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Dive into the research topics where Guillermo Barro is active.

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Featured researches published by Guillermo Barro.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

The Stellar Mass Assembly of Galaxies from z = 0 to z = 4: Analysis of a Sample Selected in the Rest-Frame Near-Infrared with Spitzer

P. G. Pérez-González; G. H. Rieke; V. Villar; Guillermo Barro; M. Blaylock; E. Egami; J. Gallego; Armando Gil de Paz; S. Pascual; J. Zamorano; J. L. Donley

Using a sample of ~28,000 sources selected at 3.6-4.5 μm with Spitzer observations of the Hubble Deep Field North, the Chandra Deep Field South, and the Lockman Hole (surveyed area ~664 arcmin^2), we study the evolution of the stellar mass content of the universe at 0 10^12.0 M_☉) assembled the bulk of their stellar content rapidly (in 1-2 Gyr) beyond z ~ 3 in very intense star formation events (producing high specific SFRs). Galaxies with 10^11.5 2.5 is dominated by optically faint (Rgsim 25) red galaxies (distant red galaxies or BzK sources), which account for ~30% of the global population of galaxies, but contribute at least 60% of the cosmic stellar mass density. Bluer galaxies (e.g., Lyman break galaxies) are more numerous but less massive, contributing less than 50% of the global stellar mass density at high redshift.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

CANDELS: The Progenitors of Compact Quiescent Galaxies at z 2

Guillermo Barro; S. M. Faber; P. G. Pérez-González; David C. Koo; Christina C. Williams; Dale D. Kocevski; Jonathan R. Trump; Mark Mozena; Elizabeth J. McGrath; Arjen van der Wel; Stijn Wuyts; Eric F. Bell; Darren J. Croton; Daniel Ceverino; Avishai Dekel; M. L. N. Ashby; Edmond Cheung; Henry C. Ferguson; A. Fontana; Jerome J. Fang; Mauro Giavalisco; Norman A. Grogin; Yicheng Guo; Nimish P. Hathi; Philip F. Hopkins; Kuang-Han Huang; Anton M. Koekemoer; J. Kartaltepe; Kyoung-Soo Lee; Jeffrey A. Newman

We combine high-resolution Hubble Space Telescope/WFC3 images with multi-wavelength photometry to track the evolution of structure and activity of massive (M > 1010 M ?) galaxies at redshifts z = 1.4-3 in two fields of the Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey. We detect compact, star-forming galaxies (cSFGs) whose number densities, masses, sizes, and star formation rates (SFRs) qualify them as likely progenitors of compact, quiescent, massive galaxies (cQGs) at z = 1.5-3. At z 2, cSFGs present SFR = 100-200 M ? yr?1, yet their specific star formation rates (sSFR ~ 10?9?yr?1) are typically half that of other massive SFGs at the same epoch, and host X-ray luminous active galactic nuclei (AGNs) 30?times (~30%) more frequently. These properties suggest that cSFGs are formed by gas-rich processes (mergers or disk-instabilities) that induce a compact starburst and feed an AGN, which, in turn, quench the star formation on dynamical timescales (few 108?yr). The cSFGs are continuously being formed at z = 2-3 and fade to cQGs down to z ~ 1.5. After this epoch, cSFGs are rare, thereby truncating the formation of new cQGs. Meanwhile, down to z = 1, existing cQGs continue to enlarge to match local QGs in size, while less-gas-rich mergers and other secular mechanisms shepherd (larger) SFGs as later arrivals to the red sequence. In summary, we propose two evolutionary tracks of QG formation: an early (z 2), formation path of rapidly quenched cSFGs fading into cQGs that later enlarge within the quiescent phase, and a late-arrival (z 2) path in which larger SFGs form extended QGs without passing through a compact state.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

Spitzer's Contribution to the AGN Population

J. L. Donley; G. H. Rieke; P. G. Pérez-González; Guillermo Barro

Infrared selection is a potentially powerful way to identify heavily obscured AGNs missed in even the deepest X-ray surveys. Using a 24 ?m-selected sample in GOODS-S, we test the reliability and completeness of three infrared AGN selection methods: (1) IRAC color-color selection, (2) IRAC power-law selection, and (3) IR-excess selection; we also evaluate a number of IR-excess approaches. We find that the vast majority of non-power-law IRAC color-selected AGN candidates in GOODS-S have colors consistent with those of star-forming galaxies. Contamination by star-forming galaxies is most prevalent at low 24 ?m flux densities (~100 ?Jy) and high redshifts ( -->z ~ 2), but the fraction of potential contaminants is still high (~50%) at 500 ?Jy, the highest flux density probed reliably by our survey. AGN candidates selected via a simple, physically motivated power-law criterion (power-law galaxies, or PLGs), however, appear to be reliable. We confirm that the IR-excess methods successfully identify a number of AGNs, but we also find that such samples may be significantly contaminated by star-forming galaxies. Adding only the secure Spitzer-selected PLG, color-selected, IR-excess, and radio/IR-selected AGN candidates to the deepest X-ray-selected AGN samples directly increases the number of known X-ray AGNs (84) by 54%-77%, and implies an increase to the number of 24 ?m-detected AGNs of 71%-94%. Finally, we show that the fraction of MIR sources dominated by an AGN decreases with decreasing MIR flux density, but only down to -->f24 ? m = 300 ?Jy. Below this limit, the AGN fraction levels out, indicating that a nonnegligible fraction (~10%) of faint 24 ?m sources (the majority of which are missed in the X-ray) are powered not by star formation, but by the central engine. The fraction of all AGNs (regardless of their MIR properties) exceeds 15% at all 24 ?m flux densities.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

Smooth(er) Stellar Mass Maps in CANDELS: Constraints on the Longevity of Clumps in High-redshift Star-forming Galaxies

Stijn Wuyts; Natascha M. Förster Schreiber; R. Genzel; Yicheng Guo; Guillermo Barro; Eric F. Bell; Avishai Dekel; Sandra M. Faber; Henry C. Ferguson; Mauro Giavalisco; Norman A. Grogin; Nimish P. Hathi; Kuang-Han Huang; Dale D. Kocevski; Anton M. Koekemoer; David C. Koo; Jennifer M. Lotz; D. Lutz; Elizabeth J. McGrath; Jeffrey A. Newman; D. Rosario; A. Saintonge; L. J. Tacconi; Benjamin J. Weiner; Arjen van der Wel

We perform a detailed analysis of the resolved colors and stellar populations of a complete sample of 323 star-forming galaxies (SFGs) at 0.5 < z < 1.5 and 326 SFGs at 1.5 < z < 2.5 in the ERS and CANDELS-Deep region of GOODS-South. Galaxies were selected to be more massive than 10(10) M-circle dot and have specific star formation rates (SFRs) above 1/t(H). We model the seven-band optical ACS + near-IR WFC3 spectral energy distributions of individual bins of pixels, accounting simultaneously for the galaxy-integrated photometric constraints available over a longer wavelength range. We analyze variations in rest-frame color, stellar surface mass density, age, and extinction as a function of galactocentric radius and local surface brightness/density, and measure structural parameters on luminosity and stellar mass maps. We find evidence for redder colors, older stellar ages, and increased dust extinction in the nuclei of galaxies. Big star-forming clumps seen in star formation tracers are less prominent or even invisible in the inferred stellar mass distributions. Off-center clumps contribute up to similar to 20% to the integrated SFR, but only 7% or less to the integrated mass of all massive SFGs at z similar to 1 and z similar to 2, with the fractional contributions being a decreasing function of wavelength used to select the clumps. The stellar mass profiles tend to have smaller sizes and M20 coefficients, and higher concentration and Gini coefficients than the light distribution. Our results are consistent with an inside-out disk growth scenario with brief (100-200 Myr) episodic local enhancements in star formation superposed on the underlying disk. Alternatively, the young ages of off-center clumps may signal inward clump migration, provided this happens efficiently on the order of an orbital timescale.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

A CRITICAL ASSESSMENT OF PHOTOMETRIC REDSHIFT METHODS: A CANDELS INVESTIGATION

Tomas Dahlen; Bahram Mobasher; Sandra M. Faber; Henry C. Ferguson; Guillermo Barro; Steven L. Finkelstein; Kristian Finlator; A. Fontana; Ruth Gruetzbauch; Seth Johnson; Janine Pforr; M. Salvato; Tommy Wiklind; Stijn Wuyts; Viviana Acquaviva; Mark Dickinson; Yicheng Guo; Jia-Sheng Huang; Kuang-Han Huang; Jeffrey A. Newman; Eric F. Bell; Christopher J. Conselice; Audrey Galametz; Eric Gawiser; Mauro Giavalisco; Norman A. Grogin; Nimish P. Hathi; Dale D. Kocevski; Anton M. Koekemoer; David C. Koo

We present results from the Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS) photometric redshift methods investigation. In this investigation, the results from 11 participants, each using a different combination of photometric redshift code, template spectral energy distributions (SEDs), and priors, are used to examine the properties of photometric redshifts applied to deep fields with broadband multi-wavelength coverage. The photometry used includes U-band through mid-infrared filters and was derived using the TFIT method. Comparing the results, we find that there is no particular code or set of template SEDs that results in significantly better photometric redshifts compared to others. However, we find that codes producing the lowest scatter and outlier fraction utilize a training sample to optimize photometric redshifts by adding zero-point offsets, template adjusting, or adding extra smoothing errors. These results therefore stress the importance of the training procedure. We find a strong dependence of the photometric redshift accuracy on the signal-to-noise ratio of the photometry. On the other hand, we find a weak dependence of the photometric redshift scatter with redshift and galaxy color. We find that most photometric redshift codes quote redshift errors (e.g., 68% confidence intervals) that are too small compared to that expected from the spectroscopic control sample. We find that all codes show a statistically significant bias in the photometric redshifts. However, the bias is in all cases smaller than the scatter; the latter therefore dominates the errors. Finally, we find that combining results from multiple codes significantly decreases the photometric redshift scatter and outlier fraction. We discuss different ways of combining data to produce accurate photometric redshifts and error estimates.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

SEDS: The Spitzer Extended Deep Survey: survey design, photometry, and deep IRAC source counts

M. L. N. Ashby; S. P. Willner; G. G. Fazio; Jia-Sheng Huang; Richard G. Arendt; Pauline Barmby; Guillermo Barro; Eric F. Bell; R. J. Bouwens; Andrea Cattaneo; Darren J. Croton; Romeel Davé; James Dunlop; E. Egami; S. M. Faber; Kristian Finlator; Norman A. Grogin; Puragra Guhathakurta; Lars Hernquist; Joseph L. Hora; G. D. Illingworth; A. Kashlinsky; Anton M. Koekemoer; David C. Koo; Ivo Labbé; Yuexing Li; Lihwai Lin; Harvey Moseley; Kirpal Nandra; J. A. Newman

The Spitzer Extended Deep Survey (SEDS) is a very deep infrared survey within five well-known extragalactic science fields: the UKIDSS Ultra-Deep Survey, the Extended Chandra Deep Field South, COSMOS, the Hubble Deep Field North, and the Extended Groth Strip. SEDS covers a total area of 1.46 deg(2) to a depth of 26 AB mag (3s) in both of the warm Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) bands at 3.6 and 4.5 mu m. Because of its uniform depth of coverage in so many widely-separated fields, SEDS is subject to roughly 25% smaller errors due to cosmic variance than a single-field survey of the same size. SEDS was designed to detect and characterize galaxies from intermediate to high redshifts (z = 2-7) with a built-in means of assessing the impact of cosmic variance on the individual fields. Because the full SEDS depth was accumulated in at least three separate visits to each field, typically with six- month intervals between visits, SEDS also furnishes an opportunity to assess the infrared variability of faint objects. This paper describes the SEDS survey design, processing, and publicly-available data products. Deep IRAC counts for the more than 300,000 galaxies detected by SEDS are consistent with models based on known galaxy populations. Discrete IRAC sources contribute 5.6 +/- 1.0 and 4.4 +/- 0.8 nW m(-2) sr(-1) at 3.6 and 4.5 mu m to the diffuse cosmic infrared background (CIB). IRAC sources cannot contribute more than half of the total CIB flux estimated from DIRBE data. Barring an unexpected error in the DIRBE flux estimates, half the CIB flux must therefore come from a diffuse component.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

Compaction and quenching of high-z galaxies in cosmological simulations: blue and red nuggets

Adi Zolotov; Avishai Dekel; Nir Mandelker; Dylan Tweed; Shigeki Inoue; Colin DeGraf; Daniel Ceverino; Joel R. Primack; Guillermo Barro; Sandra M. Faber

We use cosmological simulations to study a characteristic evolution pattern of high redshift galaxies. Early, stream-fed, highly perturbed, gas-rich discs undergo phases of dissipative contraction into compact, star-forming systems (blue nuggets) at z~4-2. The peak of gas compaction marks the onset of central gas depletion and inside-out quenching into compact ellipticals (red nuggets) by z~2. These are sometimes surrounded by gas rings or grow extended dry stellar envelopes. The compaction occurs at a roughly constant specific star-formation rate (SFR), and the quenching occurs at a constant stellar surface density within the inner kpc (


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015

The galaxy stellar mass function at 3.5 ≤ z ≤ 7.5 in the CANDELS/UDS, GOODS-South, and HUDF fields

A. Grazian; A. Fontana; P. Santini; James Dunlop; Henry C. Ferguson; M. Castellano; R. Amorin; M. L. N. Ashby; Guillermo Barro; Peter Behroozi; K. Boutsia; Karina Caputi; R.-R. Chary; Avishai Dekel; M. Dickinson; S. M. Faber; G. G. Fazio; Steven L. Finkelstein; Audrey Galametz; E. Giallongo; Mauro Giavalisco; Norman A. Grogin; Yicheng Guo; D. D. Kocevski; Anton M. Koekemoer; David C. Koo; Kyoung-Soo Lee; Yu Lu; E. Merlin; Bahram Mobasher

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The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

STELLAR MASSES FROM THE CANDELS SURVEY: THE GOODS-SOUTH AND UDS FIELDS

P. Santini; Henry C. Ferguson; A. Fontana; Bahram Mobasher; Guillermo Barro; M. Castellano; Steven L. Finkelstein; A. Grazian; Li-Ting Hsu; Bomee Lee; Sang-Gak Lee; Janine Pforr; M. Salvato; Tommy Wiklind; Stijn Wuyts; Omar Almaini; Michael C. Cooper; Audrey Galametz; Benjamin J. Weiner; R. Amorin; K. Boutsia; Christopher J. Conselice; Tomas Dahlen; M. Dickinson; Mauro Giavalisco; Norman A. Grogin; Yicheng Guo; Nimish P. Hathi; Dale D. Kocevski; Anton M. Koekemoer

). Massive galaxies quench earlier, faster, and at a higher


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

CONSTRAINING THE ASSEMBLY OF NORMAL AND COMPACT PASSIVELY EVOLVING GALAXIES FROM REDSHIFT z = 3 TO THE PRESENT WITH CANDELS

P. Cassata; Mauro Giavalisco; Christina C. Williams; Yicheng Guo; Bomee Lee; A. Renzini; Henry C. Ferguson; S. F. Faber; Guillermo Barro; Daniel H. McIntosh; Yu Lu; Eric F. Bell; David C. Koo; C. J. Papovich; Russell E. Ryan; Christopher J. Conselice; Norman A. Grogin; Anton M. Koekemoer; Nimish P. Hathi

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Dive into the Guillermo Barro's collaboration.

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P. G. Pérez-González

Complutense University of Madrid

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Anton M. Koekemoer

Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy

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David C. Koo

University of California

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Yicheng Guo

University of California

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Henry C. Ferguson

Space Telescope Science Institute

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S. M. Faber

University of California

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Norman A. Grogin

Space Telescope Science Institute

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J. Gallego

Complutense University of Madrid

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Avishai Dekel

University of California

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