFR peak seems at odds with this conclusion. We find that the cluster SFR normalized by cluster mass anticorrelates with mass and correlates with the star-forming fraction. These trends can be understood given (1) that the average star-forming galaxy forms about 1⊙M yr^−1 (uncorrected for dust) in all clusters; (2) that the total number of galaxies scales with cluster mass; and (3) the dependence of star-forming fraction on cluster mass. We present the morphology-density (MD) relation for our z = 0.4 − 0.8 clusters, and uncover that the decline of the spiral fraction with density is entirely driven by galaxies of type Sc or later. For galaxies of a given Hubble type, we see no evidence that SF properties depend on local environment. In contrast with recent findings at low z, in our distant clusters the SF-density relation and the MD relation are equivalent, suggesting that neither of the two is more fundamental than the other.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

The bright end of the galaxy luminosity function at z =7: before the onset of mass quenching?

R. A. A. Bowler; James Dunlop; Ross J. McLure; A. B. Rogers; H. J. McCracken; B. Milvang-Jensen; Hisanori Furusawa; J. P. U. Fynbo; Yoshiaki Taniguchi; J. Afonso; Malcolm N. Bremer; O. Le Fèvre

We present the results of a new search for bright star-forming galaxies at redshift z ≃ 7 within the UltraVISTA second data release (DR2) and UKIDSS (UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey) UDS (Ultra Deep Survey) DR10 data, which together provide 1.65 deg^2 of near-infrared imaging with overlapping optical and Spitzer data. Using a full photometric redshift analysis, to identify high-redshift galaxies and reject contaminants, we have selected a sample of 34 luminous (−22.7<M_(UV)<−21.2 −22.7<M_(UV)<−21.2) galaxies with 6.5 < z < 7.5. Crucially, the deeper imaging provided by UltraVISTA DR2 confirms all of the robust objects previously uncovered by Bowler et al., validating our selection technique. Our new expanded galaxy sample includes the most massive galaxies known at z ≃ 7, with M^* ≃ 10^(10) M_⊙, and the majority are resolved, consistent with larger sizes (r1/2 ≃ 1–1.5 kpc) than displayed by less massive galaxies. From our final robust sample, we determine the form of the bright end of the rest-frame UV galaxy luminosity function (LF) at z ≃ 7, providing strong evidence that it does not decline as steeply as predicted by the Schechter-function fit to fainter data. We exclude the possibility that this is due to either gravitational lensing, or significant contamination of our galaxy sample by active galactic nuclei (AGN). Rather, our results favour a double power-law form for the galaxy LF at high redshift, or, more interestingly, an LF which simply follows the form of the dark matter halo mass function at bright magnitudes. This suggests that the physical mechanism which inhibits star formation activity in massive galaxies (i.e. AGN feedback or some other form of ‘mass quenching’) has yet to impact on the observable galaxy LF at z ≃ 7, a conclusion supported by the estimated masses of our brightest galaxies which have only just reached a mass comparable to the critical ‘quenching mass’ of M^* ≃ 10^(10).2 M_⊙ derived from studies of the mass function of star-forming galaxies at lower redshift.

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J. P. U. Fynbo

University of Copenhagen

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J. Hjorth

University of Copenhagen

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Pascale Jablonka

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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