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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012

Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): The galaxy stellar mass function at z < 0.06.

Ivan K. Baldry; Simon P. Driver; J. Loveday; Edward N. Taylor; Lee S. Kelvin; J. Liske; Peder Norberg; Aaron S. G. Robotham; Sarah Brough; Andrew M. Hopkins; Steven P. Bamford; J. A. Peacock; J. Bland-Hawthorn; Christopher J. Conselice; Scott M. Croom; D. H. Jones; H. R. Parkinson; Cristina Popescu; M. Prescott; Rob Sharp; Richard J. Tuffs

We determine the low-redshift field galaxy stellar mass function (GSMF) using an area of 143 deg 2 from the first three years of the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey. The magnitude limits of this redshift survey are r < 19.4 mag over two-thirds and 19.8 mag over one-third of the area. The GSMF is determined from a sample of 5210 galaxies using a densitycorrected maximum volume method. This efficiently overcomes the issue of fluctuations in the number density versus redshift. With H0 = 70 km s −1 Mpc −1 , the GSMF is well described


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): stellar mass estimates

Edward N. Taylor; Andrew M. Hopkins; Ivan K. Baldry; Michael J. I. Brown; Simon P. Driver; Lee S. Kelvin; D. T. Hill; Aaron S. G. Robotham; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; D. H. Jones; Rob Sharp; Daniel Thomas; J. Liske; Jon Loveday; Peder Norberg; J. A. Peacock; Steven P. Bamford; Sarah Brough; Matthew Colless; Ewan Cameron; Chistopher J Conselice; Scott M. Croom; Carlos S. Frenk; M. L. P. Gunawardhana; Konrad Kuijken; Robert C. Nichol; H. R. Parkinson; S. Phillipps; Kevin A. Pimbblet; Cristina Popescu

This paper describes the first catalogue of photometrically derived stellar mass estimates for intermediate-redshift (z < 0.65; median z= 0.2) galaxies in the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) spectroscopic redshift survey. These masses, as well as the full set of ancillary stellar population parameters, will be made public as part of GAMA data release 2. Although the GAMA database does include near-infrared (NIR) photometry, we show that the quality of our stellar population synthesis fits is significantly poorer when these NIR data are included. Further, for a large fraction of galaxies, the stellar population parameters inferred from the optical-plus-NIR photometry are formally inconsistent with those inferred from the optical data alone. This may indicate problems in our stellar population library, or NIR data issues, or both; these issues will be addressed for future versions of the catalogue. For now, we have chosen to base our stellar mass estimates on optical photometry only. In light of our decision to ignore the available NIR data, we examine how well stellar mass can be constrained based on optical data alone. We use generic properties of stellar population synthesis models to demonstrate that restframe colour alone is in principle a very good estimator of stellar mass-to-light ratio, M*/Li. Further, we use the observed relation between restframe (g−i) and M*/Li for real GAMA galaxies to argue that, modulo uncertainties in the stellar evolution models themselves, (g−i) colour can in practice be used to estimate M*/Li to an accuracy of ≲0.1 dex (1σ). This ‘empirically calibrated’ (g−i)–M*/Li relation offers a simple and transparent means for estimating galaxies’ stellar masses based on minimal data, and so provides a solid basis for other surveys to compare their results to z≲0.4 measurements from GAMA.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2004

The Size Evolution of High-Redshift Galaxies

Henry C. Ferguson; Mark Dickinson; Mauro Giavalisco; Claudia Kretchmer; Swara Ravindranath; Rafal Idzi; Edward N. Taylor; Christopher J. Conselice; S. Michael Fall; Jonathan P. Gardner; Mario Livio; Piero Madau; Leonidas A. Moustakas; Casey Papovich; Rachel S. Somerville; Hyron Spinrad; Daniel Stern

Hubble Space Telescope images of high-redshift galaxies selected via color and photometric redshifts are used to examine the size and axial ratio distribution of galaxies as a function of redshift at look-back times t > 8 Gyr. These parameters are measured at rest-frame UV wavelengths (1200 A < λ < 2000 A) on images with a rest-frame resolution of less than 0.8 kpc. Galaxy radii are found to scale with redshift approximately as the Hubble parameter H-1(z). This is in accord with the theoretical expectation that the typical sizes of the luminous parts of galaxies should track the expected evolution in the virial radius of dark matter halos. The mean ratio of the semimajor axis to the semiminor axis for a bright well-resolved sample of galaxies at z ~ 4 is b/a = 0.65, suggesting that these Lyman break galaxies are not drawn from a spheroidal population. However, the median concentration index of this sample is C = 3.5, which is closer to the typical concentration indices of nearby elliptical galaxies (C ~ 4) than to the values for local disk galaxies of type Sb and later (C < 2).


The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

Lyα-Emitting Galaxies at z = 3.1: L* Progenitors Experiencing Rapid Star Formation

Eric Gawiser; Harold Francke; Kamson Lai; Kevin Schawinski; Caryl Gronwall; Robin Ciardullo; Ryan F. Quadri; Alvaro Orsi; L. Felipe Barrientos; Guillermo A. Blanc; Giovanni G. Fazio; John J. Feldmeier; Jia-Sheng Huang; Leopoldo Infante; Paulina Lira; Nelson D. Padilla; Edward N. Taylor; Ezequiel Treister; C. Megan Urry; Pieter G. van Dokkum; Shanil N. Virani

We studied the clustering properties and multiwavelength spectral energy distributions of a complete sample of 162 Lyα-emitting (LAE) galaxies at z 3.1 discovered in deep narrowband MUSYC imaging of the Extended Chandra Deep Field-South. LAEs were selected to have observed frame equivalent widths >80 A and emission line fluxes >1.5 × 10-17 ergs cm-2 s-1. Only 1% of our LAE sample appears to host AGNs. The LAEs exhibit a moderate spatial correlation length of r0 = 3.6 Mpc, corresponding to a bias factor b = 1.7, which implies median dark matter halo masses of log10 Mmed = 10.9 M☉. Comparing the number density of LAEs, 1.5 ± 0.3 × 10-3 Mpc-3, with the number density of these halos finds a mean halo occupation ~1%-10%. The evolution of galaxy bias with redshift implies that most z = 3.1 LAEs evolve into present-day galaxies with L 3 galaxy populations typically evolve into more massive galaxies. Halo merger trees show that z = 0 descendants occupy halos with a wide range of masses, with a median descendant mass close to that of L*. Only 30% of LAEs have sufficient stellar mass (>~3 × 109 M☉) to yield detections in deep Spitzer IRAC imaging. A two-population SED fit to the stacked UBVRIzJK+[3.6, 4.5, 5.6, 8.0] μm fluxes of the IRAC-undetected objects finds that the typical LAE has low stellar mass (1.0 × 109 M☉), moderate star formation rate (2 ± 1 M☉ yr-1), a young component age of 20 Myr, and little dust (AV < 0.2). The best-fit model has 20% of the mass in the young stellar component, but models without evolved stars are also allowed.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): end of survey report and data release 2

J. Liske; Ivan K. Baldry; Simon P. Driver; Richard J. Tuffs; Mehmet Alpaslan; E. Andrae; Sarah Brough; Michelle E. Cluver; M. W. Grootes; M. L. P. Gunawardhana; Lee S. Kelvin; J. Loveday; Aaron S. G. Robotham; Edward N. Taylor; Steven P. Bamford; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Michael J. I. Brown; Michael J. Drinkwater; Andrew M. Hopkins; Martin Meyer; Peder Norberg; J. A. Peacock; Nicola K. Agius; Stephen K. Andrews; Amanda E. Bauer; J. H. Y. Ching; Matthew Colless; Christopher J. Conselice; Scott M. Croom; Luke J. M. Davies

The Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey is one of the largest contemporary spectroscopic surveys of low redshift galaxies. Covering an area of ∼286 deg2 (split among five survey regions) down to a limiting magnitude of r < 19.8 mag, we have collected spectra and reliable redshifts for 238 000 objects using the AAOmega spectrograph on the Anglo-Australian Telescope. In addition, we have assembled imaging data from a number of independent surveys in order to generate photometry spanning the wavelength range 1 nm–1 m. Here, we report on the recently completed spectroscopic survey and present a series of diagnostics to assess its final state and the quality of the redshift data. We also describe a number of survey aspects and procedures, or updates thereof, including changes to the input catalogue, redshifting and re-redshifting, and the derivation of ultraviolet, optical and near-infrared photometry. Finally, we present the second public release of GAMA data. In this release, we provide input catalogue and targeting information, spectra, redshifts, ultraviolet, optical and near-infrared photometry, single-component Sersic fits, stellar masses, Hα-derived star formation rates, environment information, and group properties for all galaxies with r < 19.0 mag in two of our survey regions, and for all galaxies with r < 19.4 mag in a third region (72 225 objects in total). The data base serving these data is available at http://www.gama-survey.org/.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012

Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): Structural Investigation of Galaxies via Model Analysis

Lee S. Kelvin; Simon P. Driver; Aaron S. G. Robotham; D. T. Hill; Mehmet Alpaslan; Ivan K. Baldry; Steven P. Bamford; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Sarah Brough; Alister W. Graham; Boris Häussler; Andrew M. Hopkins; J. Liske; Jon Loveday; Peder Norberg; Steven Phillipps; Cristina Popescu; M. Prescott; Edward N. Taylor; Richard J. Tuffs

We present single-Sersic two-dimensional (2D) model fits to 167 600 galaxies modelled independently in the ugrizYJHK bandpasses using reprocessed Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release Seven (SDSS DR7) and UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey Large Area Survey imaging data available from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) data base. In order to facilitate this study we developed Structural Investigation of Galaxies via Model Analysis (sigma), an r wrapper around several contemporary astronomy software packages including source extractor, psf extractor and galfit 3. sigma produces realistic 2D model fits to galaxies, employing automatic adaptive background subtraction and empirical point spread function measurements on the fly for each galaxy in GAMA. Using these results, we define a common coverage area across the three GAMA regions containing 138 269 galaxies. We provide Sersic magnitudes truncated at 10re which show good agreement with SDSS Petrosian and GAMA photometry for low Sersic index systems (n 4), recovering as much as Δm= 0.5 mag in the r band. We employ a K-band Sersic index/u−r colour relation to delineate the massive (n > ∼2) early-type galaxies (ETGs) from the late-type galaxies (LTGs). The mean Sersic index of these ETGs shows a smooth variation with wavelength, increasing by 30 per cent from g through K. LTGs exhibit a more extreme change in Sersic index, increasing by 52 per cent across the same range. In addition, ETGs and LTGs exhibit a 38 and 25 per cent decrease, respectively, in half-light radius from g through K. These trends are shown to arise due to the effects of dust attenuation and stellar population/metallicity gradients within galaxy populations.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

The SAMI Galaxy Survey: instrument specification and target selection

Julia J. Bryant; Matt S. Owers; Aaron S. G. Robotham; Scott M. Croom; Simon P. Driver; Michael J. Drinkwater; Nuria P. F. Lorente; Luca Cortese; Nicholas Scott; Matthew Colless; Adam L. Schaefer; Edward N. Taylor; I. S. Konstantopoulos; J. T. Allen; Ivan K. Baldry; Luke A. Barnes; Amanda E. Bauer; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; J. V. Bloom; Alyson M. Brooks; Sarah Brough; Gerald Cecil; Warrick J. Couch; Darren J. Croton; Roger L. Davies; Simon C. Ellis; L. M. R. Fogarty; Caroline Foster; Karl Glazebrook; Michael Goodwin

The SAMI Galaxy Survey will observe 3400 galaxies with the Sydney-AAO Multi- object Integral-field spectrograph (SAMI) on the Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT) in a 3-year survey which began in 2013. We present the throughput of the SAMI system, the science basis and specifications for the target selection, the survey observation plan and the combined properties of the selected galaxies. The survey includes four volume-limited galaxy samples based on cuts in a proxy for stellar mass, along with low-stellar-mass dwarf galaxies all selected from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey. The GAMA regions were selected because of the vast array of ancillary data available, including ultraviolet through to radio bands. These fields are on the celestial equator at 9, 12, and 14.5 hours, and cover a total of 144 square degrees (in GAMA-I). Higher density environments are also included with the addition of eight clusters. The clusters have spectroscopy from 2dFGRS and SDSS and photometry in regions covered by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and/or VLT Survey Telescope/ATLAS. The aim is to cover a broad range in stellar mass and environment, and therefore the primary survey targets cover redshifts 0.004 < z < 0.095, magnitudes rpet < 19.4, stellar masses 107– 1012M⊙, and environments from isolated field galaxies through groups to clusters of _ 1015M⊙.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA): The GAMA Galaxy Group Catalogue (G3Cv1)

Aaron S. G. Robotham; Peder Norberg; Simon P. Driver; Ivan K. Baldry; Steven P. Bamford; Andrew M. Hopkins; J. Liske; J. Loveday; Alex Merson; J. A. Peacock; Sarah Brough; Ewan Cameron; Christopher J. Conselice; Scott M. Croom; Carlos S. Frenk; M. L. P. Gunawardhana; D. T. Hill; D. H. Jones; Lee S. Kelvin; K. Kuijken; Robert C. Nichol; H. R. Parkinson; Kevin A. Pimbblet; S. Phillipps; Cristina Popescu; M. Prescott; Rob Sharp; W. Sutherland; Edward N. Taylor; Daniel Thomas

Using the complete Galaxy and Mass Assembly I (GAMA-I) survey covering ∼142 deg2 to rAB= 19.4, of which ∼47 deg2 is to rAB= 19.8, we create the GAMA-I galaxy group catalogue (G3Cv1), generated using a friends-of-friends (FoF) based grouping algorithm. Our algorithm has been tested extensively on one family of mock GAMA lightcones, constructed from Λ cold dark matter N-body simulations populated with semi-analytic galaxies. Recovered group properties are robust to the effects of interlopers and are median unbiased in the most important respects. G3Cv1 contains 14 388 galaxy groups (with multiplicity ≥2), including 44 186 galaxies out of a possible 110 192 galaxies, implying ∼40 per cent of all galaxies are assigned to a group. The similarities of the mock group catalogues and G3Cv1 are multiple: global characteristics are in general well recovered. However, we do find a noticeable deficit in the number of high multiplicity groups in GAMA compared to the mocks. Additionally, despite exceptionally good local spatial completeness, G3Cv1 contains significantly fewer compact groups with five or more members, this effect becoming most evident for high multiplicity systems. These two differences are most likely due to limitations in the physics included of the current GAMA lightcone mock. Further studies using a variety of galaxy formation models are required to confirm their exact origin. The G3Cv1 catalogue will be made publicly available as and when the relevant GAMA redshifts are made available at http://www.gama-survey.org.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2006

Spectroscopic Identification of Massive Galaxies at z ~ 2.3 with Strongly Suppressed Star Formation*

Mariska Kriek; Pieter G. van Dokkum; Marijn Franx; Ryan F. Quadri; Eric Gawiser; David Herrera; Garth D. Illingworth; Ivo Labbé; Paulina Lira; Danilo Marchesini; Hans-Walter Rix; Gregory Rudnick; Edward N. Taylor; Sune Toft; C. Megan Urry; Stijn Wuyts

We present first results of a spectroscopic survey targeting K-selected galaxies at z = 2.0-2.7 using the Gemini near-infrared spectrograph (GNIRS). We obtained near-infrared spectra with a wavelength coverage of 1.0-2.5 μm for 26 K-bright galaxies (K < 19.7) selected from the Multi-wavelength Survey by Yale-Chile (MUSYC) using photometric redshifts. We successfully derived spectroscopic redshifts for all 26 galaxies using rest-frame optical emission lines or the redshifted Balmer/4000 A break. Twenty galaxies have spectroscopic redshifts in the range 2.0 < z < 2.7, for which bright emission lines like Hα and [O III] fall in atmospheric windows. Surprisingly, we detected no emission lines for nine of these 20 galaxies. The median 2 σ upper limit on the rest-frame equivalent width of Hα for these nine galaxies is ~10 A. The stellar continuum emission of these same nine galaxies is best fitted by evolved stellar population models. The best-fit star formation rate (SFR) is zero for five out of nine galaxies and is consistent with zero within 1 σ for the remaining four. Thus, both the Hα measurements and the independent stellar continuum modeling imply that 45% of our K-selected galaxies are not forming stars intensely. This high fraction of galaxies without detected line emission and low SFRs may imply that the suppression of star formation in massive galaxies occurs at higher redshift than is predicted by current cold dark matter (CDM) galaxy formation models. However, obscured star formation may have been missed, and deep mid-infrared imaging is needed to clarify this situation.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): spectroscopic analysis

Andrew M. Hopkins; Simon P. Driver; Sarah Brough; Matt S. Owers; Amanda E. Bauer; M. L. P. Gunawardhana; Michelle E. Cluver; Matthew Colless; Caroline Foster; M. A. Lara-Lopez; I. G. Roseboom; Rob Sharp; Oliver Steele; Daniel Thomas; Ivan K. Baldry; Michael J. I. Brown; J. Liske; Peder Norberg; Aaron S. G. Robotham; Steven P. Bamford; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Michael J. Drinkwater; Jon Loveday; Martin Meyer; J. A. Peacock; Richard J. Tuffs; Nicola K. Agius; Mehmet Alpaslan; E. Andrae; E. Cameron

The Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey is a multiwavelength photometric and spectroscopic survey, using the AAOmega spectrograph on the Anglo-Australian Telescope to obtain spectra for up to ∼300 000 galaxies over 280 deg2, to a limiting magnitude of rpet < 19.8 mag. The target galaxies are distributed over 0 < z ≲ 0.5 with a median redshift of z ≈ 0.2, although the redshift distribution includes a small number of systems, primarily quasars, at higher redshifts, up to and beyond z = 1. The redshift accuracy ranges from σv ≈ 50 km s−1 to σv ≈ 100 km s−1 depending on the signal-to-noise ratio of the spectrum. Here we describe the GAMA spectroscopic reduction and analysis pipeline. We present the steps involved in taking the raw two-dimensional spectroscopic images through to flux-calibrated one-dimensional spectra. The resulting GAMA spectra cover an observed wavelength range of 3750 ≲ λ ≲ 8850 A at a resolution of R ≈ 1300. The final flux calibration is typically accurate to 10–20 per cent, although the reliability is worse at the extreme wavelength ends, and poorer in the blue than the red. We present details of the measurement of emission and absorption features in the GAMA spectra. These measurements are characterized through a variety of quality control analyses detailing the robustness and reliability of the measurements. We illustrate the quality of the measurements with a brief exploration of elementary emission line properties of the galaxies in the GAMA sample. We demonstrate the luminosity dependence of the Balmer decrement, consistent with previously published results, and explore further how Balmer decrement varies with galaxy mass and redshift. We also investigate the mass and redshift dependencies of the [N II]/Hα versus [O III]/Hβ spectral diagnostic diagram, commonly used to discriminate between star forming and nuclear activity in galaxies.

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Andrew M. Hopkins

Australian Astronomical Observatory

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Simon P. Driver

University of Western Australia

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Sarah Brough

University of New South Wales

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Aaron S. G. Robotham

University of Western Australia

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Ivan K. Baldry

Liverpool John Moores University

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Lee S. Kelvin

Liverpool John Moores University

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J. Liske

European Southern Observatory

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