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Featured researches published by N. Z. Scoville.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2007

The Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS): Overview

N. Z. Scoville; H. Aussel; M. Brusa; P. Capak; C. M. Carollo; M. Elvis; Mauro Giavalisco; L. Guzzo; G. Hasinger; C. D. Impey; Jean-Paul Kneib; O. LeFevre; S. J. Lilly; B. Mobasher; A. Renzini; Robert Michael Rich; D. B. Sanders; E. Schinnerer; D. Schminovich; Patrick Lynn Shopbell; Yoshiaki Taniguchi; Neil De Grasse Tyson

The Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) is designed to probe the correlated evolution of galaxies, star formation, active galactic nuclei (AGNs), and dark matter (DM) with large-scale structure (LSS) over the redshift range z > 0.5-6. The survey includes multiwavelength imaging and spectroscopy from X-ray-to-radio wavelengths covering a 2 deg^2 area, including HST imaging. Given the very high sensitivity and resolution of these data sets, COSMOS also provides unprecedented samples of objects at high redshift with greatly reduced cosmic variance, compared to earlier surveys. Here we provide a brief overview of the survey strategy, the characteristics of the major COSMOS data sets, and a summary the science goals.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

COSMOS PHOTOMETRIC REDSHIFTS WITH 30-BANDS FOR 2-deg2

O. Ilbert; P. Capak; M. Salvato; H. Aussel; H. J. McCracken; D. B. Sanders; N. Z. Scoville; J. Kartaltepe; S. Arnouts; E. Le Floc'h; Bahram Mobasher; Y. Taniguchi; F. Lamareille; A. Leauthaud; Shunji S. Sasaki; D. Thompson; M. Zamojski; G. Zamorani; S. Bardelli; M. Bolzonella; A. Bongiorno; M. Brusa; Karina Caputi; C. M. Carollo; T. Contini; R. Cook; G. Coppa; O. Cucciati; S. de la Torre; L. de Ravel

We present accurate photometric redshifts in the 2-deg2 COSMOS field. The redshifts are computed with 30 broad, intermediate, and narrow bands covering the UV (GALEX), Visible-NIR (Subaru, CFHT, UKIRT and NOAO) and mid-IR (Spitzer/IRAC). A chi2 template-fitting method (Le Phare) was used and calibrated with large spectroscopic samples from VLT-VIMOS and Keck-DEIMOS. We develop and implement a new method which accounts for the contributions from emission lines (OII, Hbeta, Halpha and Ly) to the spectral energy distributions (SEDs). The treatment of emission lines improves the photo-z accuracy by a factor of 2.5. Comparison of the derived photo-z with 4148 spectroscopic redshifts (i.e. Delta z = zs - zp) indicates a dispersion of sigma_{Delta z/(1+zs)}=0.007 at i<22.5, a factor of 2-6 times more accurate than earlier photo-z in the COSMOS, CFHTLS and COMBO-17 survey fields. At fainter magnitudes i<24 and z<1.25, the accuracy is sigma_{Delta z/(1+zs)}=0.012. The deep NIR and IRAC coverage enables the photo-z to be extended to z~2 albeit with a lower accuracy (sigma_{Delta z/(1+zs)}=0.06 at i~24). The redshift distribution of large magnitude-selected samples is derived and the median redshift is found to range from z=0.66 at 22


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2007

zCOSMOS: A large VLT/VIMOS redshift survey covering 0 < z < 3 in the COSMOS field

S. Lilly; O. Le Fèvre; A. Renzini; G. Zamorani; M. Scodeggio; T. Contini; C. M. Carollo; G. Hasinger; J.-P. Kneib; A. Iovino; V. Le Brun; C. Maier; V. Mainieri; M. Mignoli; J. D. Silverman; L. Tasca; M. Bolzonella; A. Bongiorno; D. Bottini; P. Capak; Karina Caputi; A. Cimatti; O. Cucciati; Emanuele Daddi; R. Feldmann; P. Franzetti; B. Garilli; L. Guzzo; O. Ilbert; P. Kampczyk

zCOSMOS is a large-redshift survey that is being undertaken in the COSMOS field using 600 hr of observation with the VIMOS spectrograph on the 8 m VLT. The survey is designed to characterize the environments of COSMOS galaxies from the 100 kpc scales of galaxy groups up to the 100 Mpc scale of the cosmic web and to produce diagnostic information on galaxies and active galactic nuclei. The zCOSMOS survey consists of two parts: (1) zCOSMOSbright, a magnitude-limited I-band I_(AB) < 22.5 sample of about 20,000 galaxies with 0.1 < z < 1.2 covering the whole 1.7 deg^2 COSMOS ACS field, for which the survey parameters at z ~ 0.7 are designed to be directly comparable to those of the 2dFGRS at z ~ 0.1; and (2) zCOSMOS-deep, a survey of approximately 10,000 galaxies selected through color-selection criteria to have 1.4 < z < 3.0, within the central 1 deg^2. This paper describes the survey design and the construction of the target catalogs and briefly outlines the observational program and the data pipeline. In the first observing season, spectra of 1303 zCOSMOS-bright targets and 977 zCOSMOS-deep targets have been obtained. These are briefly analyzed to demonstrate the characteristics that may be expected from zCOSMOS, and particularly zCOSMOS-bright, when it is finally completed between 2008 and 2009. The power of combining spectroscopic and photometric redshifts is demonstrated, especially in correctly identifying the emission line in single-line spectra and in determining which of the less reliable spectroscopic redshifts are correct and which are incorrect. These techniques bring the overall success rate in the zCOSMOS-bright so far to almost 90% and to above 97% in the 0.5 < z < 0.8 redshift range. Our zCOSMOS-deep spectra demonstrate the power of our selection techniques to isolate high-redshift galaxies at 1.4 < z < 3.0 and of VIMOS to measure their redshifts using ultraviolet absorption lines.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2007

The First Release COSMOS Optical and Near-IR Data and Catalog*

P. Capak; H. Aussel; Masaru Ajiki; H. J. McCracken; B. Mobasher; N. Z. Scoville; Patrick Lynn Shopbell; Y. Taniguchi; D. Thompson; S. Tribiano; S. S. Sasaki; A. W. Blain; M. Brusa; C. L. Carilli; A. Comastri; C. M. Carollo; P. Cassata; James W. Colbert; Richard S. Ellis; M. Elvis; Mauro Giavalisco; W. Green; L. Guzzo; G. Hasinger; O. Ilbert; C. D. Impey; Knud Jahnke; J. Kartaltepe; Jean-Paul Kneib; Jin Koda

We present imaging data and photometry for the COSMOS survey in 15 photometric bands between 0.3 and 2.4 μm. These include data taken on the Subaru 8.3 m telescope, the KPNO and CTIO 4 m telescopes, and the CFHT 3.6 m telescope. Special techniques are used to ensure that the relative photometric calibration is better than 1% across the field of view. The absolute photometric accuracy from standard-star measurements is found to be 6%. The absolute calibration is corrected using galaxy spectra, providing colors accurate to 2% or better. Stellar and galaxy colors and counts agree well with the expected values. Finally, as the first step in the scientific analysis of these data we construct panchromatic number counts which confirm that both the geometry of the universe and the galaxy population are evolving.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2005

Star Formation in NGC 5194 (M51a): The Panchromatic View from GALEX to Spitzer*

Daniela Calzetti; Robert C. Kennicutt; Luciana Bianchi; David Allan Thilker; Daniel A. Dale; C. W. Engelbracht; Claus Leitherer; Martin Meyer; Megan L. Sosey; Maximilian J. Mutchler; Michael W. Regan; Michele D. Thornley; Lee Armus; G. J. Bendo; S. Boissier; A. Boselli; B. T. Draine; Karl D. Gordon; G. Helou; David J. Hollenbach; Lisa J. Kewley; Barry F. Madore; D. C. Martin; E. J. Murphy; G. H. Rieke; Marcia J. Rieke; H. Roussel; Kartik Sheth; J. D. Smith; Frederick M. Walter

(Abridged) Far ultraviolet to far infrared images of the nearby galaxy NGC5194, from Spitzer, GALEX, Hubble Space Telescope and ground--based data, are used to investigate local and global star formation, and the impact of dust extinction in HII-emitting knots. In the IR/UV-UV color plane, the NGC5194 HII knots show the same trend observed for normal star-forming galaxies, having a much larger dispersion than starburst galaxies. We identify the dispersion as due to the UV emission predominantly tracing the evolved, non-ionizing stellar population, up to ages 50-100 Myr. While in starbursts the UV light traces the current SFR, in NGC5194 it traces a combination of current and recent-past SFR. Unlike the UV emission, the monochromatic 24 micron luminosity is an accurate local SFR tracer for the HII knots in NGC5194; this suggests that the 24 micron emission carriers are mainly heated by the young, ionizing stars. However, preliminary results show that the ratio of the 24 micron emission to the SFR varies by a factor of a few from galaxy to galaxy. While also correlated with star formation, the 8 micron emission is not directly proportional to the number of ionizing photons. This confirms earlier suggestions that the carriers of the 8 micron emission are heated by more than one mechanism.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

New constraints on the evolution of the stellar-to-dark matter connection: a combined analysis of galaxy-galaxy lensing, clustering, and stellar mass functions from z=0.2 to z=1

Alexie Leauthaud; Jeremy L. Tinker; Kevin Bundy; Peter Behroozi; Richard Massey; Jason Rhodes; Matthew R. George; Jean-Paul Kneib; Andrew J. Benson; Risa H. Wechsler; Michael T. Busha; P. Capak; Marina Cortês; O. Ilbert; Anton M. Koekemoer; Oliver Le Fevre; S. J. Lilly; H. J. McCracken; M. Salvato; Tim Schrabback; N. Z. Scoville; Tristan L. Smith; James E. Taylor

Using data from the COSMOS survey, we perform the first joint analysis of galaxy-galaxy weak lensing, galaxy spatial clustering, and galaxy number densities. Carefully accounting for sample variance and for scatter between stellar and halo mass, we model all three observables simultaneously using a novel and self-consistent theoretical framework. Our results provide strong constraints on the shape and redshift evolution of the stellar-to-halo mass relation (SHMR) from z = 0.2 to z = 1. At low stellar mass, we find that halo mass scales as M-h proportional to M-*(0.46) and that this scaling does not evolve significantly with redshift from z = 0.2 to z = 1. The slope of the SHMR rises sharply at M-* \textgreater 5 x 10(10)M(circle dot) and as a consequence, the stellar mass of a central galaxy becomes a poor tracer of its parent halo mass. We show that the dark-to-stellar ratio, Mh/M*, varies from low to high masses, reaching a minimum of Mh/M-* similar to 27 at M-* = 4.5 x 10(10) M-circle dot and M-h = 1.2 x 10(12) M-circle dot. This minimum is important for models of galaxy formation because it marks the mass at which the accumulated stellar growth of the central galaxy has been themost efficient. We describe the SHMR at this minimum in terms of the “ pivot stellarmass,” M-*(piv) the “pivot halo mass,” M-h(piv), and the “pivot ratio,” (M-h/M-*)(piv). Thanks to a homogeneous analysis of a single data set spanning a large redshift range, we report the first detection of mass downsizing trends for both M-h(piv) and M-*(piv) The pivot stellar mass decreases from M-*(piv) = 5.75 +/- 0.13x10(10) M-circle dot at z = 0.88 to M-*(piv) = 3.55 +/- 0.17x10(10) M-circle dot at z = 0.37. Intriguingly, however, the corresponding evolution of M-h(piv) leaves the pivot ratio constant with redshift at (M-h/M-*)(piv) similar to 27. We use simple arguments to show how this result raises the possibility that star formation quenching may ultimately depend on M-h/M-* and not simply onMh, as is commonly assumed. We show that simple models with such a dependence naturally lead to downsizing in the sites of star formation. Finally, we discuss the implications of our results in the context of popular quenching models, including disk instabilities and active galactic nucleus feedback.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1991

Molecular gas in luminous infrared galaxies

David B. Sanders; N. Z. Scoville; B. T. Soifer

Radio observations of 60 bright IRAS galaxies with redshifts of 1500-25,000 km/sec are reported. Data obtained in the 1-0 line of CO using the 12-m NRAO radio telescope during 1985-1988 are presented in extensive tables, graphs, and line profiles and analyzed along with similar data on 29 less distant IRAS bright galaxies (Tinney et al., 1990). The galaxies are found to have H2 masses of (1-60) x 10 to the 9th solar mass and a mean ratio of H2 to warm dust of 540 + or - 290, corresponding to a total gas/dust ratio of 900-1100. The discrepancy between this value and that for the Galaxy (about 150) is tentatively attributed to the presence of undetected cold dust or errors in interpreting the IR data. The mechanisms which might be responsible for the high ratios of IR luminosity to H2 mass (2-220 solar luminosity per solar mass) are discussed.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2009

THE zCOSMOS 10k-BRIGHT SPECTROSCOPIC SAMPLE*

S. J. Lilly; Vincent Le Brun; C. Maier; V. Mainieri; Marco Mignoli; M. Scodeggio; Gianni Zamorani; Marcella Carollo; T. Contini; Jean-Paul Kneib; Olivier Le Fevre; A. Renzini; S. Bardelli; M. Bolzonella; A. Bongiorno; Karina Caputi; G. Coppa; O. Cucciati; Sylvain de la Torre; Loic de Ravel; P. Franzetti; Bianca Garilli; A. Iovino; P. Kampczyk; K. Kovac; C. Knobel; F. Lamareille; Jean-Francois Le Borgne; R. Pello; Yingjie Peng

We present spectroscopic redshifts of a large sample of galaxies with I_(AB) < 22.5 in the COSMOS field, measured from spectra of 10,644 objects that have been obtained in the first two years of observations in the zCOSMOS-bright redshift survey. These include a statistically complete subset of 10,109 objects. The average accuracy of individual redshifts is 110 km s^(–1), independent of redshift. The reliability of individual redshifts is described by a Confidence Class that has been empirically calibrated through repeat spectroscopic observations of over 600 galaxies. There is very good agreement between spectroscopic and photometric redshifts for the most secure Confidence Classes. For the less secure Confidence Classes, there is a good correspondence between the fraction of objects with a consistent photometric redshift and the spectroscopic repeatability, suggesting that the photometric redshifts can be used to indicate which of the less secure spectroscopic redshifts are likely right and which are probably wrong, and to give an indication of the nature of objects for which we failed to determine a redshift. Using this approach, we can construct a spectroscopic sample that is 99% reliable and which is 88% complete in the sample as a whole, and 95% complete in the redshift range 0.5 < z < 0.8. The luminosity and mass completeness levels of the zCOSMOS-bright sample of galaxies is also discussed.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2007

The COSMOS Survey: Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys Observations and Data Processing

Anton M. Koekemoer; H. Aussel; Daniela Calzetti; P. Capak; Mauro Giavalisco; Jean-Paul Kneib; A. Leauthaud; O. Le Fèvre; H. J. McCracken; Richard Massey; B. Mobasher; Jason Rhodes; N. Z. Scoville; Patrick Lynn Shopbell

We describe the details of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) Wide Field Channel (WFC) observations of the COSMOS field, including the data calibration and processing procedures. We obtained a total of 583 orbits of HST ACS/WFC imaging in the F814W filter, covering a field that is 1.64 deg^2 in area, the largest contiguous field ever imaged with HST. The median exposure depth across the field is 2028 s (one HST orbit), achieving a limiting point-source depth AB(F814W) = 27.2 (5 σ). We also present details of the astrometric image registration and distortion removal and image combination using MultiDrizzle, motivating the choice of our final pixel scale (30 mas pixel^(-1)), based on the requirements for weak-lensing science. The final set of images are publicly available through the archive sites at IPAC and STScI, along with further documentation on how they were produced.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2009

The Chandra COSMOS Survey, I: Overview and Point Source Catalog

M. Elvis; F. Civano; C. Vignali; S. Puccetti; F. Fiore; N. Cappelluti; T. Aldcroft; Antonella Fruscione; G. Zamorani; A. Comastri; M. Brusa; R. Gilli; Takamitsu Miyaji; F. Damiani; A. M. Koekemoer; Alexis Finoguenov; H. Brunner; Claudia M. Urry; J. D. Silverman; V. Mainieri; Guenther Hasinger; Richard E. Griffiths; Marcella Carollo; Heng Hao; L. Guzzo; A. W. Blain; Daniela Calzetti; C. L. Carilli; P. Capak; Stefano Ettori

The Chandra COSMOS Survey (C-COSMOS) is a large, 1.8 Ms, Chandra program that has imaged the central 0.5 deg^2 of the COSMOS field (centered at 10 ^h , +02 ^o ) with an effective exposure of ~160 ks, and an outer 0.4 deg^2 area with an effective exposure of ~80 ks. The limiting source detection depths are 1.9 × 10^(–16) erg cm^(–2) s^(–1) in the soft (0.5-2 keV) band, 7.3 × 10^(–16) erg cm^(–2) s^(–1) in the hard (2-10 keV) band, and 5.7 × 10^(–16) erg cm^(–2) s^(–1) in the full (0.5-10 keV) band. Here we describe the strategy, design, and execution of the C-COSMOS survey, and present the catalog of 1761 point sources detected at a probability of being spurious of <2 × 10^(–5) (1655 in the full, 1340 in the soft, and 1017 in the hard bands). By using a grid of 36 heavily (~50%) overlapping pointing positions with the ACIS-I imager, a remarkably uniform (±12%) exposure across the inner 0.5 deg^2 field was obtained, leading to a sharply defined lower flux limit. The widely different point-spread functions obtained in each exposure at each point in the field required a novel source detection method, because of the overlapping tiling strategy, which is described in a companion paper. This method produced reliable sources down to a 7-12 counts, as verified by the resulting logN-logS curve, with subarcsecond positions, enabling optical and infrared identifications of virtually all sources, as reported in a second companion paper. The full catalog is described here in detail and is available online.

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P. Capak

California Institute of Technology

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Anton M. Koekemoer

Space Telescope Science Institute

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O. Le Fèvre

Aix-Marseille University

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H. J. McCracken

Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris

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O. Ilbert

Aix-Marseille University

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