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Dive into the research topics where C. Furlanetto is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Furlanetto.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

The Herschel ★-ATLAS data release 1 – I. Maps, catalogues and number counts

Elisabetta Valiante; Matthew William L. Smith; Stephen Anthony Eales; Steve Maddox; E. Ibar; R. Hopwood; Loretta Dunne; Phillip Cigan; Simon Dye; Enzo Pascale; E. Rigby; N. Bourne; C. Furlanetto; R. J. Ivison

We present the first major data release of the largest single key-project in area carried out in open time with the Herschel Space Observatory. The Herschel Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey (H-ATLAS) is a survey of 600 deg2 in five photometric bands – 100, 160, 250, 350 and 500 μm – with the Photoconductor Array Camera and Spectrometer and Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (SPIRE) cameras. In this paper and the companion Paper II, we present the survey of three fields on the celestial equator, covering a total area of 161.6 deg2 and previously observed in the Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA) spectroscopic survey. This paper describes the Herschel images and catalogues of the sources detected on the SPIRE 250 μm images. The 1σ noise for source detection, including both confusion and instrumental noise, is 7.4, 9.4 and 10.2 mJy at 250, 350 and 500 μm. Our catalogue includes 120 230 sources in total, with 113 995, 46 209 and 11 011 sources detected at >4σ at 250, 350 and 500 μm. The catalogue contains detections at >3σ at 100 and 160 μm for 4650 and 5685 sources, and the typical noise at these wavelengths is 44 and 49 mJy. We include estimates of the completeness of the survey and of the effects of flux bias and also describe a novel method for determining the true source counts. The H-ATLAS source counts are very similar to the source counts from the deeper HerMES survey at 250 and 350 μm, with a small difference at 500 μm. Appendix A provides a quick start in using the released data sets, including instructions and cautions on how to use them.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

Revealing the complex nature of the strong gravitationally lensed system H-ATLAS J090311.6+003906 using ALMA.

Simon Dye; C. Furlanetto; A. M. Swinbank; C. Vlahakis; J. W. Nightingale; Loretta Dunne; Stephen Anthony Eales; Ian Smail; I. Oteo; Todd R. Hunter; M. Negrello; H. Dannerbauer; R. J. Ivison; R. Gavazzi; A. Cooray; P. van der Werf

We have modelled Atacama Large Millimetre/sub-millimetre Array (ALMA) long baseline imaging of the strong gravitational lens system H-ATLAS J090311.6+003906 (SDP.81). We have reconstructed the distribution of band 6 and 7 continuum emission in the z = 3.042 source and determined its kinematic properties by reconstructing CO(5–4) and CO(8–7) line emission in bands 4 and 6. The continuum imaging reveals a highly non-uniform distribution of dust with clumps on scales of ∼200 pc. In contrast, the CO line emission shows a relatively smooth, disc-like velocity field which is well fitted by a rotating disc model with an inclination angle of (40 ± 5)° and an asymptotic rotation velocity of 320 km s−1. The inferred dynamical mass within 1.5 kpc is (3.5 ± 0.5) × 1010 M⊙ which is comparable to the total molecular gas masses of (2.7 ± 0.5) × 1010 M⊙ and (3.5 ± 0.6) × 1010 M⊙ from the dust continuum emission and CO emission, respectively. Our new reconstruction of the lensed Hubble Space Telescope near-infrared emission shows two objects which appear to be interacting, with the rotating disc of gas and dust revealed by ALMA distinctly offset from the near-infrared emission. The clumpy nature of the dust and a low value of the Toomre parameter of Q ∼ 0.3 suggest that the disc is in a state of collapse. We estimate a star formation rate in the disc of 470 ± 80 M⊙ yr−1 with an efficiency ∼65 times greater than typical low-redshift galaxies. Our findings add to the growing body of evidence that the most infrared luminous, dust obscured galaxies in the high-redshift Universe represent a population of merger-induced starbursts.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

The Herschel-ATLAS Data Release 1 – II. Multi-wavelength counterparts to submillimetre sources

N. Bourne; Loretta Dunne; Steve Maddox; Simon Dye; C. Furlanetto; Carlos Hoyos; D. J. B. Smith; Stephen Anthony Eales; Matthew William L. Smith; Elisabetta Valiante; Mehmet Alpaslan; E. Andrae; Ivan K. Baldry; Michelle E. Cluver; A. Cooray; Simon P. Driver; James Dunlop; M. W. Grootes; R. J. Ivison; Thomas Harold Jarrett; J. Liske; Barry F. Madore; Cristina Popescu; Aaron S. G. Robotham; K. Rowlands; Mark Seibert; M. A. Thompson; Richard J. Tuffs; S. Viaene; A. H. Wright

This paper is the second in a pair of papers presenting data release 1 (DR1) of the Herschel Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey (H-ATLAS), the largest single open-time key project carried out with the HerschelSpace Observatory. The H-ATLAS is a wide-area imaging survey carried out in five photometric bands at 100, 160, 250, 350 and 500 μm covering a total area of 600 deg2. In this paper, we describe the identification of optical counterparts to submillimetre sources in DR1, comprising an area of 161 deg2 over three equatorial fields of roughly 12 × 4.5 deg centred at 9h, 12h and 14 h.5, respectively. Of all the H-ATLAS fields, the equatorial regions benefit from the greatest overlap with current multi-wavelength surveys spanning ultraviolet (UV) to mid-infrared regimes, as well as extensive spectroscopic coverage. We use a likelihood ratio technique to identify Sloan Digital Sky Survey counterparts at r < 22.4 for 250-μm-selected sources detected at ≥4σ (≈28 mJy). We find ‘reliable’ counterparts (reliability R ≥ 0.8) for 44 835 sources (39 per cent), with an estimated completeness of 73.0 per cent and contamination rate of 4.7 per cent. Using redshifts and multi-wavelength photometry from GAMA and other public catalogues, we show that H-ATLAS-selected galaxies at z < 0.5 span a wide range of optical colours, total infrared (IR) luminosities and IR/UV ratios, with no strong disposition towards mid-IR-classified active galactic nuclei in comparison with optical selection. The data described herein, together with all maps and catalogues described in the companion paper, are available from the H-ATLAS website at www.h-atlas.org.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

The Herschel-ATLAS: a sample of 500 μm-selected lensed galaxies over 600 deg2

M. Negrello; S. Amber; A. Amvrosiadis; Z.-Y. Cai; A. Lapi; Joaquin Gonzalez-Nuevo; G. De Zotti; C. Furlanetto; Steve Maddox; M. Allen; T. Bakx; R. S. Bussmann; A. Cooray; G. Covone; L. Danese; H. Dannerbauer; Hai Fu; J. Greenslade; M. A. Gurwell; R. Hopwood; Léon V. E. Koopmans; N. R. Napolitano; Hooshang Nayyeri; A. Omont; C. E. Petrillo; Dominik A. Riechers; S. Serjeant; C. Tortora; Elisabetta Valiante; G. Verdoes Kleijn

We present a sample of 80 candidate strongly lensed galaxies with flux density above 100 mJy at 500 μm extracted from the Herschel Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey, over an area of 600 deg2. Available imaging and spectroscopic data allow us to confirm the strong lensing in 20 cases and to reject it in one case. For other eight objects, the lensing scenario is strongly supported by the presence of two sources along the same line of sight with distinct photometric redshifts. The remaining objects await more follow-up observations to confirm their nature. The lenses and the background sources have median redshifts zL = 0.6 and zS = 2.5, respectively, and are observed out to zL = 1.2 and zS = 4.2. We measure the number counts of candidate lensed galaxies at 500 μm and compare them with theoretical predictions, finding a good agreement for a maximum magnification of the background sources in the range 10–20. These values are consistent with the magnification factors derived from the lens modelling of individual systems. The catalogue presented here provides sub-mm bright targets for follow-up observations aimed at exploiting gravitational lensing, to study with unprecedented details the morphological and dynamical properties of dusty star-forming regions in z ≳ 1.5 galaxies.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

ALMA RESOLVES THE PROPERTIES OF STAR-FORMING REGIONS IN A DENSE GAS DISK AT z ∼ 3

A. M. Swinbank; Simon Dye; J. W. Nightingale; C. Furlanetto; Ian Smail; A. Cooray; H. Dannerbauer; Loretta Dunne; Stephen Anthony Eales; R. Gavazzi; Todd R. Hunter; R. J. Ivison; M. Negrello; I. Oteo-Gomez; R. Smit; P. van der Werf; C. Vlahakis

We exploit long baseline ALMA submillimeter observations of the lensed star-forming galaxy SDP 81 at z = 3.042 to investigate the properties of the interstellar medium (ISM) on scales of 50–100 pc. The kinematics of the 12CO gas within this system are well described by a rotationally supported disk with an inclination-corrected rotation speed,


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

The Herschel-ATLAS: a sample of 500{\mu}m-selected lensed galaxies over 600 square degrees

M. Negrello; S. Amber; A. Amvrosiadis; Z.-Y. Cai; A. Lapi; J. González-Nuevo; G. De Zotti; C. Furlanetto; Stephen J. Maddox; M. Allen; T. Bakx; R. S. Bussmann; A. Cooray; G. Covone; L. Danese; H. Dannerbauer; Hai Fu; J. Greenslade; M. A. Gurwell; R. Hopwood; L. V. E. Koopmans; N. R. Napolitano; Hooshang Nayyeri; A. Omont; C. E. Petrillo; Dominik A. Riechers; S. Serjeant; C. Tortora; Elisabetta Valiante; G. Verdoes Kleijn

{{v}_{{\rm rot}}}


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

Lens models of Herschel-selected galaxies from high-resolution near-IR observations

Jae Calanog; Hai Fu; A. Cooray; J. L. Wardlow; Brian Ma; S. Amber; A. J. Baker; M. Baes; J. J. Bock; N. Bourne; R. S. Bussmann; Caitlin M. Casey; S. C. Chapman; D. L. Clements; A. Conley; H. Dannerbauer; G. De Zotti; Loretta Dunne; Simon Dye; Stephen Anthony Eales; D. Farrah; C. Furlanetto; A. I. Harris; R. J. Ivison; S. Kim; Steve Maddox; G. Magdis; Hugo Messias; M. J. Michałowski; M. Negrello

= 320 ± 20 km s−1, and a dynamical mass of


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

Herschel-ATLAS: the surprising diversity of dust-selected galaxies in the local submillimetre Universe

Christopher Jonathan Redfern Clark; Loretta Dunne; Haley Louise Gomez; Steve Maddox; P. De Vis; Matthew William L. Smith; Stephen Anthony Eales; M. Baes; G. J. Bendo; N. Bourne; Simon P. Driver; Simon Dye; C. Furlanetto; M. W. Grootes; R. J. Ivison; Simon Schofield; Aaron S. G. Robotham; K. Rowlands; Elisabetta Valiante; C. Vlahakis; P. van der Werf; A. H. Wright; G. De Zotti

{{M}_{{\rm dyn}}}


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

Herschel-ATLAS : revealing dust build-up and decline across gas, dust and stellar mass selected samples, I : scaling relations

P. De Vis; Loretta Dunne; Steve Maddox; Haley Louise Gomez; Christopher Jonathan Redfern Clark; Amanda E. Bauer; S. Viaene; Simon Schofield; M. Baes; A. J. Baker; N. Bourne; Simon P. Driver; Simon Dye; S. Eales; C. Furlanetto; R. J. Ivison; Aaron S. G. Robotham; K. Rowlands; D. J. B. Smith; Matthew William L. Smith; Elisabetta Valiante; A. H. Wright

= (3.5 ± 1.0)× 1010


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

Far-infrared observations of an unbiased sample of gamma-ray burst host galaxies

Saul A. Kohn; M. J. Michałowski; N. Bourne; M. Baes; J. Fritz; A. Cooray; I. De Looze; G. De Zotti; H. Dannerbauer; Loretta Dunne; Simon Dye; Stephen Anthony Eales; C. Furlanetto; Joaquin Gonzalez-Nuevo; E. Ibar; R. J. Ivison; Steve Maddox; D. Scott; D. J. B. Smith; Matthew William L. Smith; M. Symeonidis; Elisabetta Valiante

{{M}_{\odot }}

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Simon Dye

University of Nottingham

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A. Cooray

University of California

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R. J. Ivison

European Southern Observatory

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N. Bourne

University of Edinburgh

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M. J. Michałowski

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

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G. De Zotti

International School for Advanced Studies

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E. Ibar

Valparaiso University

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