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Dive into the research topics where Eduardo Bañados is active.

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Featured researches published by Eduardo Bañados.


Science | 2017

Light curves of the neutron star merger GW170817/SSS17a: Implications for r-process nucleosynthesis

M. R. Drout; Anthony L. Piro; B. J. Shappee; C. D. Kilpatrick; J. D. Simon; Carlos Contreras; D. A. Coulter; Ryan J. Foley; M. R. Siebert; Nidia I. Morrell; K. Boutsia; F. Di Mille; T. W.-S. Holoien; Daniel Kasen; J. A. Kollmeier; Barry F. Madore; A. J. Monson; A. Murguia-Berthier; Y.-C. Pan; J. X. Prochaska; Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz; A. Rest; C. Adams; K. Alatalo; Eduardo Bañados; J. Baughman; Timothy C. Beers; R. A. Bernstein; T. Bitsakis; A. Campillay

Photons from a gravitational wave event Two neutron stars merging together generate a gravitational wave signal and have also been predicted to emit electromagnetic radiation. When the gravitational wave event GW170817 was detected, astronomers rushed to search for the source using conventional telescopes (see the Introduction by Smith). Coulter et al. describe how the One-Meter Two-Hemispheres (1M2H) collaboration was the first to locate the electromagnetic source. Drout et al. present the 1M2H measurements of its optical and infrared brightness, and Shappee et al. report their spectroscopy of the event, which is unlike previously detected astronomical transient sources. Kilpatrick et al. show how these observations can be explained by an explosion known as a kilonova, which produces large quantities of heavy elements in nuclear reactions. Science, this issue p. 1556, p. 1570, p. 1574, p. 1583; see also p. 1554 Photometric observations of a neutron star merger show that it produced heavy elements through r-process nucleosynthesis. On 17 August 2017, gravitational waves (GWs) were detected from a binary neutron star merger, GW170817, along with a coincident short gamma-ray burst, GRB 170817A. An optical transient source, Swope Supernova Survey 17a (SSS17a), was subsequently identified as the counterpart of this event. We present ultraviolet, optical, and infrared light curves of SSS17a extending from 10.9 hours to 18 days postmerger. We constrain the radioactively powered transient resulting from the ejection of neutron-rich material. The fast rise of the light curves, subsequent decay, and rapid color evolution are consistent with multiple ejecta components of differing lanthanide abundance. The late-time light curve indicates that SSS17a produced at least ~0.05 solar masses of heavy elements, demonstrating that neutron star mergers play a role in rapid neutron capture (r-process) nucleosynthesis in the universe.


The Astronomical Journal | 2014

Discovery of eight z~ 6 quasars from Pan-STARRS1

Eduardo Bañados; B. P. Venemans; Eric Morganson; Roberto Decarli; F. Walter; K. C. Chambers; H.-W. Rix; E. P. Farina; Xiaohui Fan; Linhua Jiang; Ian D. McGreer; G. De Rosa; Robert A. Simcoe; A. Weiß; P. A. Price; Jeffrey S. Morgan; W. S. Burgett; J. Greiner; Nick Kaiser; R. P. Kudritzki; E. A. Magnier; N. Metcalfe; Christopher W. Stubbs; W. Sweeney; John L. Tonry; R. J. Wainscoat; C. Waters

High-redshift quasars are currently the only probes of the growth of supermassive black holes and potential tracers of structure evolution at early cosmic time. Here we present our candidate selection criteria from the Panoramic Survey Telescope & Rapid Response System 1 and follow-up strategy to discover quasars in the redshift range 5.7 lsim z lsim 6.2. With this strategy we discovered eight new 5.7 ≤ z ≤ 6.0 quasars, increasing the number of known quasars at z > 5.7 by more than 10%. We additionally recovered 18 previously known quasars. The eight quasars presented here span a large range of luminosities (–27.3 ≤ M 1450 ≤ –25.4; 19.6 ≤ z P1 ≤ 21.2) and are remarkably heterogeneous in their spectral features: half of them show bright emission lines whereas the other half show a weak or no Lyα emission line (25% with rest-frame equivalent width of the Lyα +N V line lower than 15 A). We find a larger fraction of weak-line emission quasars than in lower redshift studies. This may imply that the weak-line quasar population at the highest redshifts could be more abundant than previously thought. However, larger samples of quasars are needed to increase the statistical significance of this finding.


Nature | 2017

An 800-million-solar-mass black hole in a significantly neutral Universe at a redshift of 7.5

Eduardo Bañados; B. P. Venemans; Chiara Mazzucchelli; E. P. Farina; Fabian Walter; Feige Wang; Roberto Decarli; Daniel Stern; Xiaohui Fan; Frederick B. Davies; Joseph F. Hennawi; Robert A. Simcoe; Monica L. Turner; H.-W. Rix; Jinyi Yang; Daniel D. Kelson; Gwen C. Rudie; Jan Martin Winters

Quasars are the most luminous non-transient objects known and as a result they enable studies of the Universe at the earliest cosmic epochs. Despite extensive efforts, however, the quasar ULAS J1120 + 0641 at redshift z = 7.09 has remained the only one known at z > 7 for more than half a decade. Here we report observations of the quasar ULAS J134208.10 + 092838.61 (hereafter J1342 + 0928) at redshift z = 7.54. This quasar has a bolometric luminosity of 4 × 1013 times the luminosity of the Sun and a black-hole mass of 8 × 108 solar masses. The existence of this supermassive black hole when the Universe was only 690 million years old—just five per cent of its current age—reinforces models of early black-hole growth that allow black holes with initial masses of more than about 104 solar masses or episodic hyper-Eddington accretion. We see strong evidence of absorption of the spectrum of the quasar redwards of the Lyman α emission line (the Gunn–Peterson damping wing), as would be expected if a significant amount (more than 10 per cent) of the hydrogen in the intergalactic medium surrounding J1342 + 0928 is neutral. We derive such a significant fraction of neutral hydrogen, although the exact fraction depends on the modelling. However, even in our most conservative analysis we find a fraction of more than 0.33 (0.11) at 68 per cent (95 per cent) probability, indicating that we are probing well within the reionization epoch of the Universe.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

THE IDENTIFICATION OF z -DROPOUTS IN PAN-STARRS1: THREE QUASARS AT 6.5< z < 6.7

B. P. Venemans; Eduardo Bañados; Roberto Decarli; E. P. Farina; F. Walter; K. C. Chambers; X. Fan; H.-W. Rix; Edward F. Schlafly; Richard G. McMahon; Robert A. Simcoe; D. Stern; W. S. Burgett; P. W. Draper; H. Flewelling; Klaus-Werner Hodapp; Nick Kaiser; E. A. Magnier; N. Metcalfe; Jeffrey S. Morgan; P. A. Price; John L. Tonry; C. Waters; Yusra AlSayyad; M. Banerji; S. S. Chen; E. Gonzalez-Solares; J. Greiner; Chiara Mazzucchelli; Ian D. McGreer

Luminous distant quasars are unique probes of the high redshift intergalactic medium (IGM) and of the growth of massive galaxies and black holes in the early universe. Absorption due to neutral Hydrogen in the IGM makes quasars beyond a redshift of z~6.5 very faint in the optical


Science | 2017

Early spectra of the gravitational wave source GW170817: Evolution of a neutron star merger

B. J. Shappee; J. D. Simon; M. R. Drout; Anthony L. Piro; Nidia I. Morrell; Jose Luis Palacio Prieto; Daniel Kasen; T. W.-S. Holoien; J. A. Kollmeier; D. D. Kelson; D. A. Coulter; Ryan J. Foley; Charles D. Kilpatrick; M. R. Siebert; Barry F. Madore; A. Murguia-Berthier; Y.-C. Pan; Jason X. Prochaska; Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz; A. Rest; C. Adams; K. Alatalo; Eduardo Bañados; J. Baughman; R. A. Bernstein; T. Bitsakis; K. Boutsia; J. R. Bravo; F. Di Mille; C. R. Higgs

z


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2016

The Pan-STARRS1 distant z > 5.6 quasar survey: more than 100 quasars within the first gyr of the universe

Eduardo Bañados; B. P. Venemans; Roberto Decarli; E. P. Farina; Chiara Mazzucchelli; F. Walter; X. Fan; D. Stern; Edward F. Schlafly; K. C. Chambers; H.-W. Rix; Linhua Jiang; Ian D. McGreer; Robert A. Simcoe; Feige Wang; Jinyi Yang; Eric Morganson; G. De Rosa; J. Greiner; M. Baloković; W. S. Burgett; T. Cooper; P. W. Draper; H. Flewelling; Klaus-Werner Hodapp; Hyunsung David Jun; Nick Kaiser; R. P. Kudritzki; E. A. Magnier; N. Metcalfe

-band, thus locating quasars at higher redshifts require large surveys that are sensitive above 1 micron. We report the discovery of three new z>6.5 quasars, corresponding to an age of the universe of 6.5 quasars from 4 to 7. The quasars have redshifts of z=6.50, 6.52, and 6.66, and include the brightest z-dropout quasar reported to date, PSO J036.5078+03.0498 with M_1450=-27.4. We obtained near-infrared spectroscopy for the quasars and from the MgII line we estimate that the central black holes have masses between 5x10^8 and 4x10^9 M_sun, and are accreting close to the Eddington limit (L_Bol/L_Edd=0.13-1.2). We investigate the ionized regions around the quasars and find near zone radii of R_NZ=1.5-5.2 proper Mpc, confirming the trend of decreasing near zone sizes with increasing redshift found for quasars at 5.7<z<6.4. By combining R_NZ of the PS1 quasars with those of 5.7<z<7.1 quasars in the literature, we derive a luminosity corrected redshift evolution of R_NZ,corrected=(7.2+/-0.2)-(6.1+/-0.7)x(z-6) Mpc. However, the large spread in R_NZ in the new quasars implies a wide range in quasar ages and/or a large variation in the neutral Hydrogen fraction along different lines of sight.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

The time domain spectroscopic survey: variable selection and anticipated results

Eric Morganson; Paul J. Green; Scott F. Anderson; John J. Ruan; Adam D. Myers; Michael Eracleous; Brandon C. Kelly; Carlos Badenes; Eduardo Bañados; Michael R. Blanton; Matthew A. Bershady; J. Borissova; W. N. Brandt; W. S. Burgett; K. C. Chambers; Peter W. Draper; James R. A. Davenport; H. Flewelling; Peter Marcus Garnavich; Suzanne L. Hawley; Klaus W. Hodapp; Jedidah C. Isler; Nick Kaiser; Karen Kinemuchi; R.-P. Kudritzki; N. Metcalfe; Jeffrey S. Morgan; Isabelle Pâris; Mahmoud Parvizi; R. Poleski

Photons from a gravitational wave event Two neutron stars merging together generate a gravitational wave signal and have also been predicted to emit electromagnetic radiation. When the gravitational wave event GW170817 was detected, astronomers rushed to search for the source using conventional telescopes (see the Introduction by Smith). Coulter et al. describe how the One-Meter Two-Hemispheres (1M2H) collaboration was the first to locate the electromagnetic source. Drout et al. present the 1M2H measurements of its optical and infrared brightness, and Shappee et al. report their spectroscopy of the event, which is unlike previously detected astronomical transient sources. Kilpatrick et al. show how these observations can be explained by an explosion known as a kilonova, which produces large quantities of heavy elements in nuclear reactions. Science, this issue p. 1556, p. 1570, p. 1574, p. 1583; see also p. 1554 Spectra of a neutron star merger are unlike other astronomical transients and demonstrate rapid evolution of the source. On 17 August 2017, Swope Supernova Survey 2017a (SSS17a) was discovered as the optical counterpart of the binary neutron star gravitational wave event GW170817. We report time-series spectroscopy of SSS17a from 11.75 hours until 8.5 days after the merger. Over the first hour of observations, the ejecta rapidly expanded and cooled. Applying blackbody fits to the spectra, we measured the photosphere cooling from 11,000−900+3400 to 9300−300+300 kelvin, and determined a photospheric velocity of roughly 30% of the speed of light. The spectra of SSS17a began displaying broad features after 1.46 days and evolved qualitatively over each subsequent day, with distinct blue (early-time) and red (late-time) components. The late-time component is consistent with theoretical models of r-process–enriched neutron star ejecta, whereas the blue component requires high-velocity, lanthanide-free material.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

First discoveries of z~6 quasars with the Kilo Degree Survey and VISTA Kilo-Degree Infrared Galaxy survey

B. P. Venemans; G. Verdoes Kleijn; Johnson Mwebaze; E Valentijn; Eduardo Bañados; Roberto Decarli; J. T. A. de Jong; Joseph R. Findlay; K. Kuijken; F. La Barbera; John McFarland; Richard G. McMahon; N. R. Napolitano; Gert Sikkema; W. Sutherland

Luminous quasars at z > 5.6 can be studied in detail with the current generation of telescopes and provide us with unique information on the first gigayear of the universe. Thus far, these studies have been statistically limited by the number of quasars known at these redshifts. Such quasars are rare, and therefore, wide-field surveys are required to identify them, and multiwavelength data are required to separate them efficiently from their main contaminants, the far more numerous cool dwarfs. In this paper, we update and extend the selection for the z ~ 6 quasars presented in Banados et al. (2014) using the Pan-STARRS1 (PS1) survey. We present the PS1 distant quasar sample, which currently consists of 124 quasars in the redshift range 5.6 ≾ z ≾ 6.7 that satisfy our selection criteria. Of these quasars, 77 have been discovered with PS1, and 63 of them are newly identified in this paper. We present the composite spectra of the PS1 distant quasar sample. This sample spans a factor of ~20 in luminosity and shows a variety of emission line properties. The number of quasars at z > 5.6 presented in this work almost doubles the previously known quasars at these redshifts, marking a transition phase from studies of individual sources to statistical studies of the high-redshift quasar population, which was impossible with earlier, smaller samples.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

THE GALAXY ENVIRONMENT OF A QSO AT z ∼ 5.7

Eduardo Bañados; B. P. Venemans; Fabian Walter; J. Kurk; Roderik Overzier; Masami Ouchi

We present the selection algorithm and anticipated results for the Time Domain Spectroscopic Survey (TDSS). TDSS is an Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS)-IV Extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (eBOSS) subproject that will provide initial identification spectra of approximately 220,000 luminosity-variable objects (variable stars and active galactic nuclei across 7500 deg2 selected from a combination of SDSS and multi-epoch Pan-STARRS1 photometry. TDSS will be the largest spectroscopic survey to explicitly target variable objects, avoiding pre-selection on the basis of colors or detailed modeling of specific variability characteristics. Kernel Density Estimate analysis of our target population performed on SDSS Stripe 82 data suggests our target sample will be 95% pure (meaning 95% of objects we select have genuine luminosity variability of a few magnitudes or more). Our final spectroscopic sample will contain roughly 135,000 quasars and 85,000 stellar variables, approximately 4000 of which will be RR Lyrae stars which may be used as outer Milky Way probes. The variability-selected quasar population has a smoother redshift distribution than a color-selected sample, and variability measurements similar to those we develop here may be used to make more uniform quasar samples in large surveys. The stellar variable targets are distributed fairly uniformly across color space, indicating that TDSS will obtain spectra for a wide variety of stellar variables including pulsating variables, stars with significant chromospheric activity, cataclysmic variables, and eclipsing binaries. TDSS will serve as a pathfinder mission to identify and characterize the multitude of variable objects that will be detected photometrically in even larger variability surveys such as Large Synoptic Survey Telescope.


Nature | 2017

Rapidly star-forming galaxies adjacent to quasars at redshifts exceeding 6

Roberto Decarli; Fabian Walter; B. P. Venemans; Eduardo Bañados; Frank Bertoldi; Chris L. Carilli; Xiaohui Fan; E. P. Farina; Chiara Mazzucchelli; Dominik A. Riechers; Hans-Walter Rix; Michael A. Strauss; Ran Wang; Yujin Yang

We present the results of our first year of quasar search in the ongoing ESO public Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS) and VISTA Kilo-Degree Infrared Galaxy (VIKING) surveys. These surveys are among the deeper wide-field surveys that can be used to uncover large numbers of z ˜ 6 quasars. This allows us to probe a more common population of z ˜ 6 quasars that is fainter than the well-studied quasars from the main Sloan Digital Sky Survey. From this first set of combined survey catalogues covering ˜250 deg2 we selected point sources down to ZAB = 22 that had a very red i - Z (i - Z > 2.2) colour. After follow-up imaging and spectroscopy, we discovered four new quasars in the redshift range 5.8 <z <6.0. The absolute magnitudes at a rest-frame wavelength of 1450 A are between -26.6 <M1450 <-24.4, confirming that we can find quasars fainter than M*, which at z = 6 has been estimated to be between M* = -25.1 and M* = -27.6. The discovery of four quasars in 250 deg2 of survey data is consistent with predictions based on the z ˜ 6 quasar luminosity function. We discuss various ways to push the candidate selection to fainter magnitudes and we expect to find about 30 new quasars down to an absolute magnitude of M1450 = -24. Studying this homogeneously selected faint quasar population will be important to gain insight into the onset of the co-evolution of the black holes and their stellar hosts.

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