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Dive into the research topics where James E. Aguirre is active.

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Featured researches published by James E. Aguirre.


Nature | 2013

A dust-obscured massive maximum-starburst galaxy at a redshift of 6.34

Dominik A. Riechers; C. M. Bradford; D. L. Clements; C. D. Dowell; I. Perez-Fournon; R. J. Ivison; C. Bridge; A. Conley; Hai Fu; J. D. Vieira; J. L. Wardlow; Jae Calanog; A. Cooray; P. D. Hurley; R. Neri; J. Kamenetzky; James E. Aguirre; B. Altieri; V. Arumugam; Dominic J. Benford; M. Béthermin; J. J. Bock; D. Burgarella; A. Cabrera-Lavers; Sydney Chapman; P. Cox; James Dunlop; L. Earle; D. Farrah; P. Ferrero

Massive present-day early-type (elliptical and lenticular) galaxies probably gained the bulk of their stellar mass and heavy elements through intense, dust-enshrouded starbursts—that is, increased rates of star formation—in the most massive dark-matter haloes at early epochs. However, it remains unknown how soon after the Big Bang massive starburst progenitors exist. The measured redshift (z) distribution of dusty, massive starbursts has long been suspected to be biased low in z owing to selection effects, as confirmed by recent findings of systems with redshifts as high as ∼5 (refs 2–4). Here we report the identification of a massive starburst galaxy at z = 6.34 through a submillimetre colour-selection technique. We unambiguously determined the redshift from a suite of molecular and atomic fine-structure cooling lines. These measurements reveal a hundred billion solar masses of highly excited, chemically evolved interstellar medium in this galaxy, which constitutes at least 40 per cent of the baryonic mass. A ‘maximum starburst’ converts the gas into stars at a rate more than 2,000 times that of the Milky Way, a rate among the highest observed at any epoch. Despite the overall downturn in cosmic star formation towards the highest redshifts, it seems that environments mature enough to form the most massive, intense starbursts existed at least as early as 880 million years after the Big Bang.


Science | 2010

The detection of a population of submillimeter-bright, strongly lensed galaxies

M. Negrello; R. Hopwood; G. De Zotti; A. Cooray; A. Verma; J. J. Bock; David T. Frayer; M. A. Gurwell; A. Omont; R. Neri; H. Dannerbauer; L. Leeuw; Elizabeth J. Barton; Jeff Cooke; S. Kim; E. da Cunha; G. Rodighiero; P. Cox; D. G. Bonfield; M. J. Jarvis; S. Serjeant; R. J. Ivison; Simon Dye; I. Aretxaga; David H. Hughes; E. Ibar; Frank Bertoldi; I. Valtchanov; Stephen Anthony Eales; Loretta Dunne

Through a Lens Brightly Astronomical sources detected in the submillimeter range are generally thought to be distant, dusty galaxies undergoing a vigorous burst of star formation. They can be detected because the dust absorbs the light from stars and reemits it at longer wavelengths. Their properties are still difficult to ascertain, however, because the combination of interference from dust and the low spatial resolution of submillimeter telescopes prevents further study at other wavelengths. Using data from the Herschel Space Telescope, Negrello et al. (p. 800) showed that by searching for the brightest sources in a wide enough area in the sky it was possible to detect gravitationally lensed submillimeter galaxies with nearly full efficiency. Gravitational lensing occurs when the light of an astronomical object is deflected by a foreground mass. This phenomenon increases the apparent brightness and angular size of the lensed objects, making it easier to study sources that would be otherwise too faint to probe. Data from the Herschel Space Observatory unveils distant, dusty galaxies invisible to optical telescopes. Gravitational lensing is a powerful astrophysical and cosmological probe and is particularly valuable at submillimeter wavelengths for the study of the statistical and individual properties of dusty star-forming galaxies. However, the identification of gravitational lenses is often time-intensive, involving the sifting of large volumes of imaging or spectroscopic data to find few candidates. We used early data from the Herschel Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey to demonstrate that wide-area submillimeter surveys can simply and easily detect strong gravitational lensing events, with close to 100% efficiency.


The Astronomical Journal | 2010

The Precision Array for Probing the Epoch of Re-ionization: Eight Station Results

Aaron R. Parsons; Donald C. Backer; Griffin Foster; Melvyn C. H. Wright; Richard Bradley; Nicole E. Gugliucci; Chaitali R. Parashare; Erin E. Benoit; James E. Aguirre; Daniel C. Jacobs; C. L. Carilli; David Herne; M. J. Lynch; Jason Manley; D. Werthimer

We are developing the Precision Array for Probing the Epoch of Re-ionization (PAPER) to detect 21 cm emission from the early universe, when the first stars and galaxies were forming. We describe the overall experiment strategy and architecture and summarize two PAPER deployments: a four-antenna array in the low radio frequency interference (RFI) environment of Western Australia and an eight-antenna array at a prototyping site at the NRAO facilities near Green Bank, WV. From these activities we report on system performance, including primary beam model verification, dependence of system gain on ambient temperature, measurements of receiver and overall system temperatures, and characterization of the RFI environment at each deployment site. We present an all-sky map synthesized between 139 MHz and 174 MHz using data from both arrays that reaches down to 80 mJy (4.9 K, for a beam size of 2.15e−5 sr at 156 MHz), with a 10 mJy (620 mK) thermal noise level that indicates what would be achievable with better foreground subtraction. We calculate angular power spectra (C� ) in a cold patch and determine them to be dominated by point sources, but with contributions from galactic synchrotron emission at lower radio frequencies and angular wavemodes. Although the sample variance of foregrounds dominates errors in these power spectra, we measure a thermal noise level of 310 mK at � = 100 for a 1.46 MHz band centered at 164.5 MHz. This sensitivity level is approximately 3 orders of magnitude in temperature above the level of the fluctuations in 21 cm emission associated with re-ionization.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2010

The Bolocam Galactic Plane Survey -- II. Catalog of the Image Data

Erik Rosolowsky; Miranda K. Dunham; Adam Ginsburg; E. Todd Bradley; James E. Aguirre; John Bally; Cara Battersby; C. J. Cyganowski; Darren Dowell; Meredith Marie Drosback; Neal J. Evans; J. Glenn; Paul M. Harvey; Guy S. Stringfellow; Josh Walawender; Jonathan P. Williams

We present a catalog of 8358 sources extracted from images produced by the Bolocam Galactic Plane Survey (BGPS). The BGPS is a survey of the millimeter dust continuum emission from the northern Galactic plane. The catalog sources are extracted using a custom algorithm, Bolocat, which was designed specifically to identify and characterize objects in the large-area maps generated from the Bolocam instrument. The catalog products are designed to facilitate follow-up observation s of these relatively unstudied objects. The catalog is 98% complete from 0.4 Jy to 60 Jy over all object sizes for which the survey is sensitive (< 3.5 ′ ). We find that the sources extracted can best be described as molec ular clumps ‐ large dense regions in molecular clouds linked to cluster formation. We find the flux densit y distribution of sources follows a power law with dN/dS ∝ S -2.4±0.1 and that the mean Galactic latitude for sources is significan tly below the midplane: h bi = (-0.095 ± 0.001) ◦ .


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

NEW LIMITS ON 21 cm EPOCH OF REIONIZATION FROM PAPER-32 CONSISTENT WITH AN X-RAY HEATED INTERGALACTIC MEDIUM AT z = 7.7

Aaron R. Parsons; Adrian Liu; James E. Aguirre; Zaki S. Ali; Richard Bradley; C. L. Carilli; David R. DeBoer; Matthew R. Dexter; Nicole E. Gugliucci; Daniel C. Jacobs; Pat Klima; David MacMahon; Jason Manley; David F. Moore; Jonathan C. Pober; Irina I. Stefan; William P. Walbrugh

We present new constraints on the 21cm Epoch of Reionization (EoR) power spectrum derived from 3 months of observing with a 32-antenna, dual-polarization deployment of the Donald C. Backer Precision Array for Probing the Epoch of Reionization (PAPER) in South Africa. In this paper, we demonstrate the efficacy of the delay-spectrum approach to avoiding foregrounds, achieving over 8 orders of magnitude of foreground suppression (in mK). Combining this approach with a procedure for removing off-diagonal covariances arising from instrumental systematics, we achieve a best 2σ upper limit of (41mK) for k = 0.27 h Mpc−1 at z = 7.7. This limit falls within an order of magnitude of the brighter predictions of the expected 21cm EoR signal level. Using the upper limits set by these measurements, we generate new constraints on the brightness temperature of 21cm emission in neutral regions for various reionization models. We show that for several ionization scenarios, our measurements are inconsistent with cold reionization. That is, heating of the neutral intergalactic medium (IGM) is necessary to remain consistent with the constraints we report. Hence, we have suggestive evidence that by z = 7.7, the HI has been warmed from its cold primordial state, probably by X-rays from high-mass X-ray binaries or mini-quasars. The strength of this evidence depends on the ionization state of the IGM, which we are not yet able to constrain. This result is consistent with standard predictions for how reionization might have proceeded.We present new constraints on the 21 cm Epoch of Reionization (EoR) power spectrum derived from three months of observing with a 32 antenna, dual-polarization deployment of the Donald C. Backer Precision Array for Probing the Epoch of Reionization in South Africa. In this paper, we demonstrate the efficacy of the delay-spectrum approach to avoiding foregrounds, achieving over eight orders of magnitude of foreground suppression (in mK2). Combining this approach with a procedure for removing off-diagonal covariances arising from instrumental systematics, we achieve a best 2σ upper limit of (41 mK)2 for k = 0.27 h Mpc–1 at z = 7.7. This limit falls within an order of magnitude of the brighter predictions of the expected 21 cm EoR signal level. Using the upper limits set by these measurements, we generate new constraints on the brightness temperature of 21 cm emission in neutral regions for various reionization models. We show that for several ionization scenarios, our measurements are inconsistent with cold reionization. That is, heating of the neutral intergalactic medium (IGM) is necessary to remain consistent with the constraints we report. Hence, we have suggestive evidence that by z = 7.7, the H I has been warmed from its cold primordial state, probably by X-rays from high-mass X-ray binaries or miniquasars. The strength of this evidence depends on the ionization state of the IGM, which we are not yet able to constrain. This result is consistent with standard predictions for how reionization might have proceeded.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

ALMA REDSHIFTS OF MILLIMETER-SELECTED GALAXIES FROM THE SPT SURVEY: THE REDSHIFT DISTRIBUTION OF DUSTY STAR-FORMING GALAXIES

A. Weiß; C. De Breuck; D. P. Marrone; J. D. Vieira; James E. Aguirre; K. A. Aird; M. Aravena; M. L. N. Ashby; Matthew B. Bayliss; B. A. Benson; M. Béthermin; A. D. Biggs; L. E. Bleem; J. J. Bock; M. Bothwell; C. M. Bradford; M. Brodwin; J. E. Carlstrom; C. L. Chang; Sydney Chapman; T. M. Crawford; A. T. Crites; T. de Haan; M. Dobbs; Thomas P. Downes; C. D. Fassnacht; E. M. George; Michael D. Gladders; Anthony H. Gonzalez; T. R. Greve

Using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, we have conducted a blind redshift survey in the 3 mm atmospheric transmission window for 26 strongly lensed dusty star-forming galaxies (DSFGs) selected with the South Pole Telescope. The sources were selected to have S_(1.4mm) > 20 mJy and a dust-like spectrum and, to remove low-z sources, not have bright radio (S_843MHz) 3. We discuss the effect of gravitational lensing on the redshift distribution and compare our measured redshift distribution to that of models in the literature.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

PAPER-64 Constraints on Reionization: The 21 cm Power Spectrum at z = 8.4

Zaki S. Ali; Aaron R. Parsons; Haoxuan Zheng; Jonathan C. Pober; Adrian Liu; James E. Aguirre; Richard Bradley; G. Bernardi; C. L. Carilli; Carina Cheng; David R. DeBoer; Matthew R. Dexter; Jasper Grobbelaar; Jasper Horrell; Daniel C. Jacobs; Patricia J. Klima; David MacMahon; Matthys Maree; David F. Moore; Nima Razavi; Irina I. Stefan; William P. Walbrugh; Andre Walker

© 2015. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. In this paper, we report new limits on 21 cm emission from cosmic reionization based on a 135 day observing campaign with a 64-element deployment of the Donald C. Backer Precision Array for Probing the Epoch of Reionization in South Africa. This work extends the work presented in Parsons et al. with more collecting area, a longer observing period, improved redundancy-based calibration, improved fringe-rate filtering, and updated power-spectral analysis using optimal quadratic estimators. The result is a new 2σ upper limit on Δ2(k) of (22.4 mK)2 in the range < k < 0.5h Mpc-1 at z = 8.4. This represents a three-fold improvement over the previous best upper limit. As we discuss in more depth in a forthcoming paper, this upper limit supports and extends previous evidence against extremely cold reionization scenarios. We conclude with a discussion of implications for future 21 cm reionization experiments, including the newly funded Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2006

Bolocam Survey for 1.1 mm Dust Continuum Emission in the c2d Legacy Clouds. II. Ophiuchus

Kaisa E. Young; Melissa L. Enoch; Neal J. Evans; J. Glenn; Anneila I. Sargent; Tracy L. Huard; James E. Aguirre; S. R. Golwala; D. Haig; Paul M. Harvey; G. T. Laurent; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; Jack Sayers

We present a large-scale millimeter continuum map of the Ophiuchus molecular cloud. Nearly 11 deg2, including all of the area in the cloud with AV ≥ 3 mag, was mapped at 1.1 mm with Bolocam on the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory (CSO). By design, the map also covers the region mapped in the infrared with the Spitzer Space Telescope. We detect 44 definite sources, and a few likely sources are also seen along a filament in the eastern streamer. The map indicates that dense cores in Ophiuchus are very clustered and often found in filaments within the cloud. Most sources are round, as measured at the half-power point, but elongated when measured at lower contour levels, suggesting spherical sources lying within filaments. The masses, for an assumed dust temperature of 10 K, range from 0.24 to 3.9 M☉, with a mean value of 0.96 M☉. The total mass in distinct cores is 42 M☉, 0.5%-2% of the total cloud mass, and the total mass above 4 σ is about 80 M☉. The mean densities in the cores are quite high, with an average of 1.6 × 106 cm-3, suggesting short free-fall times. The core mass distribution can be fitted with a power law with slope α = 2.1 ± 0.3 for M > 0.5 M☉, similar to that found in other regions, but slightly shallower than that of some determinations of the local IMF. In agreement with previous studies, our survey shows that dense cores account for a very small fraction of the cloud volume and total mass. They are nearly all confined to regions with AV ≥ 9 mag, a lower threshold than found previously.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2005

THE BOLOCAM LOCKMAN HOLE MILLIMETER-WAVE GALAXY SURVEY: GALAXY CANDIDATES AND NUMBER COUNTS

G. T. Laurent; James E. Aguirre; J. Glenn; Peter A. R. Ade; J. J. Bock; S. R. Edgington; A. Goldin; S. R. Golwala; D. Haig; A. E. Lange; P. R. Maloney; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; H. T. Nguyen; P. Rossinot; Jack Sayers; P. Stover

We present results of a new deep 1.1 mm survey using Bolocam, a millimeter-wavelength bolometer array camera designed for mapping large fields at fast scan rates, without chopping. A map, galaxy candidate list, and derived number counts are presented. This survey encompasses 324 arcmin2 to an rms noise level (filtered for point sources) of ?1:1 mm ’1:4 mJy beam?1 and includes the entire regions surveyed by the published 8 mJy 850 ?m JCMT SCUBA and 1.2 mm IRAM MAMBO surveys. We reduced the data using a custom software pipeline to remove correlated sky and instrument noise via a principal component analysis. Extensive simulations and jackknife tests were performed to confirm the robustness of our source candidates and estimate the effects of false detections, bias, and completeness. In total, 17 source candidates were detected at a significance ?3.0 ?, with six expected false detections. Nine candidates are new detections, while eight candidates have coincident SCUBA 850 ?m and/or MAMBO 1.2 mm detections. From our observed number counts, we estimate the underlying differential number count distribution of submillimeter galaxies and find it to be in general agreement with previous surveys. Modeling the spectral energy distributions of these submillimeter galaxies after observations of dusty nearby galaxies suggests extreme luminosities of L ¼ ð1:0 1:6Þ ; 1013 L? and, if powered by star formation, star formation rates of 500–800 M? yr?1.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

A SENSITIVITY AND ARRAY-CONFIGURATION STUDY FOR MEASURING THE POWER SPECTRUM OF 21 cm EMISSION FROM REIONIZATION

Aaron R. Parsons; Jonathan C. Pober; Matthew McQuinn; Daniel C. Jacobs; James E. Aguirre

Telescopes aiming to measure 21 cm emission from the Epoch of Reionization must toe a careful line, balancing the need for raw sensitivity against the stringent calibration requirements for removing bright foregrounds. It is unclear what the optimal design is for achieving both of these goals. Via a pedagogical derivation of an interferometers response to the power spectrum of 21 cm reionization fluctuations, we show that even under optimistic scenarios first-generation arrays will yield low-signal-to-noise detections, and that different compact array configurations can substantially alter sensitivity. We explore the sensitivity gains of array configurations that yield high redundancy in the uv-plane—configurations that have been largely ignored since the advent of self-calibration for high-dynamic-range imaging. We first introduce a mathematical framework to generate optimal minimum-redundancy configurations for imaging. We contrast the sensitivity of such configurations with high-redundancy configurations, finding that high-redundancy configurations can improve power-spectrum sensitivity by more than an order of magnitude. We explore how high-redundancy array configurations can be tuned to various angular scales, enabling array sensitivity to be directed away from regions of the uv-plane (such as the origin) where foregrounds are brighter and instrumental systematics are more problematic. We demonstrate that a 132 antenna deployment of the Precision Array for Probing the Epoch of Reionization observing for 120 days in a high-redundancy configuration will, under ideal conditions, have the requisite sensitivity to detect the power spectrum of the 21 cm signal from reionization at a 3σ level at k < 0.25 h Mpc–1 in a bin of Δln k = 1. We discuss the tradeoffs of low- versus high-redundancy configurations.

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J. Glenn

University of Colorado Boulder

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Richard Bradley

National Radio Astronomy Observatory

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C. L. Carilli

National Radio Astronomy Observatory

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J. J. Bock

California Institute of Technology

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C. M. Bradford

California Institute of Technology

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Zaki S. Ali

University of California

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