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Dive into the research topics where Erica Ellingson is active.

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Featured researches published by Erica Ellingson.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

The Hubble Space Telescope Cluster Supernova Survey. V. Improving the Dark-energy Constraints above z > 1 and Building an Early-type-hosted Supernova Sample

Nao Suzuki; D. Rubin; C. Lidman; Gregory Scott Aldering; R. Amanullah; K. Barbary; L. F. Barrientos; J. Botyánszki; Mark Brodwin; Natalia Connolly; Kyle S. Dawson; Arjun Dey; Mamoru Doi; Megan Donahue; Susana Elizabeth Deustua; Peter R. M. Eisenhardt; Erica Ellingson; L. Faccioli; V. Fadeyev; H. K. Fakhouri; Andrew S. Fruchter; David G. Gilbank; Michael D. Gladders; G. Goldhaber; Anthony H. Gonzalez; Ariel Goobar; A. Gude; T. Hattori; Henk Hoekstra; E. Y. Hsiao

We present Advanced Camera for Surveys, NICMOS, and Keck adaptive-optics-assisted photometry of 20 Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Cluster Supernova Survey. The SNe Ia were discovered over the redshift interval 0.623 1 SNe Ia. We describe how such a sample could be efficiently obtained by targeting cluster fields with WFC3 on board HST. The updated supernova Union2.1 compilation of 580 SNe is available at http://supernova.lbl.gov/Union.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1999

Differential Galaxy Evolution in Cluster and Field Galaxies at z ≈ 0.3

Michael L. Balogh; Simon L. Morris; H. K. C. Yee; R. G. Carlberg; Erica Ellingson

We measure spectral indexes for 1823 galaxies in the Canadian Network for Observational Cosmology 1 (CNOC1) sample of 15 X-ray luminous clusters at 0.18 5 A] but no [O II] emission [W0(O ) < 5 A], perhaps indicative of recently terminated star formation. The observed fraction of 4.4% ± 0.7% in the cluster sample is an overestimate due to a systematic effect that results from the large uncertainties on individual spectral index measurements. Corrected for this bias, we estimate that K+A galaxies make up only 2.1% ± 0.7% of the cluster sample and 0.1% ± 0.7% of the field. From the subsample of galaxies more luminous than Mr = -18.8 + 5 log h, which is statistically representative of a complete sample to this limit, the corrected fraction of K+A galaxies is 1.5% ± 0.8% in the cluster and 1.2% ± 0.8% in the field. Compared with the z ≈ 0.1 fraction of 0.30%, the fraction of K+A galaxies in the CNOC1 field sample is greater by perhaps a factor of 4, but with only 1 σ significance; no further evolution of this fraction is detectable over our redshift range. We compare our data with the results of PEGASE and GISSEL96 spectrophotometric models and conclude, from the relative fractions of red and blue galaxies with no [O II] λ3727 emission and strong Hδ absorption, that up to 1.9% ± 0.8% of the cluster population may have had its star formation recently truncated without a starburst. However, this is still not significantly greater than the fraction of such galaxies in the field, 3.1% ± 1.0%. Furthermore, we do not detect an excess of cluster galaxies that have unambiguously undergone starbursts within the last 1 Gyr. In fact, at 6.3% ± 2.1%, the A+em galaxies that Poggianti et al. have recently suggested are dusty starbursts are twice as common in the field as in the cluster environment. Our results imply that these cluster environments are not responsible for inducing starbursts; thus, the increase in cluster blue galaxy fraction with redshift may not be a strictly cluster-specific phenomenon. We suggest that the truncation of star formation in clusters may largely be a gradual process, perhaps due to the exhaustion of gas in the galactic disks over fairly long timescales; in this case differential evolution may result because field galaxies can refuel their disks with gas from extended halos, thus regenerating star formation, while cluster galaxies may not have such halos and so continue to evolve passively.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1996

Galaxy cluster virial masses and Omega

R. G. Carlberg; Erica Ellingson; Christopher J. Pritchet; Patricia Gravel; Simon L. Morris; H. K. C. Yee; Roberto G. Abraham

To re-examine the rich cluster


The Astrophysical Journal | 1997

The Average Mass and Light Profiles of Galaxy Clusters

R. G. Carlberg; H. K. C. Yee; Erica Ellingson

\Omega


The Astrophysical Journal | 2001

The Evolution of Population Gradients in Galaxy Clusters: The Butcher-Oemler Effect and Cluster Infall

Erica Ellingson; Huan Lin; H. K. C. Yee; R. G. Carlberg

value the CNOC Cluster Survey has observed 16 high X-ray luminosity clusters in the redshift range 0.17 to 0.55, obtaining approximately 2600 velocities in their fields. Directly adding all the K and evolution corrected


The Astrophysical Journal | 1997

The Average Mass Profile of Galaxy Clusters

R. G. Carlberg; H. K. C. Yee; Erica Ellingson; Simon L. Morris; Roberto G. Abraham; Patricia Gravel; C. J. Pritchet; Tammy A. Smecker-Hane; F. D. A. Hartwick; James E. Hesser; J. B. Hutchings; J. B. Oke

r


The Astrophysical Journal | 1998

The Dependence of Cluster Galaxy Star Formation Rates on the Global Environment

Mike L. Balogh; David Schade; Simon L. Morris; H. K. C. Yee; R. G. Carlberg; Erica Ellingson

band light to


The Astrophysical Journal | 1997

Star Formation in Cluster Galaxies at 0.2 < z < 0.55

Mike L. Balogh; Simon L. Morris; H. K. C. Yee; R. G. Carlberg; Erica Ellingson

M_r(0)=-18.5


The Astrophysical Journal | 1997

Close Pairs of Field Galaxies in the CNOC1 Redshift Survey

David R. Patton; Christopher J. Pritchet; H. K. C. Yee; Erica Ellingson; R. G. Carlberg

, about


The Astronomical Journal | 1996

A proto-galaxy candidate at z = 2.7 discovered by its young stellar population

H. K. C. Yee; Erica Ellingson; Jill Bechtold; Raymond G. Carlberg; Jean-Charles Cuillandre

0.2L_\ast

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David Schade

Dominion Astrophysical Observatory

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