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Dive into the research topics where Richard E. Griffiths is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard E. Griffiths.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

The Chandra COSMOS Legacy survey: overview and point source catalog

F. Civano; S. Marchesi; A. Comastri; Meg Urry; M. Elvis; N. Cappelluti; S. Puccetti; M. Brusa; G. Zamorani; Guenther Hasinger; T. Aldcroft; D. M. Alexander; V. Allevato; H. Brunner; P. Capak; Alexis Finoguenov; F. Fiore; Antonella Fruscione; R. Gilli; K. Glotfelty; Richard E. Griffiths; Heng Hao; Fiona A. Harrison; Knud Jahnke; J. Kartaltepe; A. Karim; Stephanie M. LaMassa; G. Lanzuisi; Takamitsu Miyaji; P. Ranalli

The COSMOS-Legacy survey is a 4.6 Ms Chandra program that has imaged 2.2 deg2 of the COSMOS field with an effective exposure of ≃ 160 ks over the central 1.5 deg^2 and of ≃ 80 ks in the remaining area. The survey is the combination of 56 new observations obtained as an X-ray Visionary Project with the previous C-COSMOS survey. We describe the reduction and analysis of the new observations and the properties of 2273 point sources detected above a spurious probability of 2 × 10^(−5). We also present the updated properties of the C-COSMOS sources detected in the new data. The whole survey includes 4016 point sources (3814, 2920 and 2440 in the full, soft, and hard band). The limiting depths are 2.2 × 10^(−16), 1.5 × 10^(−15), and 8.9 × 10^(−16) erg cm^(-2)s^(-1) in the 0.5–2, 2–10, and 0.5–10 keV bands, respectively. The observed fraction of obscured active galactic nuclei with a column density >10^(22) cm^(−2) from the hardness ratio (HR) is 50_(-16)^(+17)%. Given the large sample we compute source number counts in the hard and soft bands, significantly reducing the uncertainties of 5%–10%. For the first time we compute number counts for obscured (HR > −0.2) and unobscured (HR < −0.2) sources and find significant differences between the two populations in the soft band. Due to the unprecedent large exposure, COSMOS-Legacy area is three times larger than surveys at similar depths and its depth is three times fainter than surveys covering similar areas. The area-flux region occupied by COSMOS-Legacy is likely to remain unsurpassed for years to come.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

THE CHANDRA COSMOS-LEGACY SURVEY : SOURCE X-RAY SPECTRAL PROPERTIES

S. Marchesi; G. Lanzuisi; F. Civano; Kazushi Iwasawa; Hyewon Suh; A. Comastri; G. Zamorani; V. Allevato; Richard E. Griffiths; Takamitsu Miyaji; P. Ranalli; M. Salvato; Kevin Schawinski; J. D. Silverman; Ezequiel Treister; Claudia M. Urry; C. Vignali

We present the X-ray spectral analysis of the 1855 extragalactic sources in the Chandra COSMOS-Legacy survey catalog having more than 30 net counts in the 0.5-7 keV band. A total of 38% of the sources are optically classified type 1 active galactic nuclei (AGNs), 60% are type 2 AGNs, and 2% are passive, low-redshift galaxies. We study the distribution of AGN photon index Γ and of the intrinsic absorption based on the sources optical classification: type 1 AGNs have a slightly steeper mean photon index Γ than type 2 AGNs, which, on the other hand, have average times higher than type 1 AGNs. We find that ∼15% of type 1 AGNs have cm-2, i.e., are obscured according to the X-ray spectral fitting; the vast majority of these sources have 1044 erg s-1. The existence of these objects suggests that optical and X-ray obscuration can be caused by different phenomena, the X-ray obscuration being, for example, caused by dust-free material surrounding the inner part of the nuclei. Approximately 18% of type 2 AGNs have cm-2, and most of these sources have low X-ray luminosities (L2-10keV < 1043 erg s-1). We expect a part of these sources to be low-accretion, unobscured AGNs lacking broad emission lines. Finally, we also find a direct proportional trend between and host-galaxy mass and star formation rate, although part of this trend is due to a redshift selection effect. (Less)


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

The Chandra COSMOS-Legacy Survey: The z>3 sample

S. Marchesi; F. Civano; M. Salvato; Francesco Shankar; A. Comastri; M. Elvis; G. Lanzuisi; Benny Trakhtenbrot; C. Vignali; G. Zamorani; V. Allevato; M. Brusa; F. Fiore; R. Gilli; Richard E. Griffiths; Guenther Hasinger; Takamitsu Miyaji; Kevin Schawinski; Ezequiel Treister; Claudia M. Urry

We present the largest high-redshift (3 0 at z > 3. We compute the number counts in the observed 0.5–2 keV band, finding a decline in the number of sources at z > 3 and constraining phenomenological models of the X-ray background. We compute the AGN space density at z > 3 in two different luminosity bins. At higher luminosities (logL(2–10 keV) > 44.1 erg s?1), the space density declines exponentially, dropping by a factor of ~20 from z ~ 3 to z ~ 6. The observed decline is ~80% steeper at lower luminosities (43.55 erg s?1 44.1 erg s?1, unobscured and obscured objects may have different evolution with redshift, with the obscured component being three times higher at z ~ 5. Finally, we compare our space density with predictions of quasar activation merger models, whose calibration is based on optically luminous AGNs. These models significantly overpredict the number of expected AGNs at logL (2–10 keV) > 44.1 erg s?1 with respect to our data.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

DISCOVERY OF MASSIVE, MOSTLY STAR FORMATION QUENCHED GALAXIES WITH EXTREMELY LARGE Lyα EQUIVALENT WIDTHS AT z ∼ 3*

Yoshiaki Taniguchi; Masaru Kajisawa; Masakazu A. R. Kobayashi; Tohru Nagao; Yasuhiro Shioya; N. Z. Scoville; David B. Sanders; P. Capak; Anton M. Koekemoer; Sune Toft; H. J. McCracken; Olivier Le Fevre; L. Tasca; Kartik Sheth; A. Renzini; S. J. Lilly; Marcella Carollo; K. Kovac; O. Ilbert; E. Schinnerer; Hai Fu; L. Tresse; Richard E. Griffiths; F. Civano

We report a discovery of six massive galaxies with both extremely large Lyα equivalent widths (EWs) and evolved stellar populations at z ~ 3. These MAssive Extremely STrong Lyα emitting Objects (MAESTLOs) have been discovered in our large-volume systematic survey for strong Lyα emitters (LAEs) with 12 optical intermediate-band data taken with Subaru/Suprime-Cam in the COSMOS field. Based on the spectral energy distribution fitting analysis for these LAEs, it is found that these MAESTLOs have (1) large rest-frame EWs of EW_0 (Lyα) ~ 100–300 A, (2) M_★ ~ 10^(10.5)–10^(11.1) M_⊙, and (3) relatively low specific star formation rates of SFR/M_★ ~ 0.03–1 Gyr^(−1). Three of the six MAESTLOs have extended Lyα emission with a radius of several kiloparsecs, although they show very compact morphology in the HST/ACS images, which correspond to the rest-frame UV continuum. Since the MAESTLOs do not show any evidence for active galactic nuclei, the observed extended Lyα emission is likely to be caused by a star formation process including the superwind activity. We suggest that this new class of LAEs, MAESTLOs, provides a missing link from star-forming to passively evolving galaxies at the peak era of the cosmic star formation history.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

THE CHANDRA COSMOS LEGACY SURVEY: CLUSTERING OF X-RAY-SELECTED AGNs AT 2.9 ≤ z ≤ 5.5 USING PHOTOMETRIC REDSHIFT PROBABILITY DISTRIBUTION FUNCTIONS

V. Allevato; F. Civano; Alexis Finoguenov; S. Marchesi; Francesco Shankar; G. Zamorani; Guenther Hasinger; M. Salvato; Takamitsu Miyaji; R. Gilli; N. Cappelluti; M. Brusa; Hyewon Suh; G. Lanzuisi; Benny Trakhtenbrot; Richard E. Griffiths; C. Vignali; Kevin Schawinski; A. Karim

We present the measurement of the projected and redshift space 2-point correlation function (2pcf) of the new catalog of Chandra COSMOS-Legacy AGN at 2.9


The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

Type 2 AGN Host Galaxies in the Chandra-COSMOS Legacy Survey: No Evidence of AGN-driven Quenching

Hyewon Suh; F. Civano; Guenther Hasinger; E. Lusso; G. Lanzuisi; S. Marchesi; Benny Trakhtenbrot; V. Allevato; N. Cappelluti; P. Capak; M. Elvis; Richard E. Griffiths; C. Laigle; Paulina Lira; Laurie Riguccini; D. Rosario; M. Salvato; Kevin Schawinski; C. Vignali

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Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2017

Infrared Selection of Obscured Active Galactic Nuclei in the COSMOS Field

Yu-Yen Chang; Emeric Le Floc’h; Stéphanie Juneau; Elisabete da Cunha; M. Salvato; F. Civano; S. Marchesi; O. Ilbert; Yoshiki Toba; Chen-Fatt Lim; Ji-Jia Tang; Wei-Hao Wang; Nicholas Ferraro; Megan Urry; Richard E. Griffiths; J. Kartaltepe

z


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

The Chandra COSMOS Legacy Survey: Compton thick AGN at high redshift

G. Lanzuisi; F. Civano; S. Marchesi; A. Comastri; M. Brusa; R. Gilli; C. Vignali; G. Zamorani; M. Brightman; Richard E. Griffiths; Anton M. Koekemoer

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Archive | 2010

Chandra COSMOS survey I. (Elvis+, 2009)

Martin S. Elvis; F. Civano; C. Vignali; S. Puccetti; F. Fiore; N. Cappelluti; Thomas L. Aldcroft; Antonella Fruscione; Gianni Zamorani; A. Comastri; M. Brusa; R. Gilli; Takamitsu Miyaji; F. Damiani; Anton 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; Andrew W. Blain; Daniela Calzetti; Christopher L. Carilli; P. Capak; Stefano Ettori

5.5 (


Archive | 2008

XMM Clusters of galaxies in COSMOS field (Finoguenov+ 2007)

Alexis Finoguenov; L. Guzzo; Guenther Hasinger; Nicholas Z. Scoville; H. Aussel; H. Böhringer; M. Brusa; P. Capak; N. Cappelluti; A. Comastri; S. Giodini; Richard E. Griffiths; Christopher D. Impey; Anton M. Koekemoer; J.-P. Kneib; Alexie Leauthaud; Olivier Le Fevre; Simon J. Lilly; V. Mainieri; Richard Massey; H. J. McCracken; Bahram Mobasher; Takashi Murayama; J. A. Peacock; Irini Sakelliou; Eva Schinnerer; J. D. Silverman; Vernesa Smolčić; Yoshiaki Taniguchi; L. Tasca

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Takamitsu Miyaji

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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M. Brusa

University of Bologna

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P. Capak

California Institute of Technology

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