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Dive into the research topics where Luca Cortese is active.

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Featured researches published by Luca Cortese.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

COLD GASS, an IRAM legacy survey of molecular gas in massive galaxies – II. The non-universality of the molecular gas depletion time-scale

A. Saintonge; Guinevere Kauffmann; Jing Wang; C. Kramer; L. J. Tacconi; Christof Buchbender; Barbara Catinella; J. Graciá-Carpio; Luca Cortese; Silvia Fabello; Jian Fu; R. Genzel; Riccardo Giovanelli; Qi Guo; Martha P. Haynes; Timothy M. Heckman; Mark R. Krumholz; Jenna Lemonias; Cheng Li; Sean M. Moran; Nemesio Rodriguez-Fernandez; David Schiminovich; Karl Schuster; Albrecht Sievers

We study the relation between molecular gas and star formation in a volume-limited sample of 222 galaxies from the COLD GASS survey, with measurements of the CO(1–0) line from the IRAM 30-m telescope. The galaxies are at redshifts 0.025 < z < 0.05 and have stellar masses in the range 10.0 < log M� /M� < 11.5. The IRAM measurements are complemented by deep Arecibo H I observations and homogeneous Sloan Digital Sky Survey and GALEX photometry. A reference sample that includes both ultraviolet (UV) and far-infrared data is used to calibrate our estimates of star formation rates from the seven optical/UV bands. The mean molecular gas depletion time-scale [tdep(H2)] for all the galaxies in our sample is 1 Gyr; however, tdep(H2) increases by a factor of 6 from a value of ∼0.5 Gyr for galaxies with stellar –


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2010

The Herschel Reference Survey

A. Boselli; Stephen Anthony Eales; Luca Cortese; G. J. Bendo; P. Chanial; V. Buat; Jonathan Ivor Davies; Robbie Richard Auld; E. Rigby; M. Baes; M. J. Barlow; James J. Bock; M. Bradford; N. Castro-Rodriguez; S. Charlot; D. L. Clements; D. Cormier; E. Dwek; D. Elbaz; M. Galametz; F. Galliano; Walter Kieran Gear; J. Glenn; Haley Louise Gomez; Matthew Joseph Griffin; Sacha Hony; Kate Gudrun Isaak; L. Levenson; N. Lu; S. Madden

The Herschel Reference Survey is a Herschel guaranteed time key project and will be a benchmark study of dust in the nearby universe. The survey will complement a number of other Herschel key projects including large cosmological surveys that trace dust in the distant universe. We will use Herschel to produce images of a statistically-complete sample of 323 galaxies at 250, 350, and 500 μm. The sample is volume-limited, containing sources with distances between 15 and 25 Mpc and flux limits in the K band to minimize the selection effects associated with dust and with young high-mass stars and to introduce a selection in stellar mass. The sample spans the whole range of morphological types (ellipticals to late-type spirals) and environments (from the field to the center of the Virgo Cluster) and as such will be useful for other purposes than our own. We plan to use the survey to investigate (i) the dust content of galaxies as a function of Hubble type, stellar mass, and environment; (ii) the connection between the dust content and composition and the other phases of the interstellar medium; and (iii) the origin and evolution of dust in galaxies. In this article, we describe the goals of the survey, the details of the sample and some of the auxiliary observing programs that we have started to collect complementary data. We also use the available multifrequency data to carry out an analysis of the statistical properties of the sample.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

The Origin of Dwarf Ellipticals in the Virgo Cluster

A. Boselli; S. Boissier; Luca Cortese; G. Gavazzi

We study the evolution of dwarf (LH < 109.6 LH☉) star-forming and quiescent galaxies in the Virgo Cluster by comparing their UV to radio centimetric properties to the predictions of multizone chemospectrophotometric models of galaxy evolution especially tuned to take into account the perturbations induced by the interaction with the cluster intergalactic medium. Our models simulate one or multiple ram pressure stripping events and galaxy starvation. Models predict that all star-forming dwarf galaxies entering the cluster for the first time loose most, if not all, of their atomic gas content, quenching on short timescales (≤150 Myr) their activity of star formation. These dwarf galaxies soon become red and quiescent, gas metal-rich objects with spectrophotometric and structural properties similar to those of dwarf ellipticals. Young, low-luminosity, high surface brightness star-forming galaxies such as late-type spirals and BCDs are probably the progenitors of relatively massive dwarf ellipticals, while it is likely that low surface brightness Magellanic irregulars evolve into very low surface brightness quiescent objects hardly detectable in ground-based imaging surveys. The small number of dwarf galaxies with physical properties intermediate between those of star-forming and quiescent systems is consistent with a rapid (<1 Gyr) transitional phase between the two dwarf galaxy populations. These results, combined with statistical considerations, are consistent with the idea that most of the dwarf ellipticals dominating the faint end of the Virgo luminosity function were initially star-forming systems, accreted by the cluster and stripped of their gas by one or subsequent ram pressure stripping events.


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 | 2013

Variations in the Galactic star formation rate and density thresholds for star formation

S. N. Longmore; John Bally; L. Testi; C. R. Purcell; A. J. Walsh; E. Bressert; M. Pestalozzi; S. Molinari; Jürgen Ott; Luca Cortese; Cara Battersby; Norman Murray; Eve J. Lee; J. M. D. Kruijssen; E. Schisano; D. Elia

The conversion of gas into stars is a fundamental process in astrophysics and cosmology. Stars are known to form from the gravitational collapse of dense clumps in interstellar molecular clouds, and it has been proposed that the resulting star formation rate is proportional to either the amount of mass above a threshold gas surface density, or the gas volume density. These star formation prescriptions appear to hold in nearby molecular clouds in our Milky Way Galaxys disc as well as in distant galaxies where the star formation rates are often much larger. The inner 500 pc of our Galaxy, the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ), contains the largest concentration of dense, high-surface density molecular gas in the Milky Way, providing an environment where the validity of star formation prescriptions can be tested. Here, we show that by several measures, the current star formation rate in the CMZ is an order-of-magnitude lower than the rates predicted by the currently accepted prescriptions. In particular, the region 1 degrees several 10(3) cm(-3)) molecular gas - enough to form 1000 Orion-like clusters - but the present-day star formation rate within this gas is only equivalent to that in Orion. In addition to density, another property of molecular clouds must be included in the star formation prescription to predict the star formation rate in a given mass of molecular gas. We discuss which physical mechanisms might be responsible for suppressing star formation in the CMZ.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2007

Radial variation of attenuation and star formation in the largest late-type disks observed with GALEX

S. Boissier; Armando Gil de Paz; A. Boselli; Barry F. Madore; V. Buat; Luca Cortese; D. Burgarella; Juan Carlos Muñoz Mateos; Tom A. Barlow; Karl Forster; Peter G. Friedman; D. Christopher Martin; Patrick Morrissey; Susan G. Neff; David Schiminovich; Mark Seibert; Todd Small; Ted K. Wyder; Luciana Bianchi; Jose Donas; Timothy M. Heckman; Young-Wook Lee; Bruno Milliard; R. Michael Rich; Alexander S. Szalay; Barry Y. Welsh; Sukyoung K. Yi

For a sample of 43 nearby, late-type galaxies, we have investigated the radial variation of both the current star formation rate and the dust-induced UV light attenuation. To do this we have cross-correlated IRAS images and GALEX observations for each of these galaxies and compiled observations of the gas (CO and H I) and metal-abundance gradients found in the literature. We find that attenuation correlates with metallicity. We then use the UV profiles, corrected for attenuation, to study several variants of the Schmidt law and conclude that our results are compatible with a simple law similar to the one of Kennicutt extending smoothly to lower surface densities, but with considerable scatter. We do not detect an abrupt break in the UV light at the threshold radius derived from Hα data (at which the Hα profile shows a break and beyond which only a few H II regions are usually found). We interpret the Hα sudden break not as a change in the star formation regime (as often suggested), but as the vanishingly small number of ionizing stars corresponding to low levels of star formation.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

The dust scaling relations of the Herschel Reference Survey

Luca Cortese; L. Ciesla; A. Boselli; S. Bianchi; Haley Louise Gomez; Matthew William L. Smith; G. J. Bendo; Stephen Anthony Eales; Michael Pohlen; M. Baes; Edvige Corbelli; Jonathan Ivor Davies; T. M. Hughes; L. K. Hunt; S. C. Madden; D. Pierini; S. di Serego Alighieri; Stefano Zibetti; M. Boquien; D. L. Clements; A. Cooray; M. Galametz; L. Magrini; C. Pappalardo; L. Spinoglio; C. Vlahakis

We combine new Herschel/SPIRE sub-millimeter observations with existing multiwavelength data to investigate the dust scaling relations of the Herschel Reference Survey, a magnitude-, volume-limited sample of similar to 300 nearby galaxies in different environments. We show that the dust-to-stellar mass ratio anti-correlates with stellar mass, stellar mass surface density and NUV - r colour across the whole range of parameters covered by our sample. Moreover, the dust-to-stellar mass ratio decreases significantly when moving from late-to early-type galaxies. These scaling relations are similar to those observed for the Hi gas-fraction, supporting the idea that the cold dust is tightly coupled to the cold atomic gas component in the interstellar medium. We also find a weak increase of the dust-to-Hi mass ratio with stellar mass and colour but no trend is seen with stellar mass surface density. By comparing galaxies in different environments we show that, although these scaling relations are followed by both cluster and field galaxies, Hi-deficient systems have, at fixed stellar mass, stellar mass surface density and morphological type systematically lower dust-to-stellar mass and higher dust-to-Hi mass ratios than Hi-normal/field galaxies. This provides clear evidence that dust is removed from the star-forming disk of cluster galaxies but the effect of the environment is less strong than what is observed in the case of the Hi disk. Such effects naturally arise if the dust disk is less extended than the Hi and follows more closely the distribution of the molecular gas phase, i.e., if the dust-to-atomic gas ratio monotonically decreases with distance from the galactic center.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

The Herschel Space Observatory view of dust in M81

G. J. Bendo; C. D. Wilson; Michael Pohlen; Marc Sauvage; Robbie Richard Auld; M. Baes; M. J. Barlow; J. J. Bock; A. Boselli; M. Bradford; V. Buat; N. Castro-Rodriguez; P. Chanial; S. Charlot; L. Ciesla; D. L. Clements; A. Cooray; D. Cormier; Luca Cortese; Jonathan Ivor Davies; Eli Dwek; Stephen Anthony Eales; D. Elbaz; M. Galametz; F. Galliano; Walter Kieran Gear; J. Glenn; Haley Louise Gomez; Matthew Joseph Griffin; Sacha Hony

We use Herschel Space Observatory data to place observational constraints on the peak and Rayleigh-Jeans slope of dust emission observed at 70–500 μm in the nearby spiral galaxy M81. We find that the ratios of wave bands between 160 and 500 μm are primarily dependent on radius but that the ratio of 70 to 160 μm emission shows no clear dependence on surface brightness or radius. These results along with analyses of the spectral energy distributions imply that the 160–500 μm emission traces 15–30 K dust heated by evolved stars in the bulge and disc whereas the 70 μm emission includes dust heated by the active galactic nucleus and young stars in star forming regions.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

The Herschel Reference Survey: dust in early-type galaxies and across the Hubble Sequence

Matthew William L. Smith; Haley Louise Gomez; Stephen Anthony Eales; L. Ciesla; A. Boselli; Luca Cortese; G. J. Bendo; M. Baes; S. Bianchi; M. Clemens; D. L. Clements; A. Cooray; Jonathan Ivor Davies; I. De Looze; S. di Serego Alighieri; J. Fritz; G. Gavazzi; Walter Kieran Gear; S. Madden; Erin Mentuch; P. Panuzzo; Michael Pohlen; L. Spinoglio; J. Verstappen; C. Vlahakis; C. D. Wilson; E. M. Xilouris

We present Herschel observations of 62 early-type galaxies (ETGs), including 39 galaxies morphologically classified as S0+S0a and 23 galaxies classified as ellipticals using SPIRE at 250, 350, and 500 mu m as part of the volume-limited Herschel Reference Survey (HRS). We detect dust emission in 24% of the ellipticals and 62% of the S0s. The mean temperature of the dust is \textless T-d \textgreater = 23.9 +/- 0.8 K, warmer than that found for late-type galaxies in the Virgo Cluster. The mean dust mass for the entire detected early-type sample is log M-d = 6.1 +/- 0.1 M-circle dot with a mean dust-to-stellar-mass ratio of log(M-d/M-*) = -4.3 +/- 0.1. Including the non-detections, these parameters are log M-d = 5.6 +/- 0.1 and log(M-d/M-*) = -5.1 +/- 0.1, respectively. The average dust-to-stellar-mass ratio for the early-type sample is fifty times lower, with larger dispersion, than the spiral galaxies observed as part of the HRS, and there is an order-of-magnitude decline in M-d/M-* between the S0s and ellipticals. We use UV and optical photometry to show that virtually all the galaxies lie close to the red sequence yet the large number of detections of cool dust, the gas-to-dust ratios, and the ratios of far-infrared to radio emission all suggest that many ETGs contain a cool interstellar medium similar to that in late-type galaxies. We show that the sizes of the dust sources in S0s are much smaller than those in early-type spirals and the decrease in the dust-to-stellar-mass ratio from early-type spirals to S0s cannot simply be explained by an increase in the bulge-to-disk ratio. These results suggest that the disks in S0s contain much less dust (and presumably gas) than the disks of early-type spirals and this cannot be explained simply by current environmental effects, such as ram-pressure stripping. The wide range in the dust-to-stellar-mass ratio for ETGs and the lack of a correlation between dust mass and optical luminosity suggest that much of the dust in the ETGs detected by Herschel has been acquired as the result of interactions, although we show these are unlikely to have had a major effect on the stellar masses of the ETGs. The Herschel observations tentatively suggest that in the most massive systems, the mass of interstellar medium is unconnected to the evolution of the stellar populations in these galaxies.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012

Investigations of dust heating in M81, M83 and NGC 2403 with the Herschel Space Observatory

G. J. Bendo; A. Boselli; Aliakbar Dariush; Michael Pohlen; H. Roussel; Marc Sauvage; Matthew William L. Smith; C. D. Wilson; M. Baes; A. Cooray; D. L. Clements; Luca Cortese; K. Foyle; M. Galametz; Haley Louise Gomez; V. Lebouteiller; N. Lu; S. Madden; Erin Mentuch; B. O'Halloran; M. J. Page; A. Remy; B. Schulz; L. Spinoglio

We use Spitzer Space Telescope and Herschel Space Observatory far-infrared data along with ground-based optical and near-infrared data to understand how dust heating in the nearby face-on spiral galaxies M81, M83 and NGC 2403 is affected by the starlight from all stars and by the radiation from star-forming regions. We find that 70/160 m surface brightness ratios tend to be more strongly influenced by star-forming regions. However, the 250/350 m and 350/500 m surface brightness ratios are more strongly affected by the light from the total stellar populations, suggesting that the dust emission at >250 m originates predominantly from a component that is colder than the dust seen at <160 m and that is relatively unaffected by star formation activity. We conclude by discussing the implications of this for modelling the spectral energy distributions of both nearby and more distant galaxies and for using far-infrared dust emission to trace star formation.

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A. Boselli

Aix-Marseille University

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G. J. Bendo

University of Manchester

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I. De Looze

University College London

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J. Fritz

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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A. Cooray

University of California

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