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Dive into the research topics where Matthew L. N. Ashby is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew L. N. Ashby.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

The Evolution of the Galaxy Rest-Frame Ultraviolet Luminosity Function Over the First Two Billion Years

Steven L. Finkelstein; Russell E. Ryan; Casey Papovich; Mark Dickinson; Mimi Song; Rachel S. Somerville; Henry C. Ferguson; Brett Salmon; Mauro Giavalisco; Anton M. Koekemoer; Matthew L. N. Ashby; Peter Behroozi; M. Castellano; James Dunlop; S. M. Faber; Giovanni G. Fazio; A. Fontana; Norman A. Grogin; Nimish P. Hathi; Jason Jaacks; Dale D. Kocevski; Rachael Livermore; Ross J. McLure; E. Merlin; Bahram Mobasher; Jeffrey A. Newman; Marc Rafelski; Vithal Tilvi; S. P. Willner

We present a robust measurement and analysis of the rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) luminosity functions at z = 4-8. We use deep Hubble Space Telescope imaging over the Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey/GOODS fields, the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, and the Hubble Frontier Field deep parallel observations near the Abell 2744 and MACS J0416.1-2403 clusters. The combination of these surveys provides an effective volume of 0.6-1.2 x 10(6) Mpc(3) over this epoch, allowing us to perform a robust search for faint (M-UV = -18) and bright (Muv \textless -21) high-redshift galaxies. We select candidate galaxies using a well-tested photometric redshift technique with careful screening of contaminants, finding a sample of 7446 candidate galaxies at 3.5 \textless z \textless 8.5, with \textgreater1000 galaxies at z approximate to 6-8. We measure both a stepwise luminosity function for candidate galaxies in our redshift samples, and a Schechter function, using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo analysis to measure robust uncertainties. At the faint end, our UV luminosity functions agree with previous studies, yet we find a higher abundance of UV-bright candidate galaxies at z \textgreater= 6. Our best-fit value of the characteristic magnitude MN is consistent with -21 at z \textgreater=, 5, which is different than that inferred based on previous trends at lower redshift, and brighter at similar to 2 sigma significance than previous measures at z = 6 and 7. At z = 8, a single power law provides an equally good fit to the UV luminosity function, while at z = 6 and 7 an exponential cutoff at the bright end is moderately preferred. We compare our luminosity functions to semi-analytical models, and find that the lack of evolution in M-UV(*) is consistent with models where the impact of dust attenuation on the bright end of the luminosity function decreases at higher redshift, although a decreasing impact of feedback may also be possible. We measure the evolution of the cosmic star-formation rate (SFR) density by integrating our observed luminosity functions to M-UV = -17, correcting for dust attenuation, and find that the SFR density declines proportionally to (1 +z)(-4.3 +/- 0 5) at z \textgreater 4, which is consistent with observations at z \textgreater= 9. Our observed luminosity functions are consistent with a reionization history that starts at z greater than or similar to 10, completes at z \textgreater 6, and reaches a midpoint (xH = 0.5) at 6.7 \textless z \textless9.4. Finally, using a constant cumulative number density selection and an empirically derived rising star-formation history, our observations predict that the abundance of bright z = 9 galaxies is likely higher than previous constraints, although consistent with recent estimates of bright z similar to 10 galaxies.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2000

The Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite: Science Objectives and Instrument Description

Gary J. Melnick; John R. Stauffer; Matthew L. N. Ashby; Edwin A. Bergin; G. Chin; Neal R. Erickson; Paul F. Goldsmith; Martin Harwit; J. E. Howe; S. C. Kleiner; David G. Koch; David A. Neufeld; Brian M. Patten; R. Plume; R. Schieder; Ronald L. Snell; Volker Tolls; Zhong Wang; G. Winnewisser; Y. F. Zhang

The Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite (SWAS), launched in 1998 December, is a NASA mission dedicated to the study of star formation through direct measurements of (1) molecular cloud composition and chemistry, (2) the cooling mechanisms that facilitate cloud collapse, and (3) the large-scale structure of the UV-illuminated cloud surfaces. To achieve these goals, SWAS is conducting pointed observations of dense [n(H2) > 103 cm-3] molecular clouds throughout our Galaxy in either the ground state or a low-lying transition of five astrophysically important species: H2O, H218O, O2, C I, and 13CO. By observing these lines SWAS is (1) testing long-standing theories that predict that these species are the dominant coolants of molecular clouds during the early stages of their collapse to form stars and planets and (2) supplying previously missing information about the abundance of key species central to the chemical models of dense interstellar gas. SWAS carries two independent Schottky barrier diode mixers—passively cooled to ~175 K—coupled to a 54 × 68 cm off-axis Cassegrain antenna with an aggregate surface error ~11 μm rms. During its baseline 3 yr mission, SWAS is observing giant and dark cloud cores with the goal of detecting or setting an upper limit on the water and molecular oxygen abundance of 3 × 10-6 (relative to H2). In addition, advantage is being taken of SWASs relatively large beam size of 33 × 45 at 553 GHz and 35 × 50 at 490 GHz to obtain large-area (~1° × 1°) maps of giant and dark clouds in the 13CO and C I lines. With the use of a 1.4 GHz bandwidth acousto-optical spectrometer, SWAS has the ability to simultaneously observe either the H2O, O2, C I, and 13CO lines or the H218O, O2, and C I lines. All measurements are being conducted with a velocity resolution less than 1 km s-1.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

The mass evolution of the first galaxies: Stellar mass functions and star formation rates at 4 < z < 7 in the CANDELS GOODS-south field

Kenneth Duncan; Christopher J. Conselice; Alice Mortlock; William G. Hartley; Yicheng Guo; Henry C. Ferguson; Romeel Davé; Yu Lu; Jamie R. Ownsworth; Matthew L. N. Ashby; Avishai Dekel; Mark Dickinson; Sandra M. Faber; Mauro Giavalisco; Norman A. Grogin; Dale D. Kocevski; Anton M. Koekemoer; Rachel S. Somerville; Catherine E. White

We measure new estimates for the galaxy stellar mass function and star formation rates for samples of galaxies at


The Astrophysical Journal | 2006

Spitzer/mips infrared imaging of m31: further evidence for a spiral/ring composite structure

Karl D. Gordon; Jeremy Bailin; C. W. Engelbracht; G. H. Rieke; Karl Anthony Misselt; William B. Latter; Eric T. Young; Matthew L. N. Ashby; Pauline Barmby; Brad K. Gibson; Dean C. Hines; Joannah L. Hinz; Oliver Krause; Deborah A. Levine; Francine Roxanne Marleau; Alberto Noriega-Crespo; Susan Renee Stolovy; David Allan Thilker; M. Werner

z \sim 4,~5,~6~\&~7


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

THE AzTEC/SMA INTERFEROMETRIC IMAGING SURVEY OF SUBMILLIMETER-SELECTED HIGH-REDSHIFT GALAXIES

Joshua D. Younger; Giovanni G. Fazio; Jia-Sheng Huang; Min S. Yun; Grant W. Wilson; Matthew L. N. Ashby; M. A. Gurwell; Alison B. Peck; G. Petitpas; David J. Wilner; David H. Hughes; Itziar Aretxaga; Sungeun Kim; K. S. Scott; J. E. Austermann; T. A. Perera; James D. Lowenthal

using data in the CANDELS GOODS South field. The deep near-infrared observations allow us to construct the stellar mass function at


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

CANDELS/GOODS-S, CDFS, and ECDFS: photometric redshifts for normal and x-ray-detected galaxies

Li-Ting Hsu; M. Salvato; Kirpal Nandra; M. Brusa; Ralf Bender; Johannes Buchner; J. L. Donley; Dale D. Kocevski; Yicheng Guo; Nimish P. Hathi; Cyprian Rangel; S. P. Willner; M. Brightman; A. Georgakakis; Tamas Budavari; Alexander S. Szalay; Matthew L. N. Ashby; Guillermo Barro; Tomas Dahlen; Sandra M. Faber; Henry C. Ferguson; Audrey Galametz; Andrea Grazian; Norman A. Grogin; Kuang-Han Huang; Anton M. Koekemoer; Ray A. Lucas; Elizabeth J. McGrath; Bahram Mobasher; Michael Peth

z \geq 6


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2011

UV-TO-FIR ANALYSIS OF SPITZER/IRAC SOURCES IN THE EXTENDED GROTH STRIP. II. PHOTOMETRIC REDSHIFTS, STELLAR MASSES, AND STAR FORMATION RATES

Guillermo Barro; P. G. Pérez-González; J. Gallego; Matthew L. N. Ashby; Masaru Kajisawa; Satoshi Miyazaki; V. Villar; Toru Yamada; J. Zamorano

directly for the first time. We estimate stellar masses for our sample by fitting the observed spectral energy distributions with synthetic stellar populations, including nebular line and continuum emission. The observed UV luminosity functions for the samples are consistent with previous observations, however we find that the observed


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

THE EVOLUTION OF THE GALAXY STELLAR MASS FUNCTION AT z = 4–8: A STEEPENING LOW-MASS-END SLOPE WITH INCREASING REDSHIFT

Mimi Song; Steven L. Finkelstein; Matthew L. N. Ashby; A. Grazian; Yu Lu; Casey Papovich; Brett Salmon; Rachel S. Somerville; Mark Dickinson; Kenneth Duncan; S. M. Faber; Giovanni G. Fazio; Henry C. Ferguson; A. Fontana; Yicheng Guo; Nimish P. Hathi; Seong-Kook Lee; E. Merlin; S. P. Willner

M_{UV}


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

The total infrared luminosity may significantly overestimate the star formation rate of quenching and recently quenched galaxies

Christopher C. Hayward; Lauranne Lanz; Matthew L. N. Ashby; Giovanni G. Fazio; Lars Hernquist; J. R. Martínez-Galarza; Kai G. Noeske; H. A. Smith; Stijn Wuyts; A. Zezas

- M


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

Deconstructing the galaxy stellar mass function with UKIDSS and CANDELS: the impact of colour, structure and environment

Alice Mortlock; Christopher J. Conselice; William G. Hartley; Ken Duncan; Caterina Lani; Jamie R. Ownsworth; Omar Almaini; Arjen van der Wel; K. H. Huang; Matthew L. N. Ashby; S. P. Willner; A. Fontana; Avishai Dekel; Anton M. Koekemoer; Henry C. Ferguson; Sandra M. Faber; Norman A. Grogin; Dale D. Kocevski

_{*}

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Pauline Barmby

University of Western Ontario

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Jason A. Surace

California Institute of Technology

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Peter R. M. Eisenhardt

California Institute of Technology

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