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Dive into the research topics where Kartik Sheth is active.

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Featured researches published by Kartik Sheth.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

The calibration of mid-infrared star formation rate indicators

D. Calzetti; Robert C. Kennicutt; C. W. Engelbracht; Claus Leitherer; B. T. Draine; Lisa J. Kewley; John Moustakas; Megan L. Sosey; Daniel A. Dale; Karl D. Gordon; G. Helou; David J. Hollenbach; Lee Armus; G. J. Bendo; Caroline Bot; Brent Alan Buckalew; T. H. Jarrett; Aigen Li; Martin Meyer; E. J. Murphy; Moire K. M. Prescott; Michael W. Regan; G. H. Rieke; Helene Roussel; Kartik Sheth; J. D. Smith; Michele D. Thornley; F. Walter

With the goal of investigating the degree to which the MIR emission traces the SFR, we analyze Spitzer 8 and 24 μm data of star-forming regions in a sample of 33 nearby galaxies with available HST NICMOS images in the Paα (1.8756 μm) emission line. The galaxies are drawn from the SINGS sample and cover a range of morphologies and a factor ~10 in oxygen abundance. Published data on local low-metallicity starburst galaxies and LIRGs are also included in the analysis. Both the stellar continuum-subtracted 8 μm emission and the 24 μm emission correlate with the extinction-corrected Paα line emission, although neither relationship is linear. Simple models of stellar populations and dust extinction and emission are able to reproduce the observed nonlinear trend of the 24 μm emission versus number of ionizing photons, including the modest deficiency of 24 μm emission in the low-metallicity regions, which results from a combination of decreasing dust opacity and dust temperature at low luminosities. Conversely, the trend of the 8 μm emission as a function of the number of ionizing photons is not well reproduced by the same models. The 8 μm emission is contributed, in larger measure than the 24 μm emission, by dust heated by nonionizing stellar populations, in addition to the ionizing ones, in agreement with previous findings. Two SFR calibrations, one using the 24 μm emission and the other using a combination of the 24 μm and Hα luminosities (Kennicutt and coworkers), are presented. No calibration is presented for the 8 μm emission because of its significant dependence on both metallicity and environment. The calibrations presented here should be directly applicable to systems dominated by ongoing star formation.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2007

The First Release COSMOS Optical and Near-IR Data and Catalog*

P. Capak; H. Aussel; Masaru Ajiki; H. J. McCracken; B. Mobasher; N. Z. Scoville; Patrick Lynn Shopbell; Y. Taniguchi; D. Thompson; S. Tribiano; S. S. Sasaki; A. W. Blain; M. Brusa; C. L. Carilli; A. Comastri; C. M. Carollo; P. Cassata; James W. Colbert; Richard S. Ellis; M. Elvis; Mauro Giavalisco; W. Green; L. Guzzo; G. Hasinger; O. Ilbert; C. D. Impey; Knud Jahnke; J. Kartaltepe; Jean-Paul Kneib; Jin Koda

We present imaging data and photometry for the COSMOS survey in 15 photometric bands between 0.3 and 2.4 μm. These include data taken on the Subaru 8.3 m telescope, the KPNO and CTIO 4 m telescopes, and the CFHT 3.6 m telescope. Special techniques are used to ensure that the relative photometric calibration is better than 1% across the field of view. The absolute photometric accuracy from standard-star measurements is found to be 6%. The absolute calibration is corrected using galaxy spectra, providing colors accurate to 2% or better. Stellar and galaxy colors and counts agree well with the expected values. Finally, as the first step in the scientific analysis of these data we construct panchromatic number counts which confirm that both the geometry of the universe and the galaxy population are evolving.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

Star Formation in NGC 5194 (M51a). II. The Spatially Resolved Star Formation Law

Robert C. Kennicutt; Daniela Calzetti; Fabian Walter; George Helou; David J. Hollenbach; Lee Armus; G. J. Bendo; Daniel A. Dale; B. T. Draine; C. W. Engelbracht; Karl D. Gordon; Moire K. M. Prescott; Michael W. Regan; Michele D. Thornley; Caroline Bot; Elias Brinks; Erwin de Blok; Duilia Fernandes de Mello; Martin Meyer; John Moustakas; E. J. Murphy; Kartik Sheth; J. D. Smith

We have studied the relationship between the star formation rate (SFR), surface density, and gas surface density in the spiral galaxy M51a (NGC 5194), using multiwavelength data obtained as part of the Spitzer Infrared Nearby Galaxies Survey (SINGS). We introduce a new SFR index based on a linear combination of Hα emission-line and 24 μm continuum luminosities, which provides reliable extinction-corrected ionizing fluxes and SFR densities over a wide range of dust attenuations. The combination of these extinction-corrected SFR densities with aperture synthesis H I and CO maps has allowed us to probe the form of the spatially resolved star formation law on scales of 0.5-2 kpc. We find that the resolved SFR versus gas surface density relation is well represented by a Schmidt power law, which is similar in form and dispersion to the disk-averaged Schmidt law. We observe a comparably strong correlation of the SFR surface density with the molecular gas surface density, but no significant correlation with the surface density of atomic gas. The best-fitting slope of the Schmidt law varies from N = 1.37 to 1.56, with zero point and slope that change systematically with the spatial sampling scale. We tentatively attribute these variations to the effects of areal sampling and averaging of a nonlinear intrinsic star formation law. Our data can also be fitted by an alternative parameterization of the SFR surface density in terms of the ratio of gas surface density to local dynamical time, but with a considerable dispersion.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2005

Star Formation in NGC 5194 (M51a): The Panchromatic View from GALEX to Spitzer*

Daniela Calzetti; Robert C. Kennicutt; Luciana Bianchi; David Allan Thilker; Daniel A. Dale; C. W. Engelbracht; Claus Leitherer; Martin Meyer; Megan L. Sosey; Maximilian J. Mutchler; Michael W. Regan; Michele D. Thornley; Lee Armus; G. J. Bendo; S. Boissier; A. Boselli; B. T. Draine; Karl D. Gordon; G. Helou; David J. Hollenbach; Lisa J. Kewley; Barry F. Madore; D. C. Martin; E. J. Murphy; G. H. Rieke; Marcia J. Rieke; H. Roussel; Kartik Sheth; J. D. Smith; Frederick M. Walter

(Abridged) Far ultraviolet to far infrared images of the nearby galaxy NGC5194, from Spitzer, GALEX, Hubble Space Telescope and ground--based data, are used to investigate local and global star formation, and the impact of dust extinction in HII-emitting knots. In the IR/UV-UV color plane, the NGC5194 HII knots show the same trend observed for normal star-forming galaxies, having a much larger dispersion than starburst galaxies. We identify the dispersion as due to the UV emission predominantly tracing the evolved, non-ionizing stellar population, up to ages 50-100 Myr. While in starbursts the UV light traces the current SFR, in NGC5194 it traces a combination of current and recent-past SFR. Unlike the UV emission, the monochromatic 24 micron luminosity is an accurate local SFR tracer for the HII knots in NGC5194; this suggests that the 24 micron emission carriers are mainly heated by the young, ionizing stars. However, preliminary results show that the ratio of the 24 micron emission to the SFR varies by a factor of a few from galaxy to galaxy. While also correlated with star formation, the 8 micron emission is not directly proportional to the number of ionizing photons. This confirms earlier suggestions that the carriers of the 8 micron emission are heated by more than one mechanism.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

THE BULK OF THE BLACK HOLE GROWTH SINCE z ∼ 1 OCCURS IN A SECULAR UNIVERSE: NO MAJOR MERGER-AGN CONNECTION*

Mauricio Cisternas; Knud Jahnke; K. J. Inskip; J. Kartaltepe; Anton M. Koekemoer; Thorsten Lisker; Aday R. Robaina; M. Scodeggio; Kartik Sheth; Jonathan R. Trump; R. Andrae; Takamitsu Miyaji; E. Lusso; M. Brusa; P. Capak; N. Cappelluti; F. Civano; O. Ilbert; C. D. Impey; Alexie Leauthaud; S. J. Lilly; M. Salvato; N. Z. Scoville; Y. Taniguchi

What is the relevance of major mergers and interactions as triggering mechanisms for active galactic nuclei (AGNs) activity? To answer this long-standing question, we analyze 140 XMM-Newton-selected AGN host galaxies and a matched control sample of 1264 inactive galaxies over z ~ 0.3–1.0 and M_∗ < 10^(11.7) M_⊙ with high-resolution Hubble Space Telescope/Advanced Camera for Surveys imaging from the COSMOS field. The visual analysis of their morphologies by 10 independent human classifiers yields a measure of the fraction of distorted morphologies in the AGN and control samples, i.e., quantifying the signature of recent mergers which might potentially be responsible for fueling/triggering the AGN. We find that (1) the vast majority (>85%) of the AGN host galaxies do not show strong distortions and (2) there is no significant difference in the distortion fractions between active and inactive galaxies. Our findings provide the best direct evidence that, since z ~ 1, the bulk of black hole (BH) accretion has not been triggered by major galaxy mergers, therefore arguing that the alternative mechanisms, i.e., internal secular processes and minor interactions, are the leading triggers for the episodes of major BH growth.We also exclude an alternative interpretation of our results: a substantial time lag between merging and the observability of the AGN phase could wash out the most significant merging signatures, explaining the lack of enhancement of strong distortions on the AGN hosts. We show that this alternative scenario is unlikely due to (1) recent major mergers being ruled out for the majority of sources due to the high fraction of disk-hosted AGNs, (2) the lack of a significant X-ray signal in merging inactive galaxies as a signature of a potential buried AGN, and (3) the low levels of soft X-ray obscuration for AGNs hosted by interacting galaxies, in contrast to model predictions.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

Evolution of the Bar Fraction in COSMOS: Quantifying the Assembly of the Hubble Sequence

Kartik Sheth; Debra Meloy Elmegreen; Bruce G. Elmegreen; P. Capak; Roberto G. Abraham; E. Athanassoula; Richard S. Ellis; B. Mobasher; M. Salvato; E. Schinnerer; Nicholas Z. Scoville; Lori Spalsbury; Linda E. Strubbe; Marcella Carollo; Michael R. Rich; Andrew A. West

We have analyzed the redshift-dependent fraction of galactic bars over 0:2 < z < 0:84 in 2157 luminous face-on spiral galaxies from the COSMOS 2 deg 2 field. Our sample is an order of magnitude larger than that used in any previous investigation,and is based onsubstantially deeper imaging data thanthat available from earlier wide-area studies of high-redshift galaxy morphology. We find that the fraction of barred spirals declines rapidly with redshift. Whereas in the local universe about 65% of luminous spiral galaxies contain bars (SB+SAB), at z � 0:84 this fraction drops to about20%.Overthisredshiftrangethefractionof strongbars(SBs)dropsfromabout30%tounder10%.Itisclearthat when the universe was half its present age, the census of galaxies on the Hubble sequence was fundamentally different fromthatof thepresentday.Amajorcluetounderstandingthisphenomenonhasalsoemergedfromouranalysis,which shows thatthe bar fractioninspiralgalaxiesisa strongfunctionof stellar mass, integratedcolor and bulge prominence. The bar fraction in very massive, luminous spirals is about constant out to z � 0:84, whereas for the low-mass, blue spirals it declines significantly with redshift beyond z ¼ 0:3. There is also a slight preference for bars in bulge-dominated systems at high redshifts that may be an important clue toward the coevolution of bars, bulges, and black holes. Our results thus haveimportant ramifications for the processes responsible forgalacticdownsizing, suggestingthatmassive galaxies matured early in a dynamical sense, and not just as a result of the regulation of their star formation rate. Subject headingg galaxies: evolution — galaxies: general — galaxies: high-redshift — galaxies: spiral — galaxies: structure


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

DEEP SPITZER 24 μm COSMOS IMAGING. I. THE EVOLUTION OF LUMINOUS DUSTY GALAXIES—CONFRONTING THE MODELS

Emeric Le Floc'h; H. Aussel; O. Ilbert; Laurie Riguccini; David T. Frayer; M. Salvato; S. Arnouts; Jason A. Surace; C. Feruglio; G. Rodighiero; P. Capak; J. Kartaltepe; S. Heinis; Kartik Sheth; Lin Yan; H. J. McCracken; D. Thompson; David B. Sanders; N. Z. Scoville; Anton M. Koekemoer

We present the first results obtained from the identification of ~30,000 sources in the Spitzer/24 μm observations of the COSMOS field at S_(24 μm) ≳ 80 μJy. Using accurate photometric redshifts (σ_ z ~ 0.12 at z ~ 2 for 24 μm sources with i ^+ ≳ 25 mag AB) and simple extrapolations of the number counts at faint fluxes, we resolve with unprecedented detail the buildup of the mid-infrared background across cosmic ages. We find that ~50% and ~80% of the 24 μm background intensity originate from galaxies at z ≳ 1 and z ≳ 2, respectively, supporting the scenario where highly obscured sources at very high redshifts (z ≳ 2) contribute only marginally to the cosmic infrared background. Assuming flux-limited selections at optical wavelengths, we also find that the fraction of i ^+-band sources with 24 μm detection strongly increases up to z ~ 2 as a consequence of the rapid evolution that star-forming galaxies have undergone with look-back time. Nonetheless, this rising trend shows a clear break at z ~ 1.3, probably due to k-correction effects implied by the complexity of spectral energy distributions in the mid-infrared. Finally, we compare our results with the predictions from different models of galaxy formation. We note that semianalytical formalisms currently fail to reproduce the redshift distributions observed at 24 μm. Furthermore, the simulated galaxies at S _(24 μm) > 80 μJy exhibit R–K colors much bluer than observed and the predicted K-band fluxes are systematically underestimated at z ≳ 0.5. Unless these discrepancies mainly result from an incorrect treatment of extinction in the models they may reflect an underestimate of the predicted density of high-redshift massive sources with strong ongoing star formation, which would point to more fundamental processes and/or parameters (e.g., initial mass function, critical density to form stars, feedback,...) that are still not fully controlled in the simulations. The most recent backward evolution scenarios reproduce reasonably well the flux/redshift distribution of 24 μm sources up to z ~ 3, although none of them is able to exactly match our results at all redshifts.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2007

COSMOS Morphological Classification with the Zurich Estimator of Structural Types (ZEST) and the Evolution Since z = 1 of the Luminosity Function of Early, Disk, and Irregular Galaxies

Claudia Scarlata; C. M. Carollo; S. Lilly; M. T. Sargent; R. Feldmann; P. Kampczyk; C. Porciani; Anton M. Koekemoer; N. Z. Scoville; J-P. Kneib; A. Leauthaud; Richard Massey; Jason Rhodes; L. Tasca; P. Capak; C. Maier; H. J. McCracken; B. Mobasher; A. Renzini; Y. Taniguchi; D. Thompson; Kartik Sheth; Masaru Ajiki; H. Aussel; Takashi Murayama; D. B. Sanders; Shunji S. Sasaki; Yasuhiro Shioya; M. Takahashi

Motivated by the desire to reliably and automatically classify structure of thousands of COSMOS galaxies, we present ZEST, the Zurich Estimator of Structural Types. To classify galaxy structure, ZEST uses (1) five nonparametric diagnostics: asymmetry, concentration, Gini coefficient, second-order moment of the brightest 20% of galaxy pixels, and ellipticity; and (2) the exponent n of single-Sersic fits to the two-dimensional surface brightness distributions. To fully exploit the wealth of information while reducing the redundancy present in these diagnostics, ZEST performs a principal component (PC) analysis. We use a sample of ~56,000 I_(AB) ≤ 24 COSMOS galaxies to show that the first three PCs fully describe the key aspects of the galaxy structure, i.e., to calibrate a three-dimensional classification grid of axes PC_1, PC_2, and PC_3. We demonstrate the robustness of the ZEST grid on the z = 0 sample of Frei et al. The ZEST classification breaks most of the degeneracy between different galaxy populations that affects morphological classifications based on only some of the diagnostics included in ZEST. As a first application, we present the evolution since z ~ 1 of the luminosity functions (LFs) of COSMOS galaxies of early, disk, and irregular galaxies and, for disk galaxies, of different bulge-to-disk ratios. Overall, we find that the LF up to a redshift z = 1 is consistent with a pure luminosity evolution (of about 0.95 mag at z ~ 0.7). We highlight, however, two trends that are in general agreement with a downsizing scenario for galaxy formation, i.e., (1) a deficit of a factor of about 2 at z ~ 0.7 of M_B > -20.5 structurally classified early-type galaxies and (2) an excess of a factor of about 3, at a similar redshift, of irregular galaxies.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

RECONSTRUCTING THE STELLAR MASS DISTRIBUTIONS OF GALAXIES USING S4G IRAC 3.6 AND 4.5 μm IMAGES. I. CORRECTING FOR CONTAMINATION BY POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS, HOT DUST, AND INTERMEDIATE-AGE STARS

Sharon E. Meidt; E. Schinnerer; Johan H. Knapen; Albert Bosma; E. Athanassoula; Kartik Sheth; Ronald J. Buta; Dennis Zaritsky; Eija Laurikainen; Debra Meloy Elmegreen; Bruce G. Elmegreen; Dimitri A. Gadotti; Heikki Salo; Michael W. Regan; Luis C. Ho; Barry F. Madore; Joannah L. Hinz; Ramin A. Skibba; Armando Gil de Paz; Juan Carlos Munoz-Mateos; Karin Menendez-Delmestre; Mark Seibert; Taehyun Kim; Trisha Mizusawa; Jarkko Laine; Sebastien Comeron

With the aim of constructing accurate two-dimensional maps of the stellar mass distribution in nearby galaxies from Spitzer Survey of Stellar Structure in Galaxies 3.6 and 4.5 μm images, we report on the separation of the light from old stars from the emission contributed by contaminants. Results for a small sample of six disk galaxies (NGC 1566, NGC 2976, NGC 3031, NGC 3184, NGC 4321, and NGC 5194) with a range of morphological properties, dust content, and star formation histories are presented to demonstrate our approach. To isolate the old stellar light from contaminant emission (e.g., hot dust and the 3.3 μm polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) feature) in the IRAC 3.6 and 4.5 μm bands we use an independent component analysis (ICA) technique designed to separate statistically independent source distributions, maximizing the distinction in the [3.6]-[4.5] colors of the sources. The technique also removes emission from evolved red objects with a low mass-to-light ratio, such as asymptotic giant branch (AGB) and red supergiant (RSG) stars, revealing maps of the underlying old distribution of light with [3.6]-[4.5] colors consistent with the colors of K and M giants. The contaminants are studied by comparison with the non-stellar emission imaged at 8 μm, which is dominated by the broad PAH feature. Using the measured 3.6 μm/8 μm ratio to select individual contaminants, we find that hot dust and PAHs together contribute between ~5% and 15% to the integrated light at 3.6 μm, while light from regions dominated by intermediate-age (AGB and RSG) stars accounts for only 1%-5%. Locally, however, the contribution from either contaminant can reach much higher levels; dust contributes on average 22% to the emission in star-forming regions throughout the sample, while intermediate-age stars contribute upward of 50% in localized knots. The removal of these contaminants with ICA leaves maps of the old stellar disk that retain a high degree of structural information and are ideally suited for tracing stellar mass, as will be the focus in a companion paper.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

The Evolution of Interstellar Medium Mass Probed by Dust Emission: ALMA Observations at z = 0.3-2

N. Z. Scoville; H. Aussel; Kartik Sheth; K. S. Scott; D. B. Sanders; R. J. Ivison; Alexandra Pope; P. Capak; P. Vanden Bout; S. Manohar; J. Kartaltepe; Brant Robertson; S. J. Lilly

The use of submm dust continuum emission to probe the mass of interstellar dust and gas in galaxies is empirically calibrated using samples of local star forming galaxies, Planck observations of the Milky Way and high redshift submm galaxies (SMGs). All of these objects suggest a similar calibration, strongly supporting the view that the Rayleigh-Jeans (RJ) tail of the dust emission can be used as an accurate and very fast probe of the ISM in galaxies. We present ALMA Cycle 0 observations of the Band 7 (350 GHz) dust emission in 107 galaxies from z = 0.2 to 2.5. Three samples of galaxies with a total of 101 galaxies were stellar mass-selected from COSMOS to have M∗ ≃ 10 11 M⊙: 37 at z∼ 0.4, 33 at z∼ 0.9 and 31 at z= 2. A fourth sample with 6 IR luminous galaxies at z = 2 was observed for comparison with the purely mass-selected samples. From the fluxes detected in the stacked images for each sample, we find that the ISM content has decreased a factor ∼ 6 from 1−2×10 10 M⊙ at both z = 2 and 0.9 down to ∼ 2×10 9 M⊙ at z = 0.4. The IR luminous sample at z = 2 shows a further ∼ 4 times increase in MISM compared to the equivalent non-IR bright sample at the same redshift. The gas mass fractions are ∼ 2 ± 0.5,12 ± 3,14 ± 2 and 53 ± 3 % for the four subsamples (z = 0.4, 0.9, 2 and IR bright galaxies). Subject headings: cosmology: observations — cosmology: galaxy evolution ISM: clouds

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Michael W. Regan

Space Telescope Science Institute

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P. Capak

California Institute of Technology

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Karin Menendez-Delmestre

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Taehyun Kim

Seoul National University

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Dimitri A. Gadotti

European Southern Observatory

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