Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Edward L. Chapin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Edward L. Chapin.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2006

The SCUBA Half-Degree Extragalactic Survey - II. Submillimetre maps, catalogue and number counts

K. Coppin; Edward L. Chapin; A. M. J. Mortier; S. E. Scott; Colin Borys; James Dunlop; M. Halpern; David H. Hughes; Alexandra Pope; D. Scott; S. Serjeant; J. Wagg; D. M. Alexander; Omar Almaini; Itziar Aretxaga; T. Babbedge; Philip Best; A. W. Blain; S. C. Chapman; D. L. Clements; M. Crawford; Loretta Dunne; Stephen Anthony Eales; A. C. Edge; D. Farrah; E. Gaztanaga; Walter Kieran Gear; G. L. Granato; T. R. Greve; M. Fox

We present maps, source catalogue and number counts of the largest, most complete and unbiased extragalactic submillimetre survey: the 850-μm SCUBA Half-Degree Extragalactic Survey (SHADES). Using the Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT), SHADES mapped two separate regions of sky: the Subaru/XMM–Newton Deep Field (SXDF) and the Lockman Hole East (LH). Encompassing 93 per cent of the overall acquired data (i.e. data taken up to 2004 February 1), these SCUBA maps cover 720 arcmin2 with a rms noise level of about 2 mJy and have uncovered >100 submillimetre galaxies. In order to ensure the utmost robustness of the resulting source catalogue, data reduction was independently carried out by four subgroups within the SHADES team, providing an unprecedented degree of reliability with respect to other SCUBA catalogues available from the literature. Individual source lists from the four groups were combined to produce a robust 120-object SHADES catalogue; an invaluable resource for follow-up campaigns aiming to study the properties of a complete and consistent sample of submillimetre galaxies. For the first time, we present deboosted flux densities for each submillimetre galaxy found in a large survey. Extensive simulations and tests were performed separately by each group in order to confirm the robustness of the source candidates and to evaluate the effects of false detections, completeness and flux density boosting. Corrections for these effects were then applied to the data to derive the submillimetre galaxy source counts. SHADES has a high enough number of detected sources that meaningful differential counts can be estimated, unlike most submillimetre surveys which have to consider integral counts. We present differential and integral source number counts and find that the differential counts are better fit with a broken power law or a Schechter function than with a single power law; the SHADES data alone significantly show that a break is required at several mJy, although the precise position of the break is not well constrained. We also find that a 850-μm survey complete down to 2 mJy would resolve 20–30 per cent of the far-infrared background into point sources.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

Scuba-2: The 10 000 pixel bolometer camera on the james clerk maxwell telescope

Wayne S. Holland; Daniel Bintley; Edward L. Chapin; A. Chrysostomou; G. R. Davis; Jessica T. Dempsey; W. D. Duncan; M. Fich; Per Friberg; M. Halpern; K. D. Irwin; Tim Jenness; B. D. Kelly; M. MacIntosh; E. I. Robson; D. Scott; Peter A. R. Ade; Eli Atad-Ettedgui; David Berry; Simon C. Craig; Xiaofeng Gao; A. G. Gibb; G. C. Hilton; Matthew I. Hollister; J. B. Kycia; D. W. Lunney; Helen McGregor; David Montgomery; William Parkes; R. P. J. Tilanus

SCUBA-2 is an innovative 10000 pixel bolometer camera operating at submillimetre wavelengths on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). The camera has the capability to carry out wide-field surveys to unprecedented depths, addressing key questions relating to the origins of galaxies, stars and planets. With two imaging arrays working simultaneously in the atmospheric windows at 450 and 850µm, the vast increase in pixel count means that SCUBA-2 maps the sky 100–150 times faster than the previous SCUBA instrument. In this paper we present an overview of the instrument, discuss the physical characteristics of the superconducting detector arrays, outline the observing modes and data acquisition, and present the early performance figures on the telescope. We also showcase the capabilities of the instrument via some early examples of the science SCUBA-2 has already undertaken. In February 2012, SCUBA-2 began a series of unique legacy surveys for the JCMT community. These surveys will take 2.5years and the results are already providing complementary data to the shorter wavelength, shallower, larger-area surveys from Herschel. The SCUBA-2 surveys will also provide a wealth of information for further study with new facilities such as ALMA, and future telescopes such as CCAT and SPICA.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

HerMES: The SPIRE confusion limit

H. T. Nguyen; Bernhard Schulz; L. Levenson; A. Amblard; V. Arumugam; H. Aussel; T. Babbedge; A. W. Blain; J. J. Bock; A. Boselli; V. Buat; N. Castro-Rodriguez; A. Cava; P. Chanial; Edward L. Chapin; D. L. Clements; A. Conley; L. Conversi; A. Cooray; C. D. Dowell; Eli Dwek; Stephen Anthony Eales; D. Elbaz; M. Fox; A. Franceschini; Walter Kieran Gear; J. Glenn; Matthew Joseph Griffin; M. Halpern; E. Hatziminaoglou

We report on the sensitivity of SPIRE photometers on the Herschel Space Observatory. Specifically, we measure the confusion noise from observations taken during the Science Demonstration Phase of the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey. Confusion noise is defined to be the spatial variation of the sky intensity in the limit of infinite integration time, and is found to be consistent among the different fields in our survey at the level of 5.8, 6.3 and 6.8 mJy/beam at 250, 350 and 500 microns, respectively. These results, together with the measured instrument noise, may be used to estimate the integration time required for confusion-limited maps, and provide a noise estimate for maps obtained by SPIRE.


Nature | 2009

Over half of the far-infrared background light comes from galaxies at z ≥ 1.2

Mark J. Devlin; Peter A. R. Ade; Itziar Aretxaga; James J. Bock; Edward L. Chapin; Matthew Joseph Griffin; Joshua O. Gundersen; M. Halpern; Peter Charles Hargrave; David H. Hughes; Jeff Klein; Gaelen Marsden; Peter G. Martin; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; Lorenzo Moncelsi; C. B. Netterfield; Henry Ngo; Luca Olmi; Enzo Pascale; G. Patanchon; Marie Rex; Douglas Scott; Christopher Semisch; Nicholas Thomas; Matthew D. P. Truch; Carole Tucker; Gregory S. Tucker; M. Viero; Donald Wiebe

Submillimetre surveys during the past decade have discovered a population of luminous, high-redshift, dusty starburst galaxies. In the redshift range 1 ≤ z ≤ 4, these massive submillimetre galaxies go through a phase characterized by optically obscured star formation at rates several hundred times that in the local Universe. Half of the starlight from this highly energetic process is absorbed and thermally re-radiated by clouds of dust at temperatures near 30 K with spectral energy distributions peaking at 100 μm in the rest frame. At 1 ≤ z ≤ 4, the peak is redshifted to wavelengths between 200 and 500 μm. The cumulative effect of these galaxies is to yield extragalactic optical and far-infrared backgrounds with approximately equal energy densities. Since the initial detection of the far-infrared background (FIRB), higher-resolution experiments have sought to decompose this integrated radiation into the contributions from individual galaxies. Here we report the results of an extragalactic survey at 250, 350 and 500 μm. Combining our results at 500 μm with those at 24 μm, we determine that all of the FIRB comes from individual galaxies, with galaxies at z ≥ 1.2 accounting for 70% of it. As expected, at the longest wavelengths the signal is dominated by ultraluminous galaxies at z > 1.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

BLAST: RESOLVING THE COSMIC SUBMILLIMETER BACKGROUND

Gaelen Marsden; Peter A. R. Ade; James J. Bock; Edward L. Chapin; Mark J. Devlin; Simon R. Dicker; Matthew Joseph Griffin; Joshua O. Gundersen; M. Halpern; Peter Charles Hargrave; David H. Hughes; Jeff Klein; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; B. Magnelli; Lorenzo Moncelsi; C. B. Netterfield; Henry Ngo; Luca Olmi; Enzo Pascale; G. Patanchon; Marie Rex; Douglas Scott; Christopher Semisch; Nicholas Thomas; Matthew D. P. Truch; Carole Tucker; Gregory S. Tucker; M. Viero; Donald Wiebe

The Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST) has made 1 deg2, deep, confusion-limited maps at three different bands, centered on the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey South Field. By calculating the covariance of these maps with catalogs of 24 μm sources from the Far-Infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey, we have determined that the total submillimeter intensities are 8.60 ± 0.59, 4.93 ± 0.34, and 2.27 ± 0.20 nW m–2 sr–1 at 250, 350, and 500 μm, respectively. These numbers are more precise than previous estimates of the cosmic infrared background (CIB) and are consistent with 24 μm-selected galaxies generating the full intensity of the CIB. We find that the fraction of the CIB that originates from sources at z ≥ 1.2 increases with wavelength, with 60% from high-redshift sources at 500 μm. At all BLAST wavelengths, the relative intensity of high-z sources is higher for 24 μm-faint sources than that for 24 μm-bright sources. Galaxies identified as active galactic nuclei (AGNs) by their Infrared Array Camera colors are 1.6-2.6 times brighter than the average population at 250-500 μm, consistent with what is found for X-ray-selected AGNs. BzK-selected galaxies are found to be moderately brighter than typical 24 μm-selected galaxies in the BLAST bands. These data provide high-precision constraints for models of the evolution of the number density and intensity of star-forming galaxies at high redshift.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

SCUBA-2: iterative map-making with the Sub-Millimetre User Reduction Facility

Edward L. Chapin; David Berry; Andrew G. Gibb; Tim Jenness; Douglas Scott; R. P. J. Tilanus; Frossie Economou; Wayne S. Holland

The Submillimetre Common User Bolometer Array 2 (SCUBA-2) is an instrument operating on the 15-m James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, nominally consisting of 5120 bolometers in each of two simultaneous imaging bands centred over 450 and 850 um. The camera is operated by scanning across the sky and recording data at a rate of 200 Hz. As the largest of a new generation of multiplexed kilopixel bolometer cameras operating in the (sub)millimetre, SCUBA-2 data analysis represents a significant challenge. We describe the production of maps using the Sub-Millimetre User Reduction Facility (SMURF) in which we have adopted a fast, iterative approach to map-making that enables data reduction on single, modern, high-end desktop computers, with execution times that are typically shorter than the observing times. SMURF is used in an automated setting, both at the telescope for real-time feedback to observers, as well as for the production of science products for the JCMT Science Archive at the Canadian Astronomy Data Centre. Three detailed case studies are used to: (i) explore convergence properties of the map-maker using simple prior constraints (Uranus -- a point source); (ii) achieve the white-noise limit for faint point-source studies (extragalactic blank-field survey of the Lockman Hole); and (iii) demonstrate that our strategy is capable of recovering angular scales comparable to the size of the array footprint (approximately 5 arcmin) for bright extended sources (star-forming region M17).


web science | 2010

The Herschel Multi-Tiered Extragalactic Survey: source extraction and cross-identifications in confusion-dominated SPIRE images

Seb Oliver; Martin Kunz; B. Altieri; A. Amblard; V. Arumugam; Robbie Richard Auld; H. Aussel; T. Babbedge; M. Béthermin; A. W. Blain; James J. Bock; A. Boselli; D. Brisbin; V. Buat; D. Burgarella; N. Castro-Rodriguez; A. Cava; P. Chanial; Edward L. Chapin; D. L. Clements; A. Conley; L. Conversi; A. Cooray; C. D. Dowell; E. Dwek; S. Dye; Stephen Anthony Eales; D. Elbaz; D. Farrah; M. Fox

We present the cross-identification and source photometry techniques used to process Herschel SPIRE imaging taken as part of the Herschel Multi-Tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES). Cross-identifications are performed in map-space so as to minimize source-blending effects. We make use of a combination of linear inversion and model selection techniques to produce reliable cross-identification catalogues based on Spitzer MIPS 24-mu m source positions. Testing on simulations and real Herschel observations shows that this approach gives robust results for even the faintest sources (S-250 similar to 10 mJy). We apply our new technique to HerMES SPIRE observations taken as part of the science demonstration phase of Herschel. For our real SPIRE observations, we show that, for bright unconfused sources, our flux density estimates are in good agreement with those produced via more traditional point source detection methods (SUSSEXtractor) by Smith et al. When compared to the measured number density of sources in the SPIRE bands, we show that our method allows the recovery of a larger fraction of faint sources than these traditional methods. However, this completeness is heavily dependent on the relative depth of the existing 24-mu m catalogues and SPIRE imaging. Using our deepest multiwavelength data set in the GOODS-N, we estimate that the use of shallow 24-mu m catalogues in our other fields introduces an incompleteness at faint levels of between 20-40 per cent at 250 mu m.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

SCUBA-2: on-sky calibration using submillimetre standard sources

Jessica T. Dempsey; Per Friberg; Tim Jenness; R. P. J. Tilanus; H. Thomas; Wayne S. Holland; Daniel Bintley; David Berry; Edward L. Chapin; A. Chrysostomou; G. R. Davis; A. G. Gibb; Harriet Parsons; E. I. Robson

SCUBA-2 is a 10000-bolometer submillimetre camera on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). The instrument commissioning was completed in September 2011, and full science operations began in October 2011. To harness the full potential of this powerful new astronomical tool, the instrument calibration must be accurate and well understood. To this end, the algorithms for calculating the line-of-sight opacity have been improved, and the derived atmospheric extinction relationships at both wavebands of the SCUBA-2 instrument are presented. The results from over 500 primary and secondary calibrator observations have allowed accurate determination of the flux conversion factors (FCF) for the 850 and 450 micron arrays. Descriptions of the instrument beam-shape and photometry methods are presented. The calibration factors are well determined, with relative calibration accuracy better than 5 per cent at 850 microns and 10 per cent at 450 microns, reflecting the success of the derived opacity relations as well as the stability of the performance of the instrument over several months. The sample-size of the calibration observations and accurate FCFs have allowed the determination of the 850 and 450 micron fluxes of several well-known submillimetre sources, and these results are compared with previous measurements from SCUBA.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

BLAST: the far‐infrared/radio correlation in distant galaxies

R. J. Ivison; D. M. Alexander; A. D. Biggs; W. N. Brandt; Edward L. Chapin; K. E. K. Coppin; Mark J. Devlin; Mark Dickinson; James Dunlop; Simon Dye; Stephen Anthony Eales; David T. Frayer; M. Halpern; David H. Hughes; E. Ibar; A. Kovács; Gaelen Marsden; Lorenzo Moncelsi; C. B. Netterfield; Enzo Pascale; G. Patanchon; D. A. Rafferty; Marie Rex; E. Schinnerer; Douglas Scott; Christopher Semisch; Ian Smail; A. M. Swinbank; Matthew D. P. Truch; Gregory S. Tucker

We investigate the correlation between far-infrared (FIR) and radio luminosities in distant galaxies, a lynchpin of modern astronomy. We use data from the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimetre Telescope (BLAST), Spitzer, the Large Apex BOlometer CamerA (LABOCA), the Very Large Array and the Giant Metre-wave Radio Telescope (GMRT) in the Extended Chandra Deep Field South (ECDFS). For a catalogue of BLAST 250-μm-selected galaxies, we remeasure the 70–870-μm flux densities at the positions of their most likely 24-μm counterparts, which have a median [interquartile] redshift of 0.74 [0.25, 1.57]. From these, we determine the monochromatic flux density ratio, q_(250)(= log_(10) [ S_(250 μm)/S_(1400 MHz)]), and the bolometric equivalent, q_(IR). At z ≈ 0.6 , where our 250-μm filter probes rest-frame 160-μm emission, we find no evolution relative to q_(160) for local galaxies. We also stack the FIR and submm images at the positions of 24-μm- and radio-selected galaxies. The difference between q_(IR) seen for 250-μm- and radio-selected galaxies suggests that star formation provides most of the IR luminosity in ≲100-μJy radio galaxies, but rather less for those in the mJy regime. For the 24-μm sample, the radio spectral index is constant across 0 < z < 3 , but q_(IR) exhibits tentative evidence of a steady decline such that q_(IR) ∝ (1 +z)^(−0.15±0.03) – significant evolution, spanning the epoch of galaxy formation, with major implications for techniques that rely on the FIR/radio correlation. We compare with model predictions and speculate that we may be seeing the increase in radio activity that gives rise to the radio background.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

AzTEC half square degree survey of the SHADES fields - I. Maps, catalogues and source counts

J. E. Austermann; James Dunlop; T. A. Perera; K. S. Scott; Grant W. Wilson; I. Aretxaga; David H. Hughes; Omar Almaini; Edward L. Chapin; S. C. Chapman; Michele Cirasuolo; D. L. Clements; K. E. K. Coppin; Loretta Dunne; Simon Dye; Stephen Anthony Eales; E. Egami; D. Farrah; D. Ferrusca; Stephen Flynn; D. Haig; M. Halpern; E. Ibar; R. J. Ivison; E. van Kampen; Young-Woon Kang; Sungeun Kim; Cedric G. Lacey; James D. Lowenthal; Philip Daniel Mauskopf

We present the first results from the largest deep extragalactic mm-wavelength survey undertaken to date. These results are derived from maps covering over 0.7 deg2, made at λ= 1.1 mm, using the AzTEC continuum camera mounted on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. The maps were made in the two fields originally targeted at λ= 850 μm with the Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) in the SCUBA Half-Degree Extragalactic Survey (SHADES) project, namely the Lockman Hole East (mapped to a depth of 0.9–1.3 mJy rms) and the Subaru/XMM–Newton Deep Field (mapped to a depth of 1.0–1.7 mJy rms). The wealth of existing and forthcoming deep multifrequency data in these two fields will allow the bright mm source population revealed by these new wide-area 1.1 mm images to be explored in detail in subsequent papers. Here, we present the maps themselves, a catalogue of 114 high-significance submillimetre galaxy detections, and a thorough statistical analysis leading to the most robust determination to date of the 1.1 mm source number counts. These new maps, covering an area nearly three times greater than the SCUBA SHADES maps, currently provide the largest sample of cosmological volumes of the high-redshift Universe in the mm or sub-mm. Through careful comparison, we find that both the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) and the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODS) North fields, also imaged with AzTEC, contain an excess of mm sources over the new 1.1 mm source-count baseline established here. In particular, our new AzTEC/SHADES results indicate that very luminous high-redshift dust enshrouded starbursts (S1.1mm > 3 mJy) are 25–50 per cent less common than would have been inferred from these smaller surveys, thus highlighting the potential roles of cosmic variance and clustering in such measurements. We compare number count predictions from recent models of the evolving mm/sub-mm source population to these sub-mm bright galaxy surveys, which provide important constraints for the ongoing refinement of semi-analytic and hydrodynamical models of galaxy formation, and find that all available models overpredict the number of bright submillimetre galaxies found in this survey.

Collaboration


Dive into the Edward L. Chapin's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David H. Hughes

Air Force Research Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark J. Devlin

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. Halpern

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marie Rex

University of Arizona

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James Dunlop

University of Edinburgh

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge