Network


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

Hotspot


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

Publication


Featured researches published by M. Fich.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

Scuba-2: The 10 000 pixel bolometer camera on the james clerk maxwell telescope

Wayne S. Holland; Daniel Bintley; Edward L. Chapin; A. Chrysostomou; G. R. Davis; Jessica T. Dempsey; W. D. Duncan; M. Fich; Per Friberg; M. Halpern; K. D. Irwin; Tim Jenness; B. D. Kelly; M. MacIntosh; E. I. Robson; D. Scott; Peter A. R. Ade; Eli Atad-Ettedgui; David Berry; Simon C. Craig; Xiaofeng Gao; A. G. Gibb; G. C. Hilton; Matthew I. Hollister; J. B. Kycia; D. W. Lunney; Helen McGregor; David Montgomery; William Parkes; R. P. J. Tilanus

SCUBA-2 is an innovative 10000 pixel bolometer camera operating at submillimetre wavelengths on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). The camera has the capability to carry out wide-field surveys to unprecedented depths, addressing key questions relating to the origins of galaxies, stars and planets. With two imaging arrays working simultaneously in the atmospheric windows at 450 and 850µm, the vast increase in pixel count means that SCUBA-2 maps the sky 100–150 times faster than the previous SCUBA instrument. In this paper we present an overview of the instrument, discuss the physical characteristics of the superconducting detector arrays, outline the observing modes and data acquisition, and present the early performance figures on the telescope. We also showcase the capabilities of the instrument via some early examples of the science SCUBA-2 has already undertaken. In February 2012, SCUBA-2 began a series of unique legacy surveys for the JCMT community. These surveys will take 2.5years and the results are already providing complementary data to the shorter wavelength, shallower, larger-area surveys from Herschel. The SCUBA-2 surveys will also provide a wealth of information for further study with new facilities such as ALMA, and future telescopes such as CCAT and SPICA.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2001

Large Area Mapping at 850 Microns. III. Analysis of the Clump Distribution in the Orion B Molecular Cloud

Doug Johnstone; M. Fich; George F. Mitchell; Gerald H. Moriarty-Schieven

We present results from a survey of a 900 arcmin2 region of the Orion B molecular cloud, including NGC 2068, NGC 2071, and HH 24/25/26, at 850 μm using the Submillimeter Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. Following the techniques developed by Johnstone et al., we identify 75 independent objects and compute size, flux, and degree of central concentration. Comparison with isothermal, pressure-confined, self-gravitating Bonnor-Ebert spheres implies that the clumps have internal temperatures of 20-40 K and surface pressures 5.5 1.0 M☉. Significant incompleteness makes determination of the slope at lower masses difficult. The two-point correlation function of the clump separations is measured revealing clustering on size scales r < 1.5 × 105 AU with a radial power-law exponent γ = 0.75.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2007

The James Clerk Maxwell telescope legacy survey of nearby star-forming regions in the gould belt

Derek Ward-Thompson; J. Di Francesco; J. Hatchell; M. R. Hogerheijde; D. Nutter; Pierre Bastien; Shantanu Basu; I. Bonnell; Janet. E. Bowey; Christopher M. Brunt; J. Buckle; Harold M. Butner; B. Cavanagh; A. Chrysostomou; Emily I. Curtis; Christopher J. Davis; W. R. F. Dent; E. F. van Dishoeck; M. G. Edmunds; M. Fich; Jason D. Fiege; L. M. Fissel; Per Friberg; Rachel Katherine Friesen; W. Frieswijk; G. A. Fuller; A. Gosling; S. Graves; J. S. Greaves; Frank Helmich

This paper describes a James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) legacy survey that has been awarded roughly 500 hr of observing time to be carried out from 2007 to 2009. In this survey, we will map with SCUBA-2 (Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array 2) almost all of the well-known low-mass and intermediate-mass star-forming regions within 0.5 kpc that are accessible from the JCMT. Most of these locations are associated with the Gould Belt. From these observations, we will produce a flux-limited snapshot of star formation near the Sun, providing a legacy of images, as well as point-source and extended-source catalogs, over almost 700 deg(2) of sky. The resulting images will yield the first catalog of prestellar and protostellar sources selected by submillimeter continuum emission, and should increase the number of known sources by more than an order of magnitude. We will also obtain with the array receiver HARP (Heterodyne Array Receiver Program) CO maps, in three CO isotopologues, of a large typical sample of prestellar and protostellar sources. We will then map the brightest hundred sources with the SCUBA-2 polarimeter (POL-2), producing the first statistically significant set of polarization maps in the submillimeter. The images and source catalogs will be a powerful reference set for astronomers, providing a detailed legacy archive for future telescopes, including ALMA, Herschel, and JWST.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

The JCMT Gould Belt Survey: first results from the SCUBA-2 observations of the Ophiuchus molecular cloud and a virial analysis of its prestellar core population

K. Pattle; Derek Ward-Thompson; Jason Matthew Kirk; G. J. White; Emily Drabek-Maunder; J. V. Buckle; S. F. Beaulieu; David Berry; H. Broekhoven-Fiene; M. J. Currie; M. Fich; J. Hatchell; Helen Kirk; T. Jenness; D. Johnstone; J. C. Mottram; D. Nutter; Jaime E. Pineda; C. Quinn; C. Salji; S. Tisi; S. Walker-Smith; J. Di Francesco; M. R. Hogerheijde; P. André; Pierre Bastien; D. Bresnahan; Harold M. Butner; M. Chen; A. Chrysostomou

In this paper, we present the first observations of the Ophiuchus molecular cloud performed as part of the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) Gould Belt Survey (GBS) with the SCUBA-2 instrument. We demonstrate methods for combining these data with previous HARP CO, Herschel, and IRAM N2H+ observations in order to accurately quantify the properties of the SCUBA-2 sources in Ophiuchus. We produce a catalogue of all of the sources found by SCUBA-2. We separate these into protostars and starless cores. We list all of the starless cores and perform a full virial analysis, including external pressure. This is the first time that external pressure has been included in this level of detail. We find that the majority of our cores are either bound or virialized. Gravitational energy and external pressure are on average of a similar order of magnitude, but with some variation from region to region. We find that cores in the Oph A region are gravitationally bound prestellar cores, while cores in the Oph C and E regions are pressure-confined. We determine that N2H+ is a good tracer of the bound material of prestellar cores, although we find some evidence for N2H+ freeze-out at the very highest core densities. We find that non-thermal linewidths decrease substantially between the gas traced by C18O and that traced by N2H+, indicating the dissipation of turbulence at higher densities. We find that the critical Bonnor–Ebert stability criterion is not a good indicator of the boundedness of our cores. We detect the pre-brown dwarf candidate Oph B-11 and find a flux density and mass consistent with previous work. We discuss regional variations in the nature of the cores and find further support for our previous hypothesis of a global evolutionary gradient across the cloud from south-west to north-east, indicating sequential star formation across the region.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

The JCMT Gould Belt Survey: a quantitative comparison between SCUBA-2 data reduction methods

Steve Mairs; D. Johnstone; Helen Kirk; S. Graves; J. V. Buckle; S. F. Beaulieu; David Berry; H. Broekhoven-Fiene; M. J. Currie; M. Fich; J. Hatchell; T. Jenness; J. C. Mottram; D. Nutter; K. Pattle; Jaime E. Pineda; C. Salji; J. Di Francesco; M. R. Hogerheijde; Derek Ward-Thompson

Performing ground-based submillimetre observations is a difficult task as the measurements are subject to absorption and emission from water vapour in the Earths atmosphere and time variation in weather and instrument stability. Removing these features and other artefacts from the data is a vital process which affects the characteristics of the recovered astronomical structure we seek to study. In this paper, we explore two data reduction methods for data taken with the Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array-2 (SCUBA-2) at the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). The JCMT Legacy Reduction 1 (JCMT LR1) and The Gould Belt Legacy Survey Legacy Release 1 (GBS LR1) reduction both use the same software (starlink) but differ in their choice of data reduction parameters. We find that the JCMT LR1 reduction is suitable for determining whether or not compact emission is present in a given region and the GBS LR1 reduction is tuned in a robust way to uncover more extended emission, which better serves more in-depth physical analyses of star-forming regions. Using the GBS LR1 method, we find that compact sources are recovered well, even at a peak brightness of only three times the noise, whereas the reconstruction of larger objects requires much care when drawing boundaries around the expected astronomical signal in the data reduction process. Incorrect boundaries can lead to false structure identification or it can cause structure to be missed. In the JCMT LR1 reduction, the extent of the true structure of objects larger than a point source is never fully recovered.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

The JCMT Gould Belt Survey: SCUBA-2 observations of circumstellar discs in L 1495

J. V. Buckle; Emily Drabek-Maunder; J. S. Greaves; J. S. Richer; Brenda C. Matthews; D. Johnstone; Helen Kirk; S. F. Beaulieu; David Berry; H. Broekhoven-Fiene; M. J. Currie; M. Fich; J. Hatchell; T. Jenness; J. C. Mottram; D. Nutter; K. Pattle; Jaime E. Pineda; C. Salji; S. Tisi; J. Di Francesco; M. R. Hogerheijde; Derek Ward-Thompson; Pierre Bastien; Harold M. Butner; M. Chen; A. Chrysostomou; S. Coude; Christopher J. Davis; A. Duarte-Cabral

We present 850μm and 450μm data from the JCMT Gould Belt Survey obtained with SCUBA-2 and characterise the dust attributes of Class I, Class II and Class III disk sources in L1495. We detect 23% of the sample at both wavelengths, with the detection rate decreasing through the Classes from I--III. The median disk mask is 1.6×10−3M⊙, and only 7% of Class II sources have disk masses larger than 20 Jupiter masses. We detect a higher proportion of disks towards sources with stellar hosts of spectral type K than spectral type M. Class II disks with single stellar hosts of spectral type K have higher masses than those of spectral type M, supporting the hypothesis that higher mass stars have more massive disks. Variations in disk masses calculated at the two wavelengths suggests there may be differences in dust opacity and/or dust temperature between disks with hosts of spectral types K to those with spectral type M.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

The JCMT Gould Belt Survey: a first look at dense cores in Orion B

Helen Kirk; J. Di Francesco; D. Johnstone; A. Duarte-Cabral; S. Sadavoy; J. Hatchell; J. C. Mottram; J. V. Buckle; David Berry; H. Broekhoven-Fiene; M. J. Currie; M. Fich; T. Jenness; D. Nutter; K. Pattle; Jaime E. Pineda; C. Quinn; C. Salji; S. Tisi; M. R. Hogerheijde; Derek Ward-Thompson; Pierre Bastien; D. Bresnahan; Harold M. Butner; M. Chen; A. Chrysostomou; S. Coude; Christopher J. Davis; Emily Drabek-Maunder; Jason D. Fiege

We present a first look at the SCUBA-2 observations of three sub-regions of the Orion B molecular cloud: LDN 1622, NGC 2023/2024, and NGC 2068/2071, from the JCMT Gould Belt Legacy Survey. We identify 29, 564, and 322 dense cores in L1622, NGC 2023/2024, and NGC 2068/2071 respectively, using the SCUBA-2 850 micron map, and present their basic properties, including their peak fluxes, total fluxes, and sizes, and an estimate of the corresponding 450 micron peak fluxes and total fluxes, using the FellWalker source extraction algorithm. Assuming a constant temperature of 20 K, the starless dense cores have a mass function similar to that found in previous dense core analyses, with a Salpeter-like slope at the high-mass end. The majority of cores appear stable to gravitational collapse when considering only thermal pressure; indeed, most of the cores which have masses above the thermal Jeans mass are already associated with at least one protostar. At higher cloud column densities, above 1-2 x 10^23 cm^-2, most of the mass is found within dense cores, while at lower cloud column densities, below 1 x 10^23 cm^-2, this fraction drops to 10% or lower. Overall, the fraction of dense cores associated with a protostar is quite small (<8%), but becomes larger for the densest and most centrally concentrated cores. NGC 2023 / 2024 and NGC 2068/2071 appear to be on the path to forming a significant number of stars in the future, while L1622 has little additional mass in dense cores to form many new stars.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

THE JCMT GOULD BELT SURVEY: EVIDENCE FOR DUST GRAIN EVOLUTION IN PERSEUS STAR-FORMING CLUMPS

Michael Chun-Yuan Chen; J. Di Francesco; D. Johnstone; S. Sadavoy; J. Hatchell; J. C. Mottram; Helen Kirk; J. V. Buckle; David Berry; H. Broekhoven-Fiene; M. J. Currie; M. Fich; T. Jenness; D. Nutter; K. Pattle; Jaime E. Pineda; C. Quinn; C. Salji; S. Tisi; M. R. Hogerheijde; Derek Ward-Thompson; Pierre Bastien; D. Bresnahan; Harold M. Butner; A. Chrysostomou; S. Coude; Christopher J. Davis; Emily Drabek-Maunder; A. Duarte-Cabral; Jason D. Fiege

The dust emissivity spectral index,


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

The JCMT Plane Survey: early results from the ℓ = 30° field

T. J. T. Moore; R. Plume; M. A. Thompson; Harriet Parsons; J. S. Urquhart; D. J. Eden; Jessica T. Dempsey; L. K. Morgan; H. Thomas; J. V. Buckle; Christopher M. Brunt; Harold M. Butner; D. Carretero; A. Chrysostomou; H. M. deVilliers; M. Fich; M. G. Hoare; G. Manser; J. C. Mottram; C. Natario; F. A. Olguin; Nicolas Peretto; D. Polychroni; Russell O. Redman; Andrew Rigby; C. Salji; L. J. Summers; David Berry; M. J. Currie; T. Jenness

\beta


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

The JCMT Gould Belt Survey: evidence for radiative heating in Serpens MWC 297 and its influence on local star formation

D. Rumble; J. Hatchell; Robert Allen Gutermuth; Helen Kirk; J. Buckle; S. F. Beaulieu; David Berry; H. Broekhoven-Fiene; M. J. Currie; M. Fich; T. Jenness; D. Johnstone; J. C. Mottram; D. Nutter; K. Pattle; Jaime E. Pineda; C. Quinn; C. Salji; S. Tisi; S. Walker-Smith; J. Di Francesco; M. R. Hogerheijde; Derek Ward-Thompson; Lori E. Allen; Lucas A. Cieza; Michael M. Dunham; Paul M. Harvey; Karl R. Stapelfeldt; Pierre Bastien; Harold M. Butner

, is a critical parameter for deriving the mass and temperature of star-forming structures, and consequently their gravitational stability. The

Collaboration


Dive into the M. Fich's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David Berry

Loughborough University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pierre Bastien

Université de Montréal

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Chrysostomou

University of Hertfordshire

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge