Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where M. Bondi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by M. Bondi.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Mid- and far-infrared luminosity functions and galaxy evolution from multiwavelength Spitzer observations up to z ~ 2.5

G. Rodighiero; M. Vaccari; A. Franceschini; L. Tresse; O. Le Fèvre; V. Le Brun; C. Mancini; I. Matute; Alessandro Cimatti; L. Marchetti; O. Ilbert; Stephane Arnouts; M. Bolzonella; E. Zucca; S. Bardelli; Carol J. Lonsdale; D. L. Shupe; Jason A. Surace; M. Rowan-Robinson; B. Garilli; G. Zamorani; L. Pozzetti; M. Bondi; Sylvain de la Torre; D. Vergani; P. Santini; A. Grazian; A. Fontana

Context. Studies of the infrared (IR) emission of cosmic sources have proven essential to constraining the evolutionary history of cosmic star formation and the gravitational accretion of nuclear black holes, because many of these events occur inside heavily dust-extinguished environments. Aims. The Spitzer Space Telescope has provided a large amount of data to constrain the nature and cosmological evolution of infrared source populations. In the present paper we exploit a large homogeneous dataset to derive a self-consistent picture of IR emission based on the time-dependent λ_(eff) = 24, 15, 12, and 8 μm monochromatic and bolometric IR luminosity functions (LF) over the full 0 < z < 2.5 redshift range. Methods. Our present analysis is based on a combination of data from deep Spitzer surveys of the VIMOS VLT Deep Survey (VVDS-SWIRE) and GOODS fields. To our limiting flux of S_(24) = 400 μJy, our sample derived from VVDS-SWIRE includes 1494 sources, and 666 and 904 sources brighter than S_(24) = 80 μJy are catalogued in GOODS-S and GOODS-N, respectively, for a total area of ~0.9 square degrees. Apart from a few galaxies, we obtain reliable optical identifications and redshifts for all these sources, providing a rich and robust dataset for our luminosity function determination. The final combined reliable sample includes 3029 sources, the fraction with photometric redshifts being 72% over all redshifts and almost all galaxies at z > 1.5. Based on the multiwavelength information available in these areas, we constrain the LFs at 8, 12, 15, and 24 μm. We also infer the total IR luminosities from our best-fit model of the observed SEDs of each source, and use this to derive the bolometric (8–1000 μm) LF and comoving volume emissivity to z ~ 2.5. Results. In the redshift interval 0 1. The mean redshift of the peak in the source number density shifts with luminosity: the brightest IR galaxies appear to form stars at earlier cosmic times (z > 1.5), while star formation in the less luminous galaxies continues until more recent epochs (z ~ 1 for L_(IR) < 10^(11)_☉), in overall agreement with similar analyses in the literature. Conclusions. Our results are indicative of a rapid increase in the galaxy IR comoving volume emissivity up to z ~ 1 and a constant average emissivity at z > 1. We also appear to measure a difference in the evolutionary rate of the source number densities as a function of luminosity, which is consistent with the downsizing evolutionary patterns reported for other samples of cosmic sources.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

The VIMOS VLT deep survey final data release: A spectroscopic sample of 35 016 galaxies and AGN out to z ∼ 6.7 selected with 17.5 ≤ iAB ≤ 24.75

O. Le Fèvre; P. Cassata; O. Cucciati; B. Garilli; O. Ilbert; V. Le Brun; D. Maccagni; C. Moreau; M. Scodeggio; L. Tresse; G. Zamorani; C. Adami; S. Arnouts; S. Bardelli; M. Bolzonella; M. Bondi; A. Bongiorno; D. Bottini; A. Cappi; S. Charlot; P. Ciliegi; T. Contini; S. de la Torre; S. Foucaud; P. Franzetti; I. Gavignaud; L. Guzzo; A. Iovino; B. C. Lemaux; C. López-Sanjuan

We describe the completed VIMOS VLT Deep Survey, and the final data release of 35016 galaxies and type-I AGN with measured spectroscopic redshifts up to redshift z~6.7, in areas 0.142 to 8.7 square degrees, and volumes from 0.5x10^6 to 2x10^7h^-3Mpc^3. We have selected samples of galaxies based solely on their i-band magnitude reaching i_{AB}=24.75. Spectra have been obtained with VIMOS on the ESO-VLT, integrating 0.75h, 4.5h and 18h for the Wide, Deep, and Ultra-Deep nested surveys. A total of 1263 galaxies have been re-observed independently within the VVDS, and from the VIPERS and MASSIV surveys. They are used to establish the redshift measurements reliability, to assess completeness, and to provide a weighting scheme taking into account the survey selection function. We describe the main properties of the VVDS samples, and the VVDS is compared to other spectroscopic surveys. In total we have obtained spectroscopic redshifts for 34594 galaxies, 422 type-I AGN, and 12430 Galactic stars. The survey has enabled to identify galaxies up to very high redshifts with 4669 redshifts in 1 3, and specific populations like LAE have been identified out to z=6.62. We show that the VVDS occupies a unique place in the parameter space defined by area, depth, redshift coverage, and number of spectra. The VVDS provides a comprehensive survey of the distant universe, covering all epochs since z, or more than 12 Gyr of cosmic time, with a uniform selection, the largest such sample to date. A wealth of science results derived from the VVDS have shed new light on the evolution of galaxies and AGN, and their distribution in space, over this large cosmic time. A final public release of the complete VVDS spectroscopic redshift sample is available at http://cesam.lam.fr/vvds.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

The VIMOS VLT Deep Survey - Evolution of the major merger rate since z ~ 1 from spectroscopically confirmed galaxy pairs

L. de Ravel; O. Le Fèvre; L. Tresse; D. Bottini; B. Garilli; V. Le Brun; D. Maccagni; R. Scaramella; M. Scodeggio; G. Vettolani; A. Zanichelli; C. Adami; Stephane Arnouts; S. Bardelli; M. Bolzonella; A. Cappi; S. Charlot; P. Ciliegi; T. Contini; Sylvie Foucaud; P. Franzetti; I. Gavignaud; L. Guzzo; O. Ilbert; A. Iovino; F. Lamareille; H. J. McCracken; B. Marano; Christian Marinoni; A. Mazure

Context: The rate at which galaxies grow via successive mergers is a key element in understanding the main phases of galaxy evolution. Aims: We measure the evolution of the fraction of galaxies in pairs and the merging rate since redshift z 1 assuming a (H0 = 70 km s-1 Mpc-1, ΩM = 0.3 and ΩΛ = 0.7) cosmology. Methods: From the VIMOS VLT Deep Survey we use a sample of 6464 galaxies with I_AB ≤ 24 to identify 314 pairs of galaxies, each member with a secure spectroscopic redshift, which are close in both projected separation and in velocity. Results: We estimate that at z 0.9, 10.9 ± 3.2% of galaxies with MB(z) ≤ -18-Qz (Q = 1.11) are in pairs with separations Δ rp ≤ 20 h-1 kpc, Δ v≤ 500 km s-1, and with Δ MB ≤ 1.5, significantly larger than 3.8 ± 1.7% at z 0.5; thus, the pair fraction evolves as (1 + z)m with m = 4.73 ± 2.01. For bright galaxies with MB(z = 0) ≤ -18.77, the pair fraction is higher and its evolution with redshift is flatter with m = 1.50 ± 0.76, a property also observed for galaxies with increasing stellar masses. Early-type pairs (dry mergers) increase their relative fraction from 3% at z 0.9 to 12% at z 0.5. The star formation rate traced by the rest-frame [OII] EW increases by 26 ± 4% for pairs with the smallest separation rp ≤ 20 h-1 kpc. Following published prescriptions to derive merger timescales, we find that the merger rate of MB(z) ≤ -18-Qz galaxies evolves as N_mg = (4.96 ± 2.07)×10-4×(1 + z)2.20 ± 0.77 mergers Mpc-3 Gyr-1. Conclusions: The merger rate of galaxies with MB(z) ≤ -18-Qz has significantly evolved since z 1 and is strongly dependent on the luminosity or stellar mass of galaxies. The major merger rate increases more rapidly with redshift for galaxies with fainter luminosities or stellar mass, while the evolution of the merger rate for bright or massive galaxies is slower, indicating that the slow evolution reported for the brightest galaxies is not universal. The merger rate is also strongly dependent on the spectral type of galaxies involved. Late-type mergers were more frequent in the past, while early-type mergers are more frequent today, contributing to the rise in the local density of early-type galaxies. About 20% of the stellar mass in present day galaxies with log(M/M{ȯ}) ≥ 9.5 has been accreted through major merging events since z = 1. This indicates that major mergers have contributed significantly to the growth in stellar mass density of bright galaxies over the last half of the life of the Universe. based on observations obtained with the European Southern Observatory Telescopes at the Paranal Observatory, under programs 072.A-0586 and 073.A-0647.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2006

The VIMOS-VLT deep survey - evolution of the luminosity functions by galaxy type up to z = 1.5 from first epoch data

E. Zucca; O. Ilbert; S. Bardelli; L. Tresse; G. Zamorani; S. Arnouts; L. Pozzetti; M. Bolzonella; H. J. McCracken; D. Bottini; B. Garilli; V. Le Brun; O. Le Fèvre; D. Maccagni; J. P. Picat; R. Scaramella; M. Scodeggio; G. Vettolani; A. Zanichelli; C. Adami; M. Arnaboldi; A. Cappi; S. Charlot; P. Ciliegi; T. Contini; Sylvie Foucaud; P. Franzetti; I. Gavignaud; L. Guzzo; A. Iovino

From the first epoch observations of the VVDS up to z=1.5 we have derived luminosity functions (LF) of different spectral type galaxies. The VVDS data, covering ~70% of the life of the Universe, allow for the first time to study from the same sample and with good statistical accuracy the evolution of the LFs by galaxy type in several rest frame bands from a purely magnitude selected sample. The magnitude limit of the VVDS allows the determination of the faint end slope of the LF with unprecedented accuracy. Galaxies have been classified in four spectral classes, using their colours and redshift, and LFs have been derived in the U, B, V, R and I rest frame bands from z=0.05 to z=1.5. We find a significant steepening of the LF going from early to late types. The M* parameter is significantly fainter for late type galaxies and this difference increases in the redder bands. Within each of the galaxy spectral types we find a brightening of M* with increasing redshift, ranging from =< 0.5 mag for early type galaxies to ~1 mag for the latest type galaxies, while the slope of the LF of each spectral type is consistent with being constant with redshift. The LF of early type galaxies is consistent with passive evolution up to z~1.1, while the number of bright early type galaxies has decreased by ~40% from z~0.3 to z~1.1. We also find a strong evolution in the normalization of the LF of latest type galaxies, with an increase of more than a factor 2 from z~0.3 to z~1.3: the density of bright late type galaxies in the same redshift range increases of a factor ~6.6. These results indicate a strong type-dependent evolution and identifies the latest spectral types as responsible for most of the evolution of the UV-optical luminosity function out to z=1.5.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2008

A new method to separate star forming from AGN galaxies at intermediate redshift: The submillijansky radio population in the VLA-COSMOS survey

Vernesa Smolčić; E. Schinnerer; M. Scodeggio; P. Franzetti; H. Aussel; M. Bondi; M. Brusa; C. L. Carilli; P. Capak; S. Charlot; P. Ciliegi; O. Ilbert; Željko Ivezić; Knud Jahnke; H. J. McCracken; Mirela Obric; M. Salvato; D. B. Sanders; N. Z. Scoville; Jonathan R. Trump; Christy A. Tremonti; L. Tasca; C. J. Walcher; G. Zamorani

We explore the properties of the submillijansky radio population at 20 cm by applying a newly developed optical color-based method to separate star-forming (SF) from active galactic nucleus (AGN) galaxies at intermediate redshifts (z ≲ 1.3). Although optical rest-frame colors are used, our separation method is shown to be efficient and not biased against dusty starburst galaxies. This classification method has been calibrated and tested on a local radio-selected optical sample. Given accurate multiband photometry and redshifts, it carries the potential to be generally applicable to any galaxy sample where SF and AGN galaxies are the two dominant populations. In order to quantify the properties of the submillijansky radio population, we have analyzed ~2,400 radio sources, detected at 20 cm in the VLA-COSMOS survey; 90% of these have submillijansky flux densities. We classify the objects into (1) star candidates, (2) quasi-stellar objects, (3) AGN, (4) SF, and (5) high-redshift (z > 1.3) galaxies. We find, for the composition of the submillijansky radio population, that SF galaxies are not the dominant population at submillijansky flux levels, as previously often assumed, but that they make up an approximately constant fraction of 30%-40% in the flux density range of ~50 μJy to 0.7 mJy. In summary, based on the entire VLA-COSMOS radio population at 20 cm, we find that the radio population at these flux densities is a mixture of roughly 30%-40% of SF and 50%-60% of AGN galaxies, with a minor contribution (~10%) of QSOs.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

The cosmic star formation rate evolution from z = 5 to z = 0 from the VIMOS VLT deep survey

L. Tresse; O. Ilbert; E. Zucca; G. Zamorani; S. Bardelli; S. Arnouts; S. Paltani; L. Pozzetti; D. Bottini; B. Garilli; V. Le Brun; O. Le Fèvre; D. Maccagni; J. P. Picat; R. Scaramella; M. Scodeggio; G. Vettolani; A. Zanichelli; C. Adami; M. Arnaboldi; M. Bolzonella; A. Cappi; S. Charlot; P. Ciliegi; T. Contini; Sylvie Foucaud; P. Franzetti; I. Gavignaud; L. Guzzo; A. Iovino

Context. The VIMOS VLT Deep Survey (VVDS) was undertaken to map the evolution of galaxies, large scale structures, and active galaxy nuclei from the redshift spectroscopic measurements of ∼10 5 objects down to an apparent magnitude I AB = 24, in combination with a multi-wavelength acquisition for radio, infrared, optical, ultraviolet, and X-rays data. Aims. We present the evolution of the comoving star formation rate (SFR) density in the redshift range 0 < z < 5 using the first epoch data release of the VVDS, that is 11564 spectra over 2200 arcmin 2 in two fields of view, the VVDS-0226-04 and the VVDS-CDFS-0332-27, and the cosmological parameters (Ω M , Ω Λ , h) = (0.3, 0.7, 0.7). Methods. We study the multi-wavelength non dust-corrected luminosity densities at 0 < z < 2 from the rest-frame far ultraviolet to the optical passbands, and the rest-frame 1500 A luminosity functions and densities at 2.7 < z < 5. Results. They evolve from z = 1.2 to z = 0.05 according to (1 + z) x with x = 2.05, 1.94, 1.92, 1.14, 0.73, 0.42, and 0.30 in the FUV-1500, NUV-2800, U-3600, B-4400, V-5500, R-6500, and I-7900 passbands, respectively. From z = 1.2 to z = 0.2 the B-band density for the irregular-like galaxies decreases markedly by a factor 3.5 while it increases by a factor 1.7 for the elliptical-like galaxies. We identify several SFR periods; from z = 5 to 3.4 the FUV-band density increases by at most 0.5 dex, from z = 3.4 to 1.2 it decreases by 0.08 dex, from z = 1.2 to z = 0.05 it declines steadily by 0.6 dex. For the most luminous M AB (1500 A) < -21 galaxies the FUV-band density drops by 2 dex from z = 3.9 to z = 1.2, and for the intermediate -21 < M AB (1500 A) < -20 galaxies it drops by 2 dex from z = 0.2 to z = 0. Comparing with dust corrected surveys, at 0.4 ≤ z ≤ 2 the FUV seems obscured by a constant factor of ∼ 1.8-2 mag, while at z < 0.5 it seems progressively less obscured by up to ∼0.9-1 mag when the dust-deficient early-type population is increasingly dominating the B-band density. Conclusions. The VVDS results agree with a downsizing picture where the most luminous sources cease to efficiently produce new stars 12 Gyrs ago (at z ≃ 4), while intermediate luminosity sources keep producing stars until 2.5 Gyrs ago (at z ≃ 0.2). A modest contribution of dry mergers and morphologies evolving towards early-type galaxies might contribute to increase the number density of the bright early types at z < 1.5. Our observed SFR density is not in agreement with a continuous smooth decrease since z ∼ 4.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2006

The VIMOS-VLT Deep Survey: Galaxy luminosity function per morphological type up to z = 1.2

O. Ilbert; S. Lauger; L. Tresse; V. Buat; Stephane Arnouts; O. Le Fèvre; D. Burgarella; E. Zucca; S. Bardelli; G. Zamorani; D. Bottini; B. Garilli; V. Le Brun; D. Maccagni; J. P. Picat; R. Scaramella; M. Scodeggio; G. Vettolani; A. Zanichelli; C. Adami; M. Arnaboldi; M. Bolzonella; A. Cappi; S. Charlot; T. Contini; Sylvie Foucaud; P. Franzetti; I. Gavignaud; L. Guzzo; A. Iovino

We have computed the evolution of the rest-frame B-band luminosity function (LF) for bulge and disk-dominated galaxies since z=1.2. We use a sample of 605 spectroscopic redshifts with I_{AB} 0.9 and bright galaxies showing a strongly decreasing LF slope \alpha=+0.55 \pm 0.21, and 32% of blue (B-I)_{AB}<0.9 and more compact galaxies which populate the LF faint-end. We observe that red bulge-dominated galaxies are already well in place at z~1, but the volume density of this population is increasing by a factor 2.7 between z~1 and z~0.6. It may be related to the building-up of massive elliptical galaxies in the hierarchical scenario. In addition, we observe that the blue bulge-dominated population is dimming by 0.7 magnitude between z~1 and z~0.6. Galaxies in this faint and more compact population could possibly be the progenitors of the local dwarf spheroidal galaxies.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2005

The VIMOS VLT deep survey. The evolution of galaxy clustering to z 2 from first epoch observations

O. Le Fèvre; L. Guzzo; B. Meneux; A. Pollo; A. Cappi; S. Colombi; A. Iovino; C. Marinoni; H. J. McCracken; R. Scaramella; D. Bottini; B. Garilli; V. Le Brun; D. Maccagni; J. P. Picat; M. Scodeggio; L. Tresse; G. Vettolani; A. Zanichelli; C. Adami; M. Arnaboldi; S. Arnouts; S. Bardelli; J. Blaizot; M. Bolzonella; S. Charlot; P. Ciliegi; T. Contini; Sylvie Foucaud; P. Franzetti

This paper presents the evolution of the clustering of the main population of galaxies from z=2.1 to z=0.2, from the first epoch VIMOS VLT Deep Survey (VVDS), a magnitude limited sample with 17.5<=I_{AB}<=24. We have computed the correlation functions \\xi(r_p,\\pi) and w_p(r_p), and the correlation length r_0(z), for the VVDS-02h and VVDS-CDFS fields, for a total of 7155 galaxies in a 0.61deg^2 area. We find that the correlation length in this sample stays roughly constant from z=0.5 to z=1.1, with r_0(z)=2.5-2.8 h^{-1} Mpc (comoving), for galaxies comparable in luminosity to the local 2dFGRS and SDSS samples, indicating that the amplitude of the correlation function was ~2.5x lower at z~1 than observed locally. The correlation length in our lowest redshift bin z=[0.2,0.5] is r_0=2.4 h^{-1} Mpc, lower than for any other population at the same redshift, indicating the low clustering of very low luminosity galaxies, 1.5 magnitudes fainter than in the 2dFGRS or SDSS. The correlation length is increasing to r_0~3.0 h^{-1} Mpc at higher redshifts z=[1.3,2.1], as we are observing increasingly brighter galaxies, comparable to galaxies with MB_AB=-20.5 locally. We compare our measurement to the DEEP2 measurements in the range z=[0.7,1.35] \\citep{coil} on the population selected applying the same magnitude and color selection criteria as in their survey, and find comparable results. The slowly varying clustering of VVDS galaxies as redshift increases is markedly different from the predicted evolution of the clustering of dark matter, indicating that bright galaxies are already tracing the large scale structures emerging from the dark matter distribution 9-10 billion years ago, a supporting evidence for a strong evolution of the galaxy vs. dark matter bias.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

The Dust-Unbiased Cosmic Star-Formation History from the 20 CM VLA-COSMOS Survey

Vernesa Smolčić; E. Schinnerer; G. Zamorani; Eric F. Bell; M. Bondi; C. L. Carilli; P. Ciliegi; Bahram Mobasher; Timothy A. D. Paglione; M. Scodeggio; N. Scoville

We derive the cosmic star-formation history out to z = 1.3 using a sample of ~350 radio-selected star-forming (SF) galaxies, a far larger sample than those in previous, similar studies. We attempt to differentiate between radio emission from active galactic nuclei and SF galaxies, and determine an evolving 1.4 GHz luminosity function (LF) based on these VLA-COSMOS SF galaxies. We precisely measure the high-luminosity end of the SF galaxy LF (star-formation rate ≳100 M☉yr^–1; equivalent to ultra-luminous IR galaxies) out to z = 1.3, finding a somewhat slower evolution than that previously derived from mid-infrared data. We find that more stars are forming in luminous starbursts at high redshift. We use extrapolations based on the local radio galaxy LF; assuming pure luminosity evolution, we derive L* ∝ (1 + z)^2.1±0.2 or L* ∝ (1 + z)^2.5±0.1, depending on the choice of the local radio galaxy LF. Thus, our radio-derived results independently confirm the ~1 order of magnitude decline in the CSFH since z ~ 1.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2005

The VIRMOS deep imaging survey - IV. Near-infrared observations

A. Iovino; H. J. McCracken; B. Garilli; Sylvie Foucaud; O. Le Fèvre; D. Maccagni; P. Saracco; S. Bardelli; G. Busarello; M. Scodeggio; A. Zanichelli; L. Paioro; D. Bottini; V. Le Brun; J. P. Picat; R. Scaramella; L. Tresse; G. Vettolani; C. Adami; M. Arnaboldi; Stephane Arnouts; M. Bolzonella; A. Cappi; S. Charlot; P. Ciliegi; T. Contini; P. Franzetti; I. Gavignaud; L. Guzzo; O. Ilbert

In this paper we present a new deep, wide-field near-infrared imaging survey. Our J- and K-band observations in four separate fields complement optical BVRI, ultraviolet and spectroscopic observations undertaken as part of the VIMOS-VLT deep survey (VVDS). In total, our survey spans ~400arcmis^2. Our catalogues are reliable in all fields to at least Kvega~20.75 and Jvega~21.50 (defined as the magnitude where object contamination is less than 10% and completeness greater than 90%). Taken together these four fields represents a unique combination of depth, wavelength coverage and area. We describe the complete data reduction process and outline a comprehensive series of tests carried out to characterise the reliability of the final catalogues. We compare the statistical properties of our catalogues with literature compilations. We find that our J- and K-selected galaxy counts are in good agreement with previously published works, as are our (J-K) versus K colour-magnitude diagrams. Stellar number counts extracted from our fields are consistent with a synthetic model of our galaxy. Using the location of the stellar locus in colour-magnitude space and the measured field-to-field variation in galaxy number counts we demonstrate that the absolute accuracy of our photometric calibration is at the 5% level or better. Finally, an investigation of the angular clustering of K- selected extended sources in our survey displays the expected scaling behaviour with limiting magnitude, with amplitudes in each magnitude bin in broad agreement with literature values.

Collaboration


Dive into the M. Bondi's collaboration.

Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge