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Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2013

The DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: Design, Observations, Data Reduction, and Redshifts

Jeffrey A. Newman; Michael C. Cooper; Marc Davis; S. M. Faber; Alison L. Coil; Puragra Guhathakurta; David C. Koo; Andrew C. Phillips; Charlie Conroy; Aaron A. Dutton; Douglas P. Finkbeiner; Brian F. Gerke; D. Rosario; Benjamin J. Weiner; Christopher N. A. Willmer; Renbin Yan; Justin Harker; Susan A. Kassin; Nicholas P. Konidaris; Kamson Lai; Darren Madgwick; Kai G. Noeske; Gregory D. Wirth; Andrew J. Connolly; Nick Kaiser; Evan N. Kirby; Brian C. Lemaux; Lihwai Lin; Jennifer M. Lotz; Gerard A. Luppino

We describe the design and data analysis of the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey, the densest and largest high-precision redshift survey of galaxies at z ~ 1 completed to date. The survey was designed to conduct a comprehensive census of massive galaxies, their properties, environments, and large-scale structure down to absolute magnitude M_B = −20 at z ~ 1 via ~90 nights of observation on the Keck telescope. The survey covers an area of 2.8 deg^2 divided into four separate fields observed to a limiting apparent magnitude of R_(AB) = 24.1. Objects with z ≾0.7 are readily identifiable using BRI photometry and rejected in three of the four DEEP2 fields, allowing galaxies with z > 0.7 to be targeted ~2.5 times more efficiently than in a purely magnitude-limited sample. Approximately 60% of eligible targets are chosen for spectroscopy, yielding nearly 53,000 spectra and more than 38,000 reliable redshift measurements. Most of the targets that fail to yield secure redshifts are blue objects that lie beyond z ~ 1.45, where the [Ou2009ii] 3727u2009A doublet lies in the infrared. The DEIMOS 1200 line mm^(−1) grating used for the survey delivers high spectral resolution (R ~ 6000), accurate and secure redshifts, and unique internal kinematic information. Extensive ancillary data are available in the DEEP2 fields, particularly in the Extended Groth Strip, which has evolved into one of the richest multiwavelength regions on the sky. This paper is intended as a handbook for users of the DEEP2 Data Release 4, which includes all DEEP2 spectra and redshifts, as well as for the DEEP2 DEIMOS data reduction pipelines. Extensive details are provided on object selection, mask design, biases in target selection and redshift measurements, the spec2d two-dimensional data-reduction pipeline, the spec1d automated redshift pipeline, and the zspec visual redshift verification process, along with examples of instrumental signatures or other artifacts that in some cases remain after data reduction. Redshift errors and catastrophic failure rates are assessed through more than 2000 objects with duplicate observations. Sky subtraction is essentially photon-limited even under bright OH sky lines; we describe the strategies that permitted this, based on high image stability, accurate wavelength solutions, and powerful B-spline modeling methods. We also investigate the impact of targets that appear to be single objects in ground-based targeting imaging but prove to be composite in Hubble Space Telescope data; they constitute several percent of targets at z ~ 1, approaching ~5%–10% at z > 1.5. Summary data are given that demonstrate the superiority of DEEP2 over other deep high-precision redshift surveys at z ~ 1 in terms of redshift accuracy, sample number density, and amount of spectral information. We also provide an overview of the scientific highlights of the DEEP2 survey thus far.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2003

The DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: Spectral Classification of Galaxies at \documentclass{aastex} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{bm} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{pifont} \usepackage{stmaryrd} \usepackage{textcomp} \usepackage{portland,xspace} \usepackage{amsmath,amsxtra} \usepackage[OT2,OT1]{fontenc} \newcommand\cyr{ \renewcommand\rmdefault{wncyr} \renewcommand\sfdefault{wncyss} \renewcommand\encodingdefault{OT2} \normalfont \selectfont} \DeclareTextFontCommand{\textcyr}{\cyr} \pagestyle{empty} \DeclareMathSizes{10}{9}{7}{6} \begin{document} \landscape

Darren Madgwick; Alison L. Coil; Christopher J. Conselice; Michael C. Cooper; Marc Davis; Richard S. Ellis; S. M. Faber; Douglas P. Finkbeiner; Brian F. Gerke; Puragra Guhathakurta; Nick Kaiser; David C. Koo; Jeffrey A. Newman; Andrew C. Phillips; Charles C. Steidel; Benjamin J. Weiner; Christopher N. A. Willmer; Renbin Yan

We present spectroscopic and photometric observations of SN 1992ar, the most distant supernova (SN) in the Calan/Tololo Survey. We compare its spectrum with those of nearby Type Ia and Ic SNe and conclude that the latter type is a better match to SN 1992ar. Using K-corrections based on the spectra of well-observed Type Ic and Ia SNe, we compute different possible rest-frame light curves of SN 1992ar and compare them with those of representative SNe of each type observed in the nearby universe. From the photometry and the spectra, we are able to conclude that SN 1992ar cannot be matched by any known example of a Type Ia SN. Even though the data set collected is fairly complete (one spectrum and 10 photometric points), it is not possible to decide whether SN 1992ar was a fast Type Ic SN, like SN 1994I, or a slow one, like SN 1983V. The absolute V magnitudes at maximum implied by each of these possibilities are -19.2 and -20.2, respectively. The latter would make SN 1992ar one of the brightest SNe on record. SN 1992ar, hence, illustrates the problem of contamination faced by the high-z Type Ia SNe samples whose luminosity distances are used to determine the cosmological parameters of the universe. We present observational criteria to distinguish the two SN types when the Si II 6355 A line is redshifted out of the sensitivity range of typical CCD detectors and discuss the effect that these luminous Type Ic SNe would have on the measured cosmological parameters, if not removed from the high-z Type Ia SN samples.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

z\sim 1

Joanna Woo; Avishai Dekel; S. M. Faber; Kai G. Noeske; David C. Koo; Brian F. Gerke; Michael C. Cooper; Samir Salim; Aaron A. Dutton; Jeffrey A. Newman; Benjamin J. Weiner; Kevin Bundy; Christopher N. A. Willmer; Marc Davis; Renbin Yan

We study the dependence of star-formation quenching on galaxy mass and environment, in the SDSS (z~0.1) and the AEGIS (z~1). It is crucial that we define quenching by low star-formation rate rather than by red colour, given that one third of the red galaxies are star forming. We address stellar mass M*, halo mass Mh, density over the nearest N neighbours deltaN, and distance to the halo centre D. The fraction of quenched galaxies appears more strongly correlated with Mh at fixed M* than with M* at fixed Mh, while for satellites quenching also depends on D. We present the M*-Mh relation for centrals at z~1. At z~1, the dependence of quenching on M* at fixed Mh is somewhat more pronounced than at z~0, but the quenched fraction is low (10%) and the haloes are less massive. For satellites, M*-dependent quenching is noticeable at high D, suggesting a quenching dependence on sub-halo mass for recently captured satellites. At small D, where satellites likely fell in more than a few Gyr ago, quenching strongly depends on Mh, and not on M*. The Mh-dependence of quenching is consistent with theoretical wisdom where virial shock heating in massive haloes shuts down accretion and triggers ram-pressure stripping, causing quenching. The interpretation of deltaN is complicated by the fact that it depends on the number of observed group members compared to N, motivating the use of D as a better measure of local environment.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

\end{document}

Francesco Belfiore; Roberto Maiolino; Claudia Maraston; Eric Emsellem; Matthew A. Bershady; Karen L. Masters; Renbin Yan; Dmitry Bizyaev; M. Boquien; Joel R. Brownstein; Kevin Bundy; Niv Drory; Timothy M. Heckman; David R. Law; Alexandre Roman-Lopes; Kaike Pan; Letizia Stanghellini; Daniel Thomas; Anne-Marie Weijmans; Kyle B. Westfall

We study the spatially resolved excitation properties of the ionised gas in a sample of 646 galaxies using integral field spectroscopy data from SDSS-IV MaNGA. Making use of Baldwin-Philips-Terlevich diagnostic diagrams we demonstrate the ubiquitous presence of extended (kpc scale) low ionisation emission-line regions (LIERs) in both star forming and quiescent galaxies. In star forming galaxies LIER emission can be associated with diffuse ionised gas, most evident as extra-planar emission in edge-on systems. In addition, we identify two main classes of galaxies displaying LIER emission: `central LIER (cLIER) galaxies, where central LIER emission is spatially extended, but accompanied by star formation at larger galactocentric distances, and `extended LIER (eLIER) galaxies, where LIER emission is extended throughout the whole galaxy. In eLIER and cLIER galaxies, LIER emission is associated with radially flat, low H


Nature | 2016

Dependence of galaxy quenching on halo mass and distance from its centre

Edmond Cheung; Kevin Bundy; Michele Cappellari; Sebastien Peirani; W. Rujopakarn; Kyle B. Westfall; Renbin Yan; Matthew A. Bershady; Jenny E. Greene; Timothy M. Heckman; Niv Drory; David R. Law; Karen L. Masters; Daniel Thomas; David A. Wake; Anne-Marie Weijmans; Kate H. R. Rubin; Francesco Belfiore; Benedetta Vulcani; Yanmei Chen; Kai Zhang; Joseph D. Gelfand; Dmitry Bizyaev; Alexandre Roman-Lopes; Donald P. Schneider

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The Astronomical Journal | 2015

SDSS IV MaNGA - Spatially resolved diagnostic diagrams: A proof that many galaxies are LIERs

David R. Law; Renbin Yan; Matthew A. Bershady; Kevin Bundy; Brian Cherinka; Niv Drory; Nicholas MacDonald; José R. Sánchez-Gallego; David A. Wake; Anne-Marie Weijmans; Michael R. Blanton; Mark A. Klaene; Sean M. Moran; Sebastián F. Sánchez; Kai Zhang

equivalent width of line emission (


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

Suppressing star formation in quiescent galaxies with supermassive black hole winds

Jonathan R. Trump; Nicholas P. Konidaris; Guillermo Barro; David C. Koo; Dale D. Kocevski; S. Juneau; Benjamin J. Weiner; S. M. Faber; Ian S. McLean; Renbin Yan; P. G. Pérez-González; V. Villar


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

Observing Strategy for the SDSS-IV/MaNGA IFU Galaxy Survey

Daniel Goddard; Daniel Thomas; Claudia Maraston; Kyle B. Westfall; James Etherington; Rogério Riffel; Nícolas Dullius Mallmann; Zheng Zheng; Maria Argudo-Fernández; Jianhui Lian; Matthew A. Bershady; Kevin Bundy; Niv Drory; David R. Law; Renbin Yan; David A. Wake; Anne-Marie Weijmans; Dmitry Bizyaev; Joel R. Brownstein; Richard R. Lane; Roberto Maiolino; Karen L. Masters; Michael R. Merrifield; Christian Nitschelm; Kaike Pan; Alexandre Roman-Lopes; Thaisa Storchi-Bergmann; Donald P. Schneider

Quiescent galaxies with little or no ongoing star formation dominate the population of galaxies with masses above 2u2009×u20091010 times that of the Sun; the number of quiescent galaxies has increased by a factor of about 25 over the past ten billion years (refs 1, 2, 3, 4). Once star formation has been shut down, perhaps during the quasar phase of rapid accretion onto a supermassive black hole, an unknown mechanism must remove or heat the gas that is subsequently accreted from either stellar mass loss or mergers and that would otherwise cool to form stars. Energy output from a black hole accreting at a low rate has been proposed, but observational evidence for this in the form of expanding hot gas shells is indirect and limited to radio galaxies at the centres of clusters, which are too rare to explain the vast majority of the quiescent population. Here we report bisymmetric emission features co-aligned with strong ionized-gas velocity gradients from which we infer the presence of centrally driven winds in typical quiescent galaxies that host low-luminosity active nuclei. These galaxies are surprisingly common, accounting for as much as ten per cent of the quiescent population with masses around 2u2009×u20091010 times that of the Sun. In a prototypical example, we calculate that the energy input from the galaxy’s low-level active supermassive black hole is capable of driving the observed wind, which contains sufficient mechanical energy to heat ambient, cooler gas (also detected) and thereby suppress star formation.


The Astronomical Journal | 2016

Testing diagnostics of nuclear activity and star formation in galaxies at z > 1

David R. Law; Brian Cherinka; Renbin Yan; Brett H. Andrews; Matthew A. Bershady; Dmitry Bizyaev; Guillermo A. Blanc; Michael R. Blanton; Adam S. Bolton; Joel R. Brownstein; Kevin Bundy; Yanmei Chen; Niv Drory; Richard D'Souza; Hai Fu; Amy Jones; Guinevere Kauffmann; Nicholas MacDonald; Karen L. Masters; Jeffrey A. Newman; John Parejko; José R. Sánchez-Gallego; Sebastián F. Sánchez; David J. Schlegel; Daniel Thomas; David A. Wake; Anne-Marie Weijmans; Kyle B. Westfall; Kai Zhang

Mapping Nearby Galaxies at Apache Point Observatory (MaNGA) is an integral-field spectroscopic survey that is one of three core programs in the fourth-generation Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-IV). MaNGAs 17 pluggable optical fiber-bundle integral field units (IFUs) will observe a sample of 10,000 nearby galaxies distributed throughout the SDSS imaging footprint (focusing particularly on the North Galactic Cap). In each pointing these IFUs are deployed across a 3° field; they yield spectral coverage 3600−10300 A at a typical resolution R ~ 2000, and sample the sky with 2 diameter fiber apertures with a total bundle fill factor of 56%. Observing over such a large field and range of wavelengths is particularly challenging for obtaining uniform and integral spatial coverage and resolution at all wavelengths and across each entire fiber array. Data quality is affected by the IFU construction technique, chromatic and field differential refraction, the adopted dithering strategy, and many other effects. We use numerical simulations to constrain the hardware design and observing strategy for the survey with the aim of ensuring consistent data quality that meets the survey science requirements while permitting maximum observational flexibility. We find that MaNGA science goals are best achieved with IFUs composed of a regular hexagonal grid of optical fibers with rms displacement of 5 μm or less from their nominal packing position; this goal is met by the MaNGA hardware, which achieves 3 μm rms fiber placement. We further show that MaNGA observations are best obtained in sets of three 15 minute exposures dithered along the vertices of a 1.44 arcsec equilateral triangle; these sets form the minimum observational unit, and are repeated as needed to achieve a combined signal-to-noise ratio of 5 A-1 per fiber in the r-band continuum at a surface brightness of 23 AB arcsec-2. In order to ensure uniform coverage and delivered image quality, we require that the exposures in a given set be obtained within a 60 minute interval of each other in hour angle, and that all exposures be obtained at airmass ≲ 1.2 (i.e., within 1–3 hr of transit depending on the declination of a given field).


The Astronomical Journal | 2015

SDSS-IV MaNGA : spatially resolved star formation histories in galaxies as a function of galaxy mass and type

Renbin Yan; Christy A. Tremonti; Matthew A. Bershady; David R. Law; David J. Schlegel; Kevin Bundy; Niv Drory; Nicholas MacDonald; Dmitry Bizyaev; Guillermo A. Blanc; Michael R. Blanton; Brian Cherinka; Arthur Eigenbrot; James E. Gunn; Paul Harding; David W. Hogg; José R. Sánchez-Gallego; Sebastián F. Sánchez; David A. Wake; Anne-Marie Weijmans; Ting Xiao; Kai Zhang

We present some of the first science data with the new Keck/MOSFIRE instrument to test the effectiveness of different AGN/SF diagnostics at z ~ 1.5. MOSFIRE spectra were obtained in three H-band multi-slit masks in the GOODS-S field, resulting in 2 hr exposures of 36 emission-line galaxies. We compare X-ray data with the traditional emission-line ratio diagnostics and the alternative mass-excitation and color-excitation diagrams, combining new MOSFIRE infrared data with previous HST/WFC3 infrared spectra (from the 3D-HST survey) and multiwavelength photometry. We demonstrate that a high [O III]/Hβ ratio is insufficient as an active galactic nucleus (AGN) indicator at z > 1. For the four X-ray-detected galaxies, the classic diagnostics ([O III]/Hβ versus [N II]/Hα and [S II]/Hα) remain consistent with X-ray AGN/SF classification. The X-ray data also suggest that composite galaxies (with intermediate AGN/SF classification) host bona fide AGNs. Nearly ~2/3 of the z ~ 1.5 emission-line galaxies have nuclear activity detected by either X-rays or the classic diagnostics. Compared to the X-ray and line ratio classifications, the mass-excitation method remains effective at z > 1, but we show that the color-excitation method requires a new calibration to successfully identify AGNs at these redshifts.

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Kevin Bundy

University of California

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David R. Law

Space Telescope Science Institute

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Matthew A. Bershady

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Dmitry Bizyaev

Sternberg Astronomical Institute

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Kai Zhang

University of Kentucky

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