Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where David C. Koo is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by David C. Koo.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

Star Formation in AEGIS Field Galaxies since z = 1.1: The Dominance of Gradually Declining Star Formation, and the Main Sequence of Star-forming Galaxies

Kai G. Noeske; Benjamin J. Weiner; S. M. Faber; Casey Papovich; David C. Koo; Rachel S. Somerville; Kevin Bundy; Christopher J. Conselice; J. A. Newman; David Schiminovich; E. Le Floc'h; Alison L. Coil; G. H. Rieke; Jennifer M. Lotz; Joel R. Primack; P. Barmby; Michael C. Cooper; M. Davis; Richard S. Ellis; Giovanni G. Fazio; Puragra Guhathakurta; Jing Huang; Susan A. Kassin; D. C. Martin; Andrew C. Phillips; Robert Michael Rich; Todd Small; C. A. N. Willmer; Graham Wallace Wilson

We analyze star formation (SF) as a function of stellar mass (M☉) and redshift z in the All-Wavelength Extended Groth Strip International Survey. For 2905 field galaxies, complete to 10^10(10^10.8 )M at z < 0.7(1), with Keck spectroscopic redshifts out to z = 1.1, we compile SF rates (SFRs) from emission lines, GALEX, and Spitzer MIPS 24 µm photometry, optical-NIR M* measurements, and HST morphologies. Galaxies with reliable signs of SF form a distinct “main sequence” (MS), with a limited range of SFRs at a given M* and z (1 σ ≾ ±0.3 dex), and log (SFR) approximately proportional to log M*. The range of log (SFR) remains constant to z > 1, while the MS as a whole moves to higher SFR as z increases. The range of the SFR along the MS constrains the amplitude of episodic variations of SF and the effect of mergers on the SFR. Typical galaxies spend ∼67%(95%) of their lifetime since z = 1 within a factor of ≾2(4) of their average SFR at a given M* and z. The dominant mode of the evolution of SF since z ∼ 1 is apparently a gradual decline of the average SFR in most individual galaxies, not a decreasing frequency of starburst episodes, or a decreasing factor by which SFRs are enhanced in starbursts. LIRGs at z ∼ 1 seem to mostly reflect the high SFR typical for massive galaxies at that epoch. The smooth MS may reflect that the same set of few physical processes governs SF prior to additional quenching processes. A gradual process like gas exhaustion may play a dominant role.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

UBIQUITOUS OUTFLOWS IN DEEP2 SPECTRA OF STAR-FORMING GALAXIES AT z = 1.4

Benjamin J. Weiner; Alison L. Coil; Jason X. Prochaska; Jeffrey A. Newman; Michael C. Cooper; Kevin Bundy; Christopher J. Conselice; Aaron A. Dutton; S. M. Faber; David C. Koo; Jennifer M. Lotz; G. H. Rieke; Kate H. R. Rubin

Galactic winds are a prime suspect for the metal enrichment of the intergalactic medium (IGM) and may have a strong influence on the chemical evolution of galaxies and the nature of QSO absorption-line systems. We use a sample of 1406 galaxy spectra at z ~ 1.4 from the DEEP2 redshift survey to show that blueshifted Mg IYI ?? 2796, 2803 absorption is ubiquitous in star-forming galaxies at this epoch. This is the first detection of frequent outflowing galactic winds at z ~ 1. The presence and depth of absorption are independent of active galactic nuclei spectral signatures or galaxy morphology; major mergers are not a prerequisite for driving a galactic wind from massive galaxies. Outflows are found in co-added spectra of galaxies spanning a range of 30 times in stellar mass and 10 times in star formation rate (SFR), calibrated from K-band and from the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer IR fluxes. The outflows have column densities of order NH ~ 1020 cm-2 and characteristic velocities of ~?300-500?km?s?1, with absorption seen out to 1000?km?s?1 in the most massive, highest SFR galaxies. The velocities suggest that the outflowing gas can escape into the IGM and that massive galaxies can produce cosmologically and chemically significant outflows. Both the Mg II equivalent width and the outflow velocity are larger for galaxies of higher stellar mass and SFR, with V wind ~ SFR0.3, similar to the scaling in low redshift IR-luminous galaxies. The high frequency of outflows in the star-forming galaxy population at z ~ 1 indicates that galactic winds occur in the progenitors of massive spirals as well as those of ellipticals. The increase of outflow velocity with mass and SFR constrains theoretical models of galaxy evolution that include feedback from galactic winds, and may favor momentum-driven models for the wind physics.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003

Science Objectives and Early Results of the DEEP2 Redshift Survey

Marc Davis; Sandra M. Faber; Jeffrey A. Newman; Andrew C. Phillips; Richard S. Ellis; Charles C. Steidel; Christopher J. Conselice; Alison L. Coil; Douglas P. Finkbeiner; David C. Koo; Puragra Guhathakurta; Benjamin J. Weiner; Ricardo P. Schiavon; Christopher N. A. Willmer; Nick Kaiser; Gerard A. Luppino; Gregory D. Wirth; Andrew J. Connolly; Peter R. M. Eisenhardt; Michael C. Cooper; Brian F. Gerke

The DEIMOS spectrograph has now been installed on the Keck-II telescope and commissioning is nearly complete. The DEEP2 Redshift Survey, which will take approximately 120 nights at the Keck Observatory over a three year period and has been designed to utilize the power of DEIMOS, began in the summer of 2002. The multiplexing power and high efficiency of DEIMOS enables us to target 1000 faint galaxies per clear night. Our goal is to gather high-quality spectra of ≈ 60,000 galaxies with z>0.75 in order to study the properties and large scale clustering of galaxies at z ≈ 1. The survey will be executed at high spectral resolution, R=λ/Δλ ≈ 5000, allowing us to work between the bright OH sky emission lines and to infer linewidths for many of the target galaxies (for several thousand objects, we will obtain rotation curves as well). The linewidth data will facilitate the execution of the classical redshift-volume cosmological test, which can provide a precision measurement of the equation of state of the Universe. This talk reviews the project, summarizes our science goals and presents some early DEIMOS data.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1997

Keck Spectroscopy of Redshift z ~ 3 Galaxies in the Hubble Deep Field

James D. Lowenthal; David C. Koo; Rafael Guzman; J. Gallego; Andrew C. Phillips; S. M. Faber; Nicole P. Vogt; Garth D. Illingworth; Caryl Gronwall

We have obtained spectra with the 10 m Keck telescope of a sample of 24 galaxies having colors consistent with star-forming galaxies at redshifts 2 z 4.5 in the Hubble deep field (HDF). Eleven of these galaxies are confirmed to be at high redshift (zmed = 3.0), one is at z = 0.5, and the other 12 have uncertain redshifts but have spectra consistent with their being at z > 2. The spectra of the confirmed high-redshift galaxies show a diversity of features, including weak Ly? emission, strong Ly? breaks or damped Ly? absorption profiles, and the stellar and interstellar rest-UV absorption lines common to local starburst galaxies and high-redshift star-forming galaxies reported recently by others. The narrow profiles and low equivalent widths of C IV, Si IV, and N V absorption lines may imply low stellar metallicities. Combined with the five high-redshift galaxies in the HDF previously confirmed with Keck spectra by Steidel et al. (1996a), the 16 confirmed sources yield a comoving volume density of n ? 2.4 ? 10-4 h -->503 Mpc-3 for q0 = 0.05, or n ? 1.1 ? 10-3 h -->503 Mpc-3 for q0 = 0.5. These densities are 3-4 times higher than the recent estimates of Steidel et al. (1996b) based on ground-based photometry with slightly brighter limits and are comparable to estimates of the local volume density of galaxies brighter than L*. The high-redshift density measurement is only a lower limit and could be almost 3 times higher still if all 29 of the unconfirmed candidates in our original sample, including those not observed, are indeed also at high redshift. The galaxies are small but luminous, with half-light radii 1.8 50?1 kpc and absolute magnitudes -21.5 > MB > -23. The HST images show a wide range of morphologies, including several with very close, small knots of emission embedded in wispy extended structures. Using rest-frame UV continuum fluxes with no dust correction, we calculate star formation rates in the range 7-24 or 3-9 h -->50?2 M? yr-1 for q0 = 0.05 and q0 = 0.5, respectively. These rates overlap those for local spiral and H II galaxies today, although they could be more than twice as high if dust extinction in the UV is significant. If the objects at z = 3 were simply to fade by 5 mag (assuming a 107 yr burst and passive evolution) without mergers in the 14 Gyr between then and now (for q0 = 0.05, h50 = 1.0), they would resemble average dwarf elliptical/spheroidal galaxies in both luminosity and size. However, the variety of morphologies and the high number density of z = 3 galaxies in the HDF suggest that they represent a range of physical processes and stages of galaxy formation and evolution, rather than any one class of object, such as massive ellipticals. A key issue remains the measurement of masses. These high-redshift objects are likely to be the low-mass, starbursting building blocks of more massive galaxies seen today.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

The All-wavelength Extended Groth Strip International Survey (AEGIS) Data Sets

M. Davis; Puragra Guhathakurta; Nicholas P. Konidaris; Jeffrey A. Newman; M. L. N. Ashby; A. D. Biggs; Pauline Barmby; Kevin Bundy; S. C. Chapman; Alison L. Coil; Christopher J. Conselice; Michael C. Cooper; Darren J. Croton; Peter R. M. Eisenhardt; Richard S. Ellis; S. M. Faber; Taotao Fang; Giovanni G. Fazio; A. Georgakakis; Brian F. Gerke; W. M. Goss; Stephen D. J. Gwyn; Justin Harker; Andrew M. Hopkins; Jia-Sheng Huang; R. J. Ivison; Susan A. Kassin; Evan N. Kirby; Anton M. Koekemoer; David C. Koo

In this the first of a series of Letters, we present a panchromatic data set in the Extended Groth Strip region of the sky. Our survey, the All-Wavelength Extended Groth Strip International Survey (AEGIS), aims to study the physical properties and evolutionary processes of galaxies at z ~ 1. It includes the following deep, wide-field imaging data sets: Chandra/ACIS X-ray, GALEX ultraviolet, CFHT/MegaCam Legacy Survey optical, CFHT/CFH12K optical, Hubble Space Telescope/ACS optical and NICMOS near-infrared, Palomar/WIRC near-infrared, Spitzer/IRAC mid-infrared, Spitzer/MIPS far-infrared, and VLA radio continuum. In addition, this region of the sky has been targeted for extensive spectroscopy using the Deep Imaging Multi-Object Spectrograph (DEIMOS) on the Keck II 10 m telescope. Our survey is compared to other large multiwavelength surveys in terms of depth and sky coverage.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2006

The Deep Evolutionary Exploratory Probe 2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: The Galaxy Luminosity Function to z ~ 1*

Christopher N. A. Willmer; S. M. Faber; David C. Koo; Benjamin J. Weiner; Jeffrey A. Newman; Alison L. Coil; A. J. Connolly; Charlie Conroy; Michael C. Cooper; M. Davis; Douglas P. Finkbeiner; Brian F. Gerke; Puragra Guhathakurta; Justin Harker; Nick Kaiser; Susan A. Kassin; Nicholas P. Konidaris; Lihwai Lin; Gerard A. Luppino; Darren Madgwick; Kai G. Noeske; Andrew C. Phillips; Renbin Yan

The evolution of the B-band galaxy luminosity function is measured using a sample of more than 11,000 galaxies with spectroscopic redshifts from the DEEP2 Redshift Survey. The rest-frame MB versus U - B color-magnitude diagram of DEEP2 galaxies shows that the color-magnitude bimodality seen in galaxies locally is still present at redshifts z > 1. Dividing the sample at the trough of this color bimodality into predominantly red and blue galaxies, we find that the luminosity function of each galaxy color type evolves differently. Blue counts tend to shift to brighter magnitudes at constant number density, while the red counts remain largely constant at a fixed absolute magnitude. Using Schechter functions with fixed faint-end slopes we find that M for blue galaxies brightens by ~1.3 ? 0.14 mag per unit redshift, with no significant evolution in number density. For red galaxies M brightens somewhat less with redshift, while the formal value of * declines. When the population of blue galaxies is subdivided into two halves using the rest-frame color as the criterion, the measured evolution of both blue subpopulations is very similar.The evolution of the B-band galaxy luminosity function is measured using a sample of more than 11,000 galaxies with spectroscopic redshifts from the DEEP2 Redshift Survey. The rest-frame M_B versus U-B color-magnitude diagram of DEEP2 galaxies shows that the color-magnitude bi-modality seen in galaxies locally is still present at redshifts z > 1. Dividing the sample at the trough of this color bimodality into predominantly red and blue galaxies, we find that the luminosity function of each galaxy color type evolves differently. Blue counts tend to shift to brighter magnitudes at constant number density, while the red counts remain largely constant at a fixed absolute magnitude. Using Schechter functions with fixed faint-end slopes we find that M*_B for blue galaxies brightens by ~ 1.3 magnitudes per unit redshift, with no significant evolution in number density. For red galaxies M*_B brightens somewhat less with redshift, while the formal value of phi* declines. When the population of blue galaxies is subdivided into two halves using the rest-frame color as the criterion, the measured evolution of both blue subpopulations is very similar.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2013

The DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: Design, Observations, Data Reduction, and Redshifts

Jeffrey A. Newman; Michael C. Cooper; Marc Davis; S. M. Faber; Alison L. Coil; Puragra Guhathakurta; David C. Koo; Andrew C. Phillips; Charlie Conroy; Aaron A. Dutton; Douglas P. Finkbeiner; Brian F. Gerke; D. Rosario; Benjamin J. Weiner; Christopher N. A. Willmer; Renbin Yan; Justin Harker; Susan A. Kassin; Nicholas P. Konidaris; Kamson Lai; Darren Madgwick; Kai G. Noeske; Gregory D. Wirth; Andrew J. Connolly; Nick Kaiser; Evan N. Kirby; Brian C. Lemaux; Lihwai Lin; Jennifer M. Lotz; Gerard A. Luppino

We describe the design and data analysis of the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey, the densest and largest high-precision redshift survey of galaxies at z ~ 1 completed to date. The survey was designed to conduct a comprehensive census of massive galaxies, their properties, environments, and large-scale structure down to absolute magnitude M_B = −20 at z ~ 1 via ~90 nights of observation on the Keck telescope. The survey covers an area of 2.8 deg^2 divided into four separate fields observed to a limiting apparent magnitude of R_(AB) = 24.1. Objects with z ≾0.7 are readily identifiable using BRI photometry and rejected in three of the four DEEP2 fields, allowing galaxies with z > 0.7 to be targeted ~2.5 times more efficiently than in a purely magnitude-limited sample. Approximately 60% of eligible targets are chosen for spectroscopy, yielding nearly 53,000 spectra and more than 38,000 reliable redshift measurements. Most of the targets that fail to yield secure redshifts are blue objects that lie beyond z ~ 1.45, where the [O ii] 3727 A doublet lies in the infrared. The DEIMOS 1200 line mm^(−1) grating used for the survey delivers high spectral resolution (R ~ 6000), accurate and secure redshifts, and unique internal kinematic information. Extensive ancillary data are available in the DEEP2 fields, particularly in the Extended Groth Strip, which has evolved into one of the richest multiwavelength regions on the sky. This paper is intended as a handbook for users of the DEEP2 Data Release 4, which includes all DEEP2 spectra and redshifts, as well as for the DEEP2 DEIMOS data reduction pipelines. Extensive details are provided on object selection, mask design, biases in target selection and redshift measurements, the spec2d two-dimensional data-reduction pipeline, the spec1d automated redshift pipeline, and the zspec visual redshift verification process, along with examples of instrumental signatures or other artifacts that in some cases remain after data reduction. Redshift errors and catastrophic failure rates are assessed through more than 2000 objects with duplicate observations. Sky subtraction is essentially photon-limited even under bright OH sky lines; we describe the strategies that permitted this, based on high image stability, accurate wavelength solutions, and powerful B-spline modeling methods. We also investigate the impact of targets that appear to be single objects in ground-based targeting imaging but prove to be composite in Hubble Space Telescope data; they constitute several percent of targets at z ~ 1, approaching ~5%–10% at z > 1.5. Summary data are given that demonstrate the superiority of DEEP2 over other deep high-precision redshift surveys at z ~ 1 in terms of redshift accuracy, sample number density, and amount of spectral information. We also provide an overview of the scientific highlights of the DEEP2 survey thus far.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

The Evolution of Galaxy Mergers and Morphology at z < 1.2 in the Extended Groth Strip

Jennifer M. Lotz; M. Davis; S. M. Faber; Puragra Guhathakurta; Stephen D. J. Gwyn; Jia-Sheng Huang; David C. Koo; Lihwai Lin; Jeffrey A. Newman; Kai G. Noeske; Casey Papovich; Christopher N. A. Willmer; Alison L. Coil; Christopher J. Conselice; Michael C. Cooper; Andrew M. Hopkins; Anne Julie Metevier; Joel R. Primack; G. H. Rieke; Benjamin J. Weiner

We present the quantitative rest-frame B morphological evolution and galaxy merger fraction at 0.2 1011 L☉ are disk galaxies, and only ~15% are classified as major merger candidates. Edge-on and dusty disk galaxies (Sb-Ir) are almost a third of the red sequence at z ~ 1.1, while E/S0/Sa make up over 90% of the red sequence at z ~ 0.3. Approximately 2% of our full sample are red mergers. We conclude (1) the merger rate does not evolve strongly between 0.2 < z < 1.2; (2) the decrease in the volume-averaged star formation rate density since z ~ 1 is a result of declining star formation in disk galaxies rather than a disappearing population of major mergers; (3) the build-up of the red sequence at z < 1 can be explained by a doubling in the number of spheroidal galaxies since z ~ 1.2.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2002

The DEEP Groth Strip Survey. II. Hubble Space Telescope Structural Parameters of Galaxies in the Groth Strip

Luc Simard; Christopher N. A. Willmer; Nicole P. Vogt; Vicki L. Sarajedini; Andrew C. Phillips; Benjamin J. Weiner; David C. Koo; Myungshin Im; Garth D. Illingworth; S. M. Faber

The quantitative morphological classification of distant galaxies is essential to the understanding of the evolution of galaxies over the history of the universe. This paper presents Hubble Space Telescope WFPC2 F606W and F814W photometric structural parameters for 7450 galaxies in the Groth Strip. These parameters are based on a two-dimensional bulge + disk surface brightness model and were obtained using an automated reduction and analysis pipeline described in detail here. A first set of fits was performed separately in each bandpass, and a second set of fits was performed simultaneously on both bandpasses. The information produced by these two types of fits can be used to explore different science goals. Systematic and random fitting errors in all structural parameters as well as bulge and disk colors are carefully characterized through extensive sets of simulations. The results of these simulations are given in catalogs similar to the real science catalogs so that both real and simulated measurements can be sampled according to the same selection criteria to show biases and errors in the science data subset of interest. The effects of asymmetric structures on the recovered bulge+disk fitting parameters are also explored through simulations. The full multidimensional photometric survey selection function of the Groth Strip is also computed. This selection function, coupled to bias maps from simulations, provides a complete and objective reproduction of the observational limits, and these limits can be applied to theoretical predictions from galaxy evolution models for direct comparisons with the data.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

Star formation in AEGIS field galaxies since z = 1.1: Staged galaxy formation and a model of mass-dependent gas exhaustion

Kai G. Noeske; S. M. Faber; Benjamin J. Weiner; David C. Koo; Joel R. Primack; Avishai Dekel; Casey Papovich; Christopher J. Conselice; E. Le Floc'h; G. H. Rieke; Alison L. Coil; Jennifer M. Lotz; Rachel S. Somerville; Kevin Bundy

We analyze star formation (SF) as a function of stellar mass (M☉) and redshift z in the All-Wavelength Extended Groth Strip International Survey, for star-forming field galaxies with M* ≳ 10^10 M☉ out to z = 1.1. The data indicate that the high specific SF rates (SFRs) of many less massive galaxies do not represent late, irregular or recurrent, starbursts in evolved galaxies. They rather seem to reflect the onset (initial burst) of the dominant SF episode of galaxies, after which SF gradually declines on gigayear timescales to z = 0 and forms the bulk of a galaxy’s M*. With decreasing mass, this onset of major SF shifts to decreasing z for an increasing fraction of galaxies (staged galaxy formation). This process may be an important component of the “downsizing” phenomenon. We find that the predominantly gradual decline of SFRs described by Noeske et al. can be reproduced by exponential SF histories (τ models), if less massive galaxies have systematically longer e-folding times τ, and a later onset of SF (zf). Our model can provide a first parameterization of SFR as a function of M* and z, and quantify mass dependences of τ and z, from direct observations of M* and SFRs up to z > 1. The observed evolution of SF in galaxies can plausibly reflect the dominance of gradual gas exhaustion. The data are also consistent with the history of cosmological accretion onto dark matter halos.

Collaboration


Dive into the David C. Koo's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S. M. Faber

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anton M. Koekemoer

Space Telescope Science Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeffrey A. Newman

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alison L. Coil

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Avishai Dekel

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Henry C. Ferguson

Space Telescope Science Institute

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge