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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2006

The SCUBA Half-Degree Extragalactic Survey - II. Submillimetre maps, catalogue and number counts

K. Coppin; Edward L. Chapin; A. M. J. Mortier; S. E. Scott; Colin Borys; James Dunlop; M. Halpern; David H. Hughes; Alexandra Pope; D. Scott; S. Serjeant; J. Wagg; D. M. Alexander; Omar Almaini; Itziar Aretxaga; T. Babbedge; Philip Best; A. W. Blain; S. C. Chapman; D. L. Clements; M. Crawford; Loretta Dunne; Stephen Anthony Eales; A. C. Edge; D. Farrah; E. Gaztanaga; Walter Kieran Gear; G. L. Granato; T. R. Greve; M. Fox

We present maps, source catalogue and number counts of the largest, most complete and unbiased extragalactic submillimetre survey: the 850-μm SCUBA Half-Degree Extragalactic Survey (SHADES). Using the Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT), SHADES mapped two separate regions of sky: the Subaru/XMM–Newton Deep Field (SXDF) and the Lockman Hole East (LH). Encompassing 93 per cent of the overall acquired data (i.e. data taken up to 2004 February 1), these SCUBA maps cover 720 arcmin2 with a rms noise level of about 2 mJy and have uncovered >100 submillimetre galaxies. In order to ensure the utmost robustness of the resulting source catalogue, data reduction was independently carried out by four subgroups within the SHADES team, providing an unprecedented degree of reliability with respect to other SCUBA catalogues available from the literature. Individual source lists from the four groups were combined to produce a robust 120-object SHADES catalogue; an invaluable resource for follow-up campaigns aiming to study the properties of a complete and consistent sample of submillimetre galaxies. For the first time, we present deboosted flux densities for each submillimetre galaxy found in a large survey. Extensive simulations and tests were performed separately by each group in order to confirm the robustness of the source candidates and to evaluate the effects of false detections, completeness and flux density boosting. Corrections for these effects were then applied to the data to derive the submillimetre galaxy source counts. SHADES has a high enough number of detected sources that meaningful differential counts can be estimated, unlike most submillimetre surveys which have to consider integral counts. We present differential and integral source number counts and find that the differential counts are better fit with a broken power law or a Schechter function than with a single power law; the SHADES data alone significantly show that a break is required at several mJy, although the precise position of the break is not well constrained. We also find that a 850-μm survey complete down to 2 mJy would resolve 20–30 per cent of the far-infrared background into point sources.


web science | 2007

The SCUBA HAlf Degree Extragalactic Survey – III. Identification of radio and mid-infrared counterparts to submillimetre galaxies

R. J. Ivison; T. R. Greve; James Dunlop; J. A. Peacock; E. Egami; Ian Smail; E. Ibar; E. van Kampen; I. Aretxaga; T. Babbedge; A. D. Biggs; A. W. Blain; Sydney Chapman; D. L. Clements; K. Coppin; D. Farrah; M. Halpern; David H. Hughes; M. J. Jarvis; T. Jenness; J. R. Jones; A. M. J. Mortier; Seb Oliver; Casey Papovich; P. G. Pérez-González; Alexandra Pope; Steve Rawlings; G. H. Rieke; M. Rowan-Robinson; Richard S. Savage

Determining an accurate position for a submillimetre (submm) galaxy (SMG) is the crucial step that enables us to move from the basic properties of an SMG sample – source counts and 2D clustering – to an assessment of their detailed, multiwavelength properties, their contribution to the history of cosmic star formation and their links with present-day galaxy populations. In this paper, we identify robust radio and/or infrared (IR) counterparts, and hence accurate positions, for over two-thirds of the SCUBA HAlf-Degree Extragalactic Survey (SHADES) Source Catalogue, presenting optical, 24-μm and radio images of each SMG. Observed trends in identification rate have given no strong rationale for pruning the sample. Uncertainties in submm position are found to be consistent with theoretical expectations, with no evidence for significant additional sources of error. Employing the submm/radio redshift indicator, via a parametrization appropriate for radio-identified SMGs with spectroscopic redshifts, yields a median redshift of 2.8 for the radio-identified subset of SHADES, somewhat higher than the median spectroscopic redshift. We present a diagnostic colour–colour plot, exploiting Spitzer photometry, in which we identify regions commensurate with SMGs at very high redshift. Finally, we find that significantly more SMGs have multiple robust counterparts than would be expected by chance, indicative of physical associations. These multiple systems are most common amongst the brightest SMGs and are typically separated by 2–6 arcsec, ~15–50/ sin i kpc at z∼ 2, consistent with early bursts seen in merger simulations.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2004

The host of GRB 030323 at z=3.372: A very high column density DLA system with a low metallicity

Paul M. Vreeswijk; Sara L. Ellison; Cedric Ledoux; R. A. M. J. Wijers; Johan Peter Uldall Fynbo; P. Møller; Arne A. Henden; J. Hjorth; Gianluca Masi; E. Rol; B. L. Jensen; Nial R. Tanvir; Andrew J. Levan; J. M. Castro Cerón; J. Gorosabel; A. J. Castro-Tirado; Andrew S. Fruchter; C. Kouveliotou; I. Burud; James E. Rhoads; N. Masetti; E. Palazzi; E. Pian; H. Pedersen; L. Kaper; A. C. Gilmore; P. M. Kilmartin; J. Buckle; Marc S. Seigar; Dieter H. Hartmann

We present photometry and spectroscopy of the afterglow of GRB 030323. VLT spectra of the afterglow show damped Lyα (DLA) absorption and low- and high-ionization lines at a redshift z = 3.3718 ± 0.0005. The inferred neutral hy- drogen column density, log N(Hi) = 21.90 ± 0.07, is larger than any (GRB- or QSO-) DLA H  column density inferred directly from Lyα in absorption. From the afterglow photometry, we derive a conservative upper limit to the host-galaxy extinction: AV < 0.5 mag. The iron abundance is (Fe/H) = −1.47 ± 0.11, while the metallicity of the gas as measured from sulphur is (S/H) = −1.26 ± 0.20. We derive an upper limit on the H2 molecular fraction of 2N(H2)/(2N(H2) + N(Hi)) < 10 −6 .I n the Lyα trough, a Lyα emission line is detected, which corresponds to a star-formation rate (not corrected for dust extinction) of roughly 1 Myr −1 . All these results are consistent with the host galaxy of GRB 030323 consisting of a low metallicity gas with a low dust content. We detect fine-structure lines of silicon, Si *, which have never been clearly detected in QSO-DLAs; this suggests that these lines are produced in the vicinity of the GRB explosion site. Under the assumption that these fine-structure levels are populated by particle collisions, we estimate the H  volume density to be nHi = 10 2 −10 4 cm −3 .H ST/ACS imaging 4 months after the burst shows an extended AB(F606W) = 28.0 ± 0.3 mag object at a distance of 0.


Scopus | 2004

The host of GRB 030323 at z = 3.372: A very high column density DLA system with a low metallicity

Paul M. Vreeswijk; Sara L. Ellison; C. Ledoux; R.A.M.J. Wijers; E. Rol; L. Kaper; Van Den Heuvel Epj; J. P. U. Fynbo; J. Hjorth; B. L. Jensen; H. Pedersen; P. Møller; Arne A. Henden; Gianluca Masi; Nial R. Tanvir; Andrew J. Levan; Castro Cerón Jm; J. Gorosabel; Andrew S. Fruchter; I. Burud; James E. Rhoads; Alberto J. Castro-Tirado; C. Kouveliotou; N. Masetti; E. Palazzi; E. Pian; A. C. Gilmore; P. M. Kilmartin; J. Buckle; Marc S. Seigar

We present photometry and spectroscopy of the afterglow of GRB 030323. VLT spectra of the afterglow show damped Lyα (DLA) absorption and low- and high-ionization lines at a redshift z = 3.3718 ± 0.0005. The inferred neutral hy- drogen column density, log N(Hi) = 21.90 ± 0.07, is larger than any (GRB- or QSO-) DLA H  column density inferred directly from Lyα in absorption. From the afterglow photometry, we derive a conservative upper limit to the host-galaxy extinction: AV < 0.5 mag. The iron abundance is (Fe/H) = −1.47 ± 0.11, while the metallicity of the gas as measured from sulphur is (S/H) = −1.26 ± 0.20. We derive an upper limit on the H2 molecular fraction of 2N(H2)/(2N(H2) + N(Hi)) < 10 −6 .I n the Lyα trough, a Lyα emission line is detected, which corresponds to a star-formation rate (not corrected for dust extinction) of roughly 1 Myr −1 . All these results are consistent with the host galaxy of GRB 030323 consisting of a low metallicity gas with a low dust content. We detect fine-structure lines of silicon, Si *, which have never been clearly detected in QSO-DLAs; this suggests that these lines are produced in the vicinity of the GRB explosion site. Under the assumption that these fine-structure levels are populated by particle collisions, we estimate the H  volume density to be nHi = 10 2 −10 4 cm −3 .H ST/ACS imaging 4 months after the burst shows an extended AB(F606W) = 28.0 ± 0.3 mag object at a distance of 0.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2004

The Hα Galaxy Survey ⋆ I. The galaxy sample, Hα narrow-band observations and star formation parameters for 334 galaxies

P. A. James; N. S. Shane; J. E. Beckman; A. Cardwell; Chris A. Collins; Jason Etherton; R. S. de Jong; Kambiz Fathi; Johan H. Knapen; Reynier F. Peletier; Susan M. Percival; Don Pollacco; Marc S. Seigar; S. Stedman; Iain A. Steele

We discuss the selection and observations of a large sample of nearby galaxies, which we are using to quantify the star formation activity in the local Universe. The sample consists of 334 galaxies across all Hubble types from S0/a to Im and with recession velocities of between 0 and 3000 km s 1 . The basic data for each galaxy are narrow band H�+(Nii) and R-band imaging, from which we derive star formation rates, H�+(Nii) equivalent widths and surface brightnesses, and R-band total magnitudes. A strong correlation is found between total star formation rate and Hubble type, with the strongest star formation in isolated galaxies occurring in Sc and Sbc types. More surprisingly, no significant trend is found between H�+(Nii) equivalent width and galaxy R-band luminosity. More detailed analyses of the data set presented here will be described in subsequent papers.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2007

Intracluster light and the extended stellar envelopes of cD galaxies: an analytical description

Marc S. Seigar; Alister W. Graham; Helmut Jerjen

We have analysed deep R-band images, down to a limiting surface brightness of 26.5 R-mag arcsec −2 (equivalent to ∼28 B-mag arcsec −2 ), of five cD galaxies to determine the shape of the surface brightness profiles of their extended stellar envelopes. Both de Vaucouleurs R 1/4 and Sersic R 1/n models, on their own, provide a poor description of the surface brightness profiles of cD galaxies. This is due to the presence of outer stellar envelopes, thought to have accumulated over the merger history of the central cluster galaxy and also from the tidal stripping of galaxies at larger cluster radii. We therefore simultaneously fit two Sersic functions to measure the shape of the inner and outer components of the cD galaxies. We show that, for three out of our five galaxies, the surface brightness profiles are best fitted by an inner Sersic model, with indices n ∼ 1-6, and an outer exponential component. For these systems, the galaxy-to-envelope size ratio is 0.1-0.4 and the contribution of the stellar envelope to the total R-band light (i.e. galaxy + envelope) is around 60-80 per cent (based on extrapolation to a 300 kpc radius). The exceptions are NGC 6173, for which our surface brightness profile modelling is consistent with just a single component (i.e. no envelope) and NGC 4874 which appears to have an envelope with a de Vaucouleurs, rather than exponential, profile.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2007

The SCUBA half degree extragalactic survey – IV. Radio–mm–FIR photometric redshifts

Itziar Aretxaga; David H. Hughes; K. Coppin; A. M. J. Mortier; Jeff Wagg; James Dunlop; Edward L. Chapin; Stephen Anthony Eales; E. Gaztanaga; M. Halpern; R. J. Ivison; Eelco van Kampen; Douglas Scott; S. Serjeant; Ian Smail; Thomas Babbedge; Andrew J. Benson; S. C. Chapman; D. L. Clements; Loretta Dunne; Simon Dye; D. Farrah; M. J. Jarvis; Robert G. Mann; Alexandra Pope; Robert S. Priddey; Steve Rawlings; Marc S. Seigar; Laura Silva; Chris Simpson

We present the redshift distribution of the Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) Half Degree Survey (SHADES) galaxy population based on the rest-frame radio–mm–far-infrared (FIR) colours of 120 robustly detected 850 μm sources in the Lockman Hole East (LH) and Subaru XMM–Newton Deep Field (SXDF). The redshift distribution derived from the full spectral energy distribution (SED) information is shown to be narrower than that determined from the radio–sub-mm spectral index, as more photometric bands contribute to a higher redshift accuracy. The redshift distribution of sources derived from at least two photometric bands peaks at z≈ 2.4 and has a near-Gaussian distribution, with 50 per cent (interquartile range) of sources at z= 1.8–3.1 . We find a statistically significant difference between the measured redshift distributions in the two fields; the SXDF peaking at a slightly lower redshift (median z ≈ 2.2 ) than the LH (median z ≈ 2.7 ), which we attribute to the noise properties of the radio observations. We demonstrate, however, that there could also be field-to-field variations that are consistent with the measured differences in the redshift distributions and, hence, that the incomplete area observed by SHADES with SCUBA, despite being the largest sub-mm survey to date, may still be too small to fully characterize the bright sub-mm galaxy population. Finally, we present a brief comparison with the predicted, or assumed, redshift distributions of sub-mm galaxy formation and evolution models, and we derive the contribution of these SHADES sources and the general sub-mm galaxy population to the star formation rate density at different epochs.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2005

The SCUBA half-degree extragalactic survey - I. Survey motivation, design and data processing

A. M. J. Mortier; S. Serjeant; James Dunlop; S. E. Scott; Peter A. R. Ade; D. M. Alexander; Omar Almaini; Itziar Aretxaga; Carlton M. Baugh; Andrew J. Benson; Philip Best; A. W. Blain; J. J. Bock; Colin Borys; A. Bressan; C. L. Carilli; E. L. Chapin; S. C. Chapman; D. L. Clements; K. Coppin; M. Crawford; Mark J. Devlin; Simon R. Dicker; Loretta Dunne; Stephen Anthony Eales; A. C. Edge; D. Farrah; M. Fox; Carlos S. Frenk; E. Gaztanaga

he Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) Half-Degree Extragalactic Survey (SHADES) is a major new blank-field extragalactic submillimetre (submm) survey currently underway at the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). Ultimately, SHADES aims to cover half a square degree at 450 and 850m to a 4 depth of ~= 8mJy at 850m. Two fields are being observed, the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field (SXDF) (02h18m- 05) and the Lockman Hole East (10h52m+ 57). The survey has three main aims: (i) to investigate the population of high-redshift submm galaxies and the cosmic history of massive dust-enshrouded star formation activity; (ii) to investigate the clustering properties of submm-selected galaxies in order to determine whether these objects could be progenitors of present-day massive ellipticals; and (iii) to investigate the fraction of submm-selected sources that harbour active galactic nuclei. To achieve these aims requires that the submm data be combined with co-spatial information spanning the radio-to-X-ray frequency range. Accordingly, SHADES has been designed to benefit from ultra-deep radio imaging obtained with the Very Large Array (VLA), deep mid-infrared observations from the Spitzer Space Telescope, submm mapping by the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimetre Telescope (BLAST), deep near-infrared imaging with the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope, deep optical imaging with the Subaru Telescope and deep X-ray observations with the XMM-Newton observatory. It is expected that the resulting extensive multiwavelength data set will provide complete photometric redshift information accurate to as well as detailed spectral energy distributions for the vast majority of the submm-selected sources. In this paper, the first of a series on SHADES, we present an overview of the motivation for the survey, describe the SHADES survey strategy, provide a detailed description of the primary data-analysis pipeline and demonstrate the superiority of our adopted matched-filter source-extraction technique over, for example, Emerson-II style methods. We also report on the progress of the survey. As of 2004 February, 720arcmin2 had been mapped with SCUBA (about 40 per cent of the anticipated final total area) to a median 1 depth of 2.2mJy per beam at 850m (25mJy per beam at 450m), and the source-extraction routines give a source density of 650 +/- 50 sources deg-2 > 3 at 850m. Although uncorrected for Eddington bias, this source density is more than sufficient for providing enough sources to answer the science goals of SHADES, once half a square degree is observed. A refined reanalysis of the original 8-mJy survey Lockman hole data was carried out in order to evaluate the new data-reduction pipeline. Of the 17 most secure sources in the original sample, 12 have been reconfirmed, including 10 of the 11 for which radio identifications were previously secured.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2001

Hubble Space Telescope optical-near-infrared colors of nearby R1/4 and exponential bulges

C. Marcella Carollo; Massimo Stiavelli; P. Tim de Zeeuw; Marc S. Seigar; Herwig Dejonghe

We have analyzed V, H, and J Hubble Space Telescope (HST) images for a sample of early- to late-type spiral galaxies and have reported elsewhere the statistical frequency of R1/4-law and exponential bulges in our sample as a function of Hubble type and the frequency of occurrence and structural properties of the resolved central nuclei hosted by intermediate- to late-type bulges and disks (see references in the text). Here we use these data to show the following: The V-H color distribution of the R1/4 bulge peaks around V-H ~ 1.3, with a sigma Δ(V-H) ~ 0.1 mag. Assuming a solar metallicity, these values correspond to stellar ages of ≈ 6 ± 3 Gyr. In contrast, the V-H color distribution of the exponential bulges peaks at V-H ~ 0.9 and has a sigma Δ(V-H) ~ 0.4 mag. This likely implies significantly smaller ages and/or lower metallicities for (a significant fraction of the stars in) the exponential bulges compared to the R1/4-law spheroids. Most of the central nuclei hosted by the exponential bulges have V-H and J-H colors that are compatible with relatively unobscured stellar populations. Assuming no or little dust effects, ages 1 Gyr are suggested for these nuclei, which in turn imply masses of about a few 106 to a few 107 M☉, i.e., sufficient to dissolve progenitor bars with masses consistent with those inferred for the exponential bulges by their luminosities. While different bulge-nucleus pairs cover a large range of V-H colors, each bulge-nucleus pair has quite similar V-H colors and thus possibly similar stellar populations. The HST photometric analysis suggests that exponential-type bulge formation is taking place in the local universe and that this process is consistent with being the outcome of secular evolution processes within the disks. The structures that are currently formed inside the disks are quite dissimilar from the old elliptical-like spheroids that are hosted by the early-type disks.We have analysed


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2003

L′ and M′ standard stars for the Mauna Kea Observatories Near-Infrared system

S. K. Leggett; Timothy G. Hawarden; Malcolm J. Currie; Andrew J. Adamson; T. Carroll; T. H. Kerr; O. P. Kuhn; Marc S. Seigar; Watson P. Varricatt; T. Wold

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D. Farrah

California Institute of Technology

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Patrick Treuthardt

North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences

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James Dunlop

University of Edinburgh

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P. A. James

Liverpool John Moores University

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