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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


The Astrophysical Journal | 1996

The Canada-France Redshift Survey: The Luminosity Density and Star Formation History of the Universe to z ~ 1

S. J. Lilly; O. Le Fèvre; F. Hammer; David Crampton

The comoving luminosity density of the universe, (λ), is estimated from the Canada-France Redshift Survey (CFRS) faint galaxy sample in three wave bands (2800 A, 4400 A, and 1 μm) over the redshift range 0 < z < 1. In all three wave bands, increases markedly with redshift. For a (q0 = 0.5, Ω = 1.0) cosmological model, the comoving luminosity density increases as (1 + z)2.1 ± 0.5 at 1 μm, as (1 + z)2.7 ± 0.5 at 4400 A, and as (1 + z)3.9 ± 0.75 at 2800 A, these exponents being reduced by 0.43 and 1.12 for (0.05, 0.1) and (-0.85, 0.1) cosmological models, respectively. The (λ)-τ relation can be reasonably well modeled by an actively evolving stellar population with a Salpeter initial mass function (IMF) extending to 125 M☉, and a star formation rate declining as τ-2.5 with a turn-on of star formation at early epochs. A Scalo IMF extending to the same mass limit produces too many long-lived low-mass stars. This rapid evolution of the star formation rate and comoving luminosity density of the universe is in good agreement with the conclusions of Pei & Fall from their analysis of the evolving metallicity of the universe. One consequence of this evolution is that the physical luminosity density at short wavelengths has probably declined by 2 orders of magnitude since z ~ 1.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

Spectral Energy Distributions of Hard X-Ray Selected Active Galactic Nuclei in the XMM-Newton Medium Deep Survey

Maria del Carmen Polletta; M. Tajer; L. Maraschi; G. Trinchieri; Carol J. Lonsdale; L. Chiappetti; S. Andreon; M. Pierre; O. Le Fèvre; G. Zamorani; D. Maccagni; O. Garcet; Jean Surdej; A. Franceschini; D. Alloin; D. L. Shupe; Jason A. Surace; F. Fang; M. Rowan-Robinson; Harding E. Smith; L. Tresse

We present the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of a hard X-ray selected sample. The sample contains 136 sources with F(2-10 keV)>10^-14 erg/cm^2/s and 132 are AGNs. The sources are detected in a 1 square degree area of the XMM-Newton-Medium Deep Survey where optical data from the VVDS, CFHTLS surveys, and infrared data from the SWIRE survey are available. Based on a SED fitting technique we derive photometric redshifts with sigma(1+z)=0.11 and 6% of outliers and identify AGN signatures in 83% of the objects. This fraction is higher than derived when a spectroscopic classification is available. The remaining 17+9-6% of AGNs shows star-forming galaxy SEDs (SF class). The sources with AGN signatures are divided in two classes, AGN1 (33+6-1%) and AGN2 (50+6-11). The AGN1 and AGN2 classes include sources whose SEDs are fitted by type 1 and type 2 AGN templates, respectively. On average, AGN1s show soft X-ray spectra, consistent with being unabsorbed, while AGN2s and SFs show hard X-ray spectra, consistent with being absorbed. The analysis of the average SEDs as a function of X-ray luminosity shows a reddening of the IR SEDs, consistent with a decreasing contribution from the host galaxy at higher luminosities. The AGNs in the SF classes are likely obscured in the mid-infrared, as suggested by their low L(3-20micron)/Lcorr(0.5-10 keV) ratios. We confirm the previously found correlation for AGNs between the radio luminosity and the X-ray and the mid-infrared luminosities. The X-ray-radio correlation can be used to identify heavily absorbed AGNs. However, the estimated radio fluxes for the missing AGN population responsible for the bulk of the background at E>10 keV are too faint to be detected even in the deepest current radio surveys.We present the SEDs of a hard X-ray selected sample containing 136 sources with F_(2-10 keV) > 10^(-14) erg cm^(-2) s^(-1); 132 are AGNs. The sources are detected in a 1 deg^2 area of the XMM-Newton Medium Deep Survey where optical data from the VVDS and CFHTLS and infrared data from the SWIRE survey are available. Based on a SED fitting technique we derive photometric redshifts with σ(1 + z) = 0.11 and 6% of outliers and identify AGN signatures in 83% of the objects. This fraction is higher than derived when a spectroscopic classification is available. The remaining 17^(+9)_(-6)% of AGNs show star-forming galaxy SEDs (SF class). The sources with AGN signatures are divided in two classes, AGN1 (33^(+6)_(-1)%) and AGN2 (50^(+6)_(-11)%). The AGN1 and AGN2 classes include sources whose SEDs are fitted by type 1 and type 2 AGN templates, respectively. On average, AGN1s show soft X-ray spectra, consistent with being unabsorbed, while AGN2s and SFs show hard X-ray spectra, consistent with being absorbed. The analysis of the average SEDs as a function of X-ray luminosity shows a reddening of the infrared SEDs, consistent with a decreasing contribution from the host galaxy at higher luminosities. The AGNs in the SF classes are likely obscured in the mid-infrared, as suggested by their low L_(3-20 μm)/L^(corr)_(0.5-10 keV) ratios. We confirm the previously found correlation for AGNs between the radio luminosity and the X-ray and the mid-infrared luminosities. The X-ray-radio correlation can be used to identify heavily absorbed AGNs. However, the estimated radio fluxes for the missing AGN population responsible for the bulk of the background at E > 10 keV are too faint to be detected even in the deepest current radio surveys.


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.


Nature | 2008

A test of the nature of cosmic acceleration using galaxy redshift distortions

L. Guzzo; M. Pierleoni; B. Meneux; E. Branchini; O. Le Fèvre; C. Marinoni; B. Garilli; Jeremy Blaizot; G. De Lucia; A. Pollo; H. J. McCracken; D. Bottini; V. Le Brun; D. Maccagni; J. P. Picat; R. Scaramella; M. Scodeggio; L. Tresse; G. Vettolani; A. Zanichelli; C. Adami; S. Arnouts; S. Bardelli; M. Bolzonella; A. Bongiorno; A. Cappi; S. Charlot; P. Ciliegi; T. Contini; O. Cucciati

Observations of distant supernovae indicate that the Universe is now in a phase of accelerated expansion the physical cause of which is a mystery. Formally, this requires the inclusion of a term acting as a negative pressure in the equations of cosmic expansion, accounting for about 75 per cent of the total energy density in the Universe. The simplest option for this ‘dark energy’ corresponds to a ‘cosmological constant’, perhaps related to the quantum vacuum energy. Physically viable alternatives invoke either the presence of a scalar field with an evolving equation of state, or extensions of general relativity involving higher-order curvature terms or extra dimensions. Although they produce similar expansion rates, different models predict measurable differences in the growth rate of large-scale structure with cosmic time. A fingerprint of this growth is provided by coherent galaxy motions, which introduce a radial anisotropy in the clustering pattern reconstructed by galaxy redshift surveys. Here we report a measurement of this effect at a redshift of 0.8. Using a new survey of more than 10,000 faint galaxies, we measure the anisotropy parameter β = 0.70 ± 0.26, which corresponds to a growth rate of structure at that time of f = 0.91 ± 0.36. This is consistent with the standard cosmological-constant model with low matter density and flat geometry, although the error bars are still too large to distinguish among alternative origins for the accelerated expansion. The correct origin could be determined with a further factor-of-ten increase in the sampled volume at similar redshift.


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.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

UltraVISTA: a new ultra-deep near-infrared survey in COSMOS

H. J. McCracken; B. Milvang-Jensen; James Dunlop; Marijn Franx; J. P. U. Fynbo; O. Le Fèvre; J. Holt; Karina Caputi; Y. Goranova; Fernando Buitrago; James P. Emerson; Wolfram Freudling; P. Hudelot; C. López-Sanjuan; F. Magnard; Y. Mellier; P. Møller; Kim K. Nilsson; W. Sutherland; L. Tasca; J. Zabl

In this paper we describe the first data release of the UltraVISTA near-infrared imaging survey of the COSMOS field. We summarise the key goals and design of the survey and provide a detailed description of our data reduction techniques. We provide stacked, sky-subtracted images in YJHK_s and narrow-band filters constructed from data collected during the first year of UltraVISTA observations. Our stacked images reach 5σAB depths in an aperture of 2″ diameter of ~25 in Y and ~24 in JHK_s bands and all have sub-arcsecond seeing. To this 5σ limit, our K_s catalogue contains 216 268 sources. We carry out a series of quality assessment tests on our images and catalogues, comparing our stacks with existing catalogues. The 1σ astrometric rms in both directions for stars selected with 17.0 < K_s(AB) < 19.5 is ~0.08″ in comparison to the publicly-available COSMOS ACS catalogues. Our images are resampled to the same pixel scale and tangent point as the publicly available COSMOS data and so may be easily used to generate multi-colour catalogues using this data. All images and catalogues presented in this paper are publicly available through ESO’s “phase 3” archiving and distribution system and from the UltraVISTA web site.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2000

Hubble Space Telescope imaging of the CFRS and LDSS redshift surveys - IV. Influence of mergers in the evolution of faint field galaxies from z~1

O. Le Fèvre; R. G. Abraham; S. J. Lilly; Richard S. Ellis; J. Brinchmann; David Schade; L. Tresse; Matthew Colless; David Crampton; Karl Glazebrook; F. Hammer; T. J. Broadhurst

ABSTRA C T Hubble Space Telescope images of a sample of 285 galaxies with measured redshifts from the Canada‐France Redshift Survey (CFRS) and Autofib‐Low Dispersion Spectrograph Survey (LDSS) redshift surveys are analysed to derive the evolution of the merger fraction out to redshifts z , 1. We have performed visual and machine-based merger identifications, as well as counts of bright pairs of galaxies with magnitude differences dm # 1:5 mag. We find that the pair fraction increases with redshift, with up to ,20 per cent of the galaxies being in physical pairs at z , 0:75‐1. We derive a merger fraction varying with redshift as /O1a zU 3:2^0:6 , after correction for line-of-sight contamination, in excellent agreement with the merger fraction derived from the visual classification of mergers for which ma 3:4 ^ 0:6. After correcting for seeing effects on the ground-based selection of survey galaxies, we conclude that the pair fraction evolves as/O1a zU 2:7^0:6 . This implies that an average L* galaxy will have undergone 0.8‐1.8 merger events from za 1t oza 0, with 0.5 to 1.2 merger events occuring in a 2-Gyr time-span at around z , 0:9. This result is consistent with predictions from semi-analytical models of galaxy formation. From the simple coaddition of the observed luminosities of the galaxies in pairs, physical mergers are computed to lead to a brightening of 0.5 mag for each pair on average, and a boost in star formation rate of a factor of 2, as derived from the average [O ii] equivalent widths. Mergers of galaxies are therefore contributing significantly to the evolution of both the luminosity function and luminosity density of the Universe out to z , 1.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1999

15 Micron Infrared Space Observatory Observations of the 1415+52 Canada-France Redshift Survey Field: The Cosmic Star Formation Rate as Derived from Deep Ultraviolet, Optical, Mid-Infrared, and Radio Photometry

H. Flores; F. Hammer; Trinh X. Thuan; C. Césarsky; F. X. Désert; A. Omont; S. J. Lilly; Stephen Anthony Eales; David Crampton; O. Le Fèvre

The Canada-France Redshift Survey 1452+52 field has been deeply imaged with the Infrared Space Observatory using ISOCAM through the LW3 filter (12-18 μm). Careful data analysis and comparison with deep optical and radio data have allowed us to generate a catalog of 78 15 μm sources with both radio and optical identifications. They are redder and lie at higher redshift than I-band-selected galaxies, with most of them being star-forming galaxies. We have considered the galaxies detected at radio and 15 μm wavelengths, which potentially include all strong and heavily extincted starbursts, up to z=1. Spectral energy distributions (SEDs) for each of the sources have been derived using deep radio, mid-IR, near-IR, optical, and UV photometry. The sources were then spectrally classified by comparing with SEDs of well-known nearby galaxies. By deriving their far-IR luminosities by interpolation, we can estimate their star formation rate (SFR) in a way that does not depend sensitively on the extinction. Between 35% and 85% of the star formation at z≤1 is related to IR emission, and the global extinction is in the range AV=0.5-0.85. While heavily extincted starbursts with SFRs in excess of 100 M☉ yr-1 constitute less than 1% of all galaxies, they contribute about 18% of the SFR density out to z=1. Their morphologies range from S0 to Sab, and more than a third are interacting systems. The SFR derived by far-IR fluxes is likely to be ~2.9 times higher than those previously estimated from UV fluxes. The derived stellar mass formed since the redshift of 1 could be too high when compared with the present-day stellar mass density. This might be due to an initial mass function in distant star-forming galaxies different from the solar neighborhood one or an underestimate of the local stellar mass density.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

THE XMM-NEWTON WIDE-FIELD SURVEY IN THE COSMOS FIELD (XMM-COSMOS): DEMOGRAPHY AND MULTIWAVELENGTH PROPERTIES OF OBSCURED AND UNOBSCURED LUMINOUS ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI*

M. Brusa; F. Civano; A. Comastri; Takamitsu Miyaji; M. Salvato; G. Zamorani; N. Cappelluti; F. Fiore; G. Hasinger; V. Mainieri; Andrea Merloni; A. Bongiorno; P. Capak; M. Elvis; R. Gilli; Heng Hao; Knud Jahnke; Anton M. Koekemoer; O. Ilbert; E. Le Floc'h; E. Lusso; M. Mignoli; E. Schinnerer; J. D. Silverman; Ezequiel Treister; J. D. Trump; C. Vignali; M. Zamojski; T. Aldcroft; H. Aussel

We report the final optical identifications of the medium-depth (~60 ksec), contiguous (2 deg^2) XMM-Newton survey of the COSMOS field. XMM-Newton has detected ~800 X-ray sources down to limiting fluxes of ~5x10^{-16}, ~3x10^{-15}, and ~7x10^{-15} erg/cm2/s in the 0.5-2 keV, 2-10 keV and 5-10 keV bands, respectively. The work is complemented by an extensive collection of multi-wavelength data from 24 micron to UV, available from the COSMOS survey, for each of the X-ray sources, including spectroscopic redshifts for ~50% of the sample, and high-quality photometric redshifts for the rest. The XMM and multiwavelength flux limits are well matched: 1760 (98%) of the X-ray sources have optical counterparts, 1711 (~95%) have IRAC counterparts, and 1394 (~78%) have MIPS 24micron detections. Thanks to the redshift completeness (almost 100%) we were able to constrain the high-luminosity tail of the X-ray luminosity function confirming that the peak of the number density of logL_X>44.5 AGN is at z~2. Spectroscopically-identified obscured and unobscured AGN, as well as normal and starforming galaxies, present well-defined optical and infrared properties. We devised a robust method to identify a sample of ~150 high redshift (z>1), obscured AGN candidates for which optical spectroscopy is not available. We were able to determine that the fraction of the obscured AGN population at the highest (L_X>10^{44} erg s^{-1}) X-ray luminosity is ~15-30% when selection effects are taken into account, providing an important observational constraint for X-ray background synthesis. We studied in detail the optical spectrum and the overall spectral energy distribution of a prototypical Type 2 QSO, caught in a stage transitioning from being starburst dominated to AGN dominated, which was possible to isolate only thanks to the combination of X-ray and infrared observations.

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V. Le Brun

Aix-Marseille University

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M. Scodeggio

European Southern Observatory

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H. J. McCracken

Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris

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