Brian Cherinka
Johns Hopkins University
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The Astronomical Journal | 2015
Niv Drory; Nick MacDonald; Matthew A. Bershady; Kevin Bundy; James E. Gunn; David R. Law; M. Smith; R. Stoll; Christy A. Tremonti; David A. Wake; Renbin Yan; Anne-Marie Weijmans; Nell Byler; Brian Cherinka; Frances Cope; Arthur Eigenbrot; Paul Harding; Diana Holder; Joseph Huehnerhoff; K. Jaehnig; T. C. Jansen; Mark A. Klaene; A. M. Paat; Jeffrey W. Percival; Conor Sayres
We describe the design, manufacture, and performance of bare-fiber integral field units (IFUs) for the SDSS-IV survey Mapping Nearby Galaxies at Apache Point Observatory (MaNGA) on the the Sloan 2.5 m telescope at Apache Point Observatory. MaNGA is a luminosity-selected integral-field spectroscopic survey of 104 local galaxies covering 360–1030 nm at R ~ 2200. The IFUs have hexagonal dense packing of fibers with packing regularity of 3 μm (rms), and throughput of 96 ± 0.5% from 350 nm to 1 μm in the lab. Their sizes range from 19 to 127 fibers (3–7 hexagonal layers) using Polymicro FBP 120:132:150 μm core:clad:buffer fibers to reach a fill fraction of 56%. High throughput (and low focal-ratio degradation (FRD)) is achieved by maintaining the fiber cladding and buffer intact, ensuring excellent surface polish, and applying a multi-layer anti-reflection (AR) coating of the input and output surfaces. In operations on-sky, the IFUs show only an additional 2.3% FRD-related variability in throughput despite repeated mechanical stressing during plate plugging (however other losses are present). The IFUs achieve on-sky throughput 5% above the single-fiber feeds used in SDSS-III/BOSS, attributable to equivalent performance compared to single fibers and additional gains from the AR coating. The manufacturing process is geared toward mass-production of high-multiplex systems. The low-stress process involves a precision ferrule with a hexagonal inner shape designed to lead inserted fibers to settle in a dense hexagonal pattern. The ferrule ID is tapered at progressively shallower angles toward its tip and the final 2 mm are straight and only a few microns larger than necessary to hold the desired number of fibers. Our IFU manufacturing process scales easily to accommodate other fiber sizes and can produce IFUs with substantially larger fiber counts. To assure quality, automated testing in a simple and inexpensive system enables complete characterization of throughput and fiber metrology. Future applications include larger IFUs, higher fill factors with stripped buffer, de-cladding, and lenslet coupling.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015
David M. Wilkinson; Claudia Maraston; Daniel Thomas; L. Coccato; Rita Tojeiro; Michele Cappellari; Francesco Belfiore; Matthew A. Bershady; Mike Blanton; Kevin Bundy; Sabrina L. Cales; Brian Cherinka; Niv Drory; Eric Emsellem; Hai Fu; David R. Law; Cheng Li; Roberto Maiolino; Karen L. Masters; Christy A. Tremonti; David A. Wake; Enci Wang; Anne-Marie Weijmans; Ting Xiao; Renbin Yan; Kai Zhang; Dmitry Bizyaev; Jonathan Brinkmann; Karen Kinemuchi; Elena Malanushenko
MaNGA (Mapping Nearby Galaxies at Apache Point Observatory) is a 6-yr SDSS-IV (Sloan Digital Sky Survey IV) survey that will obtain resolved spectroscopy from 3600 to 10 300 A for a representative sample of over 10 000 nearby galaxies. In this paper, we derive spatially resolved stellar population properties and radial gradients by performing full spectral fitting of observed galaxy spectra from P-MaNGA, a prototype of the MaNGA instrument. These data include spectra for 18 galaxies, covering a large range of morphological type. We derive age, metallicity, dust, and stellar mass maps, and their radial gradients, using high spectral-resolution stellar population models, and assess the impact of varying the stellar library input to the models. We introduce a method to determine dust extinction which is able to give smooth stellar mass maps even in cases of high and spatially non-uniform dust attenuation. With the spectral fitting, we produce detailed maps of stellar population properties which allow us to identify galactic features among this diverse sample such as spiral structure, smooth radial profiles with little azimuthal structure in spheroidal galaxies, and spatially distinct galaxy sub-components. In agreement with the literature, we find the gradients for galaxies identified as early type to be on average flat in age, and negative (−0.15 dex/Re) in metallicity, whereas the gradients for late-type galaxies are on average negative in age (−0.39 dex/Re) and flat in metallicity. We demonstrate how different levels of data quality change the precision with which radial gradients can be measured. We show how this analysis, extended to the large numbers of MaNGA galaxies, will have the potential to shed light on galaxy structure and evolution.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
Cheng Li; Enci Wang; Lin Lin; Matthew A. Bershady; Kevin Bundy; Christy A. Tremonti; Ting Xiao; Renbin Yan; Dmitry Bizyaev; Michael R. Blanton; Sabrina L. Cales; Brian Cherinka; Edmond Cheung; Niv Drory; Eric Emsellem; Hai Fu; Joseph D. Gelfand; David R. Law; Lihwai Lin; Nick MacDonald; Claudia Maraston; Karen L. Masters; Michael R. Merrifield; Kaike Pan; S. F. Sánchez; Donald P. Schneider; Daniel Thomas; David A. Wake; Lixin Wang; Anne-Marie Weijmans
We present an analysis of the data produced by the MaNGA prototype run (P-MaNGA), aiming to test how the radial gradients in recent star formation histories, as indicated by the 4000 ??break (Dn(4000)), H? absorption (EW(H?A)), and H? emission (EW(H?)) indices, can be useful for understanding disk growth and star formation cessation in local galaxies. We classify 12 galaxies observed on two P-MaNGA plates as either centrally quiescent (CQ) or centrally star-forming (CSF), according to whether Dn(4000) measured in the central spaxel of each datacube exceeds 1.6. For each spaxel we generate both 2D maps and radial profiles of Dn(4000), EW(H?A), and EW(H?). We find that CSF galaxies generally show very weak or no radial variation in these diagnostics. In contrast, CQ galaxies present significant radial gradients, in the sense that Dn(4000) decreases, while both EW(H?A) and EW(H?) increase from the galactic center outward. The outer regions of the galaxies show greater scatter on diagrams relating the three parameters than their central parts. In particular, the clear separation between centrally measured quiescent and star-forming galaxies in these diagnostic planes is largely filled in by the outer parts of galaxies whose global colors place them in the green valley, supporting the idea that the green valley represents a transition between blue-cloud and red-sequence phases, at least in our small sample. These results are consistent with a picture in which the cessation of star formation propagates from the center of a galaxy outward?as it moves to the red sequence.
The Astronomical Journal | 2016
David R. Law; Brian Cherinka; Renbin Yan; Brett H. Andrews; Matthew A. Bershady; Dmitry Bizyaev; Guillermo A. Blanc; Michael R. Blanton; Adam S. Bolton; Joel R. Brownstein; Kevin Bundy; Yanmei Chen; Niv Drory; Richard D'Souza; Hai Fu; Amy Jones; Guinevere Kauffmann; Nicholas MacDonald; Karen L. Masters; Jeffrey A. Newman; John Parejko; José R. Sánchez-Gallego; Sebastián F. Sánchez; David J. Schlegel; Daniel Thomas; David A. Wake; Anne-Marie Weijmans; Kyle B. Westfall; Kai Zhang
Mapping Nearby Galaxies at Apache Point Observatory (MaNGA) is an optical fiber-bundle integral-field unit (IFU) spectroscopic survey that is one of three core programs in the fourth-generation Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-IV). With a spectral coverage of 3622 - 10,354 Angstroms and an average footprint of ~ 500 arcsec^2 per IFU the scientific data products derived from MaNGA will permit exploration of the internal structure of a statistically large sample of 10,000 low redshift galaxies in unprecedented detail. Comprising 174 individually pluggable science and calibration IFUs with a near-constant data stream, MaNGA is expected to obtain ~ 100 million raw-frame spectra and ~ 10 million reduced galaxy spectra over the six-year lifetime of the survey. In this contribution, we describe the MaNGA Data Reduction Pipeline (DRP) algorithms and centralized metadata framework that produces sky-subtracted, spectrophotometrically calibrated spectra and rectified 3-D data cubes that combine individual dithered observations. For the 1390 galaxy data cubes released in Summer 2016 as part of SDSS-IV Data Release 13 (DR13), we demonstrate that the MaNGA data have nearly Poisson-limited sky subtraction shortward of ~ 8500 Angstroms and reach a typical 10-sigma limiting continuum surface brightness mu = 23.5 AB/arcsec^2 in a five arcsec diameter aperture in the g band. The wavelength calibration of the MaNGA data is accurate to 5 km/s rms, with a median spatial resolution of 2.54 arcsec FWHM (1.8 kpc at the median redshift of 0.037) and a median spectral resolution of sigma = 72 km/s.
The Astronomical Journal | 2015
Renbin Yan; Christy A. Tremonti; Matthew A. Bershady; David R. Law; David J. Schlegel; Kevin Bundy; Niv Drory; Nicholas MacDonald; Dmitry Bizyaev; Guillermo A. Blanc; Michael R. Blanton; Brian Cherinka; Arthur Eigenbrot; James E. Gunn; Paul Harding; David W. Hogg; José R. Sánchez-Gallego; Sebastián F. Sánchez; David A. Wake; Anne-Marie Weijmans; Ting Xiao; Kai Zhang
Mapping Nearby Galaxies at Apache Point Observatory (MaNGA), one of three core programs in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-IV (SDSS-IV), is an integral-field spectroscopic (IFS) survey of roughly 10,000 nearby galaxies. It employs dithered observations using 17 hexagonal bundles of 2 arcsec fibers to obtain resolved spectroscopy over a wide wavelength range of 3,600-10,300A. To map the internal variations within each galaxy, we need to perform accurate {\it spectral surface photometry}, which is to calibrate the specific intensity at every spatial location sampled by each individual aperture element of the integral field unit. The calibration must correct only for the flux loss due to atmospheric throughput and the instrument response, but not for losses due to the finite geometry of the fiber aperture. This requires the use of standard star measurements to strictly separate these two flux loss factors (throughput versus geometry), a difficult challenge with standard single-fiber spectroscopy techniques due to various practical limitations. Therefore, we developed a technique for spectral surface photometry using multiple small fiber-bundles targeting standard stars simultaneously with galaxy observations. We discuss the principles of our approach and how they compare to previous efforts, and we demonstrate the precision and accuracy achieved. MaNGAs relative calibration between the wavelengths of H
The Astronomical Journal | 2016
Renbin Yan; Kevin Bundy; David R. Law; Matthew A. Bershady; Brett H. Andrews; Brian Cherinka; Aleksandar M. Diamond-Stanic; Niv Drory; Nicholas MacDonald; José R. Sánchez-Gallego; Daniel Thomas; David A. Wake; Anne-Marie Weijmans; Kyle B. Westfall; Kai Zhang; Alfonso Aragon-Salamanca; Francesco Belfiore; Dmitry Bizyaev; Guillermo A. Blanc; Michael R. Blanton; Joel R. Brownstein; Michele Cappellari; Richard D'Souza; Eric Emsellem; Hai Fu; P. Gaulme; Mark T. Graham; Daniel Goddard; James E. Gunn; Paul Harding
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018
Michael S. Talbot; Joel R. Brownstein; Adam S. Bolton; Kevin Bundy; Brett H. Andrews; Brian Cherinka; Thomas E. Collett; Anupreeta More; Surhud More; Alessandro Sonnenfeld; Simona Vegetti; David A. Wake; Anne-Marie Weijmans; Kyle B. Westfall
and H
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017
Amy Jones; Guinevere Kauffmann; Richard D'Souza; Dmitry Bizyaev; David R. Law; L. Haffner; Yannick M. Bahé; Brett H. Andrews; Matt Bershady; Joel R. Brownstein; Kevin Bundy; Brian Cherinka; Aleksandar M. Diamond-Stanic; Niv Drory; Rogemar A. Riffel; S. F. Sánchez; Daniel Thomas; David A. Wake; Renbin Yan; Kai Zhang
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The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Kevin Bundy; Matthew A. Bershady; David R. Law; Renbin Yan; Niv Drory; Nicholas MacDonald; David A. Wake; Brian Cherinka; José R. Sánchez-Gallego; Anne-Marie Weijmans; Daniel Thomas; Christy A. Tremonti; Karen L. Masters; L. Coccato; Aleksandar M. Diamond-Stanic; Alfonso Aragon-Salamanca; Vladimir Avila-Reese; Carles Badenes; J. Falcón-Barroso; Francesco Belfiore; Dmitry Bizyaev; Guillermo A. Blanc; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Michael R. Blanton; Joel R. Brownstein; Nell Byler; Michele Cappellari; Charlie Conroy; Aaron A. Dutton; Eric Emsellem
has a root-mean-square (RMS) of 1.7%, while that between [NII]
The Astronomical Journal | 2015
David R. Law; Renbin Yan; Matthew A. Bershady; Kevin Bundy; Brian Cherinka; Niv Drory; Nicholas MacDonald; José R. Sánchez-Gallego; David A. Wake; Anne-Marie Weijmans; Michael R. Blanton; Mark A. Klaene; Sean M. Moran; Sebastián F. Sánchez; Kai Zhang
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