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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Baryon Acoustic Oscillations in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 7 Galaxy Sample

Will J. Percival; Beth A. Reid; Daniel J. Eisenstein; Neta A. Bahcall; Tamas Budavari; Joshua A. Frieman; Masataka Fukugita; James E. Gunn; Željko Ivezić; Gillian R. Knapp; Richard G. Kron; Jon Loveday; Robert H. Lupton; Timothy A. McKay; Avery Meiksin; Robert C. Nichol; Adrian Pope; David J. Schlegel; Donald P. Schneider; David N. Spergel; Chris Stoughton; Michael A. Strauss; Alexander S. Szalay; Max Tegmark; Michael S. Vogeley; David H. Weinberg; Donald G. York; Idit Zehavi

The spectroscopic Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 7 (DR7) galaxy sample represents the final set of galaxies observed using the original SDSS target selection criteria. We analyse the clustering of galaxies within this sample, including both the luminous red galaxy and main samples, and also include the 2-degree Field Galaxy Redshift Survey data. In total, this sample comprises 893 319 galaxies over 9100 deg(2). Baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) are observed in power spectra measured for different slices in redshift; this allows us to constrain the distance-redshift relation at multiple epochs. We achieve a distance measure at redshift z = 0.275, of r(s)(z(d))/D-V(0.275) = 0.1390 +/- 0.0037 (2.7 per cent accuracy), where r(s)(z(d)) is the comoving sound horizon at the baryon-drag epoch, D-V(z) equivalent to [(1 + z)(2)D(A)(2)cz/H(z)](1/3), D-A(z) is the angular diameter distance and H(z) is the Hubble parameter. We find an almost independent constraint on the ratio of distances D-V(0.35)/D-V(0.2) = 1.736 +/- 0.065, which is consistent at the 1.1 sigma level with the best-fitting Lambda cold dark matter model obtained when combining our z = 0.275 distance constraint with the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe 5-year (WMAP5) data. The offset is similar to that found in previous analyses of the SDSS DR5 sample, but the discrepancy is now of lower significance, a change caused by a revised error analysis and a change in the methodology adopted, as well as the addition of more data. Using WMAP5 constraints on Omega(b)h(2) and Omega(c) h(2), and combining our BAO distance measurements with those from the Union supernova sample, places a tight constraint on Omega(m) = 0.286 +/- 0.018 and H-0 = 68.2 +/- 2.2 km s(-1) Mpc(-1) that is robust to allowing Omega(k) not equal 0 and omega not equal -1. This result is independent of the behaviour of dark energy at redshifts greater than those probed by the BAO and supernova measurements. Combining these data sets with the full WMAP5 likelihood constraints provides tight constraints on both Omega(k) = -0.006 +/- 0.008 and omega = -0.97 +/- 0.10 for a constant dark energy equation of state.


The Astronomical Journal | 2006

The 2.5 m Telescope of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey

James E. Gunn; Walter A. Siegmund; Edward J. Mannery; Russell Owen; Charles L. Hull; R. French Leger; Larry N. Carey; Gillian R. Knapp; Donald G. York; William N. Boroski; Stephen M. Kent; Robert H. Lupton; Constance M. Rockosi; Michael L. Evans; Patrick Waddell; John Anderson; James Annis; John C. Barentine; Larry M. Bartoszek; Steven Bastian; Stephen B. Bracker; Howard J. Brewington; Charles Briegel; J. Brinkmann; Yorke J. Brown; Michael A. Carr; Paul C. Czarapata; Craig Drennan; Thomas W. Dombeck; Glenn R. Federwitz

We describe the design, construction, and performance of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey telescope located at Apache Point Observatory. The telescope is a modified two-corrector Ritchey-Chretien design with a 2.5 m, f/2.25 primary, a 1.08 m secondary, a Gascoigne astigmatism corrector, and one of a pair of interchangeable highly aspheric correctors near the focal plane, one for imaging and the other for spectroscopy. The final focal ratio is f/5. The telescope is instrumented by a wide-area, multiband CCD camera and a pair of fiber-fed double spectrographs. Novel features of the telescope include the following: (1) A 3° diameter (0.65 m) focal plane that has excellent image quality and small geometric distortions over a wide wavelength range (3000-10,600 A) in the imaging mode, and good image quality combined with very small lateral and longitudinal color errors in the spectroscopic mode. The unusual requirement of very low distortion is set by the demands of time-delay-and-integrate (TDI) imaging. (2) Very high precision motion to support open-loop TDI observations. (3) A unique wind baffle/enclosure construction to maximize image quality and minimize construction costs. The telescope had first light in 1998 May and began regular survey operations in 2000.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2002

Galaxy Clustering in Early Sloan Digital Sky Survey Redshift Data

Idit Zehavi; Michael R. Blanton; Joshua A. Frieman; David H. Weinberg; Hounjun J. Mo; Michael A. Strauss; Scott F. Anderson; James Annis; Neta A. Bahcall; Mariangela Bernardi; John W. Briggs; J. Brinkmann; Scott Burles; Larry N. Carey; Francisco J. Castander; Andrew J. Connolly; István Csabai; Julianne J. Dalcanton; Scott Dodelson; Mamoru Doi; Daniel J. Eisenstein; Michael L. Evans; Douglas P. Finkbeiner; Scott D. Friedman; Masataka Fukugita; James E. Gunn; Greg Hennessy; Robert B. Hindsley; Željko Ivezić; Stephen B. H. Kent

We present the first measurements of clustering in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) galaxy redshift survey. Our sample consists of 29,300 galaxies with redshifts 5700 km s-1 ≤ cz ≤ 39,000 km s-1, distributed in several long but narrow (25-5°) segments, covering 690 deg2. For the full, flux-limited sample, the redshift-space correlation length is approximately 8 h-1 Mpc. The two-dimensional correlation function ξ(rp,π) shows clear signatures of both the small-scale, fingers-of-God distortion caused by velocity dispersions in collapsed objects and the large-scale compression caused by coherent flows, though the latter cannot be measured with high precision in the present sample. The inferred real-space correlation function is well described by a power law, ξ(r) = (r/6.1 ± 0.2 h-1 Mpc)-1.75±0.03, for 0.1 h-1 Mpc ≤ r ≤ 16 h-1 Mpc. The galaxy pairwise velocity dispersion is σ12 ≈ 600 ± 100 km s-1 for projected separations 0.15 h-1 Mpc ≤ rp ≤ 5 h-1 Mpc. When we divide the sample by color, the red galaxies exhibit a stronger and steeper real-space correlation function and a higher pairwise velocity dispersion than do the blue galaxies. The relative behavior of subsamples defined by high/low profile concentration or high/low surface brightness is qualitatively similar to that of the red/blue subsamples. Our most striking result is a clear measurement of scale-independent luminosity bias at r 10 h-1 Mpc: subsamples with absolute magnitude ranges centered on M* - 1.5, M*, and M* + 1.5 have real-space correlation functions that are parallel power laws of slope ≈-1.8 with correlation lengths of approximately 7.4, 6.3, and 4.7 h-1 Mpc, respectively.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Cosmological constraints from the clustering of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey DR7 luminous red galaxies

Beth A. Reid; Will J. Percival; Daniel J. Eisenstein; Licia Verde; David N. Spergel; Ramin A. Skibba; Neta A. Bahcall; Tamas Budavari; Joshua A. Frieman; Masataka Fukugita; J. Richard Gott; James E. Gunn; Željko Ivezić; Gillian R. Knapp; Richard G. Kron; Robert H. Lupton; Timothy A. McKay; Avery Meiksin; Robert C. Nichol; Adrian Pope; David J. Schlegel; Donald P. Schneider; Chris Stoughton; Michael A. Strauss; Alexander S. Szalay; Max Tegmark; Michael S. Vogeley; David H. Weinberg; Donald G. York; Idit Zehavi

We present the power spectrum of the reconstructed halo density field derived from a sample of luminous red galaxies (LRGs) from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Seventh Data Release (DR7). The halo power spectrum has a direct connection to the underlying dark matter power for k≤ 0.2 h Mpc−1, well into the quasi-linear regime. This enables us to use a factor of ∼8 more modes in the cosmological analysis than an analysis with kmax= 0.1 h Mpc−1, as was adopted in the SDSS team analysis of the DR4 LRG sample. The observed halo power spectrum for 0.02 < k < 0.2 h Mpc−1 is well fitted by our model: χ2= 39.6 for 40 degrees of freedom for the best-fitting Λ cold dark matter (ΛCDM) model. We find Ωmh2(ns/0.96)1.2= 0.141+0.101-0.012 for a power-law primordial power spectrum with spectral index ns and Ωbh2= 0.022 65 fixed, consistent with cosmic microwave background measurements. The halo power spectrum also constrains the ratio of the comoving sound horizon at the baryon-drag epoch to an effective distance to z= 0.35: rs/DV(0.35) = 0.1097+0.0039−0.0042. Combining the halo power spectrum measurement with the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) 5 year results, for the flat ΛCDM model we find Ωm= 0.289 ± 0.019 and H0= 69.4 ± 1.6 km s−1 Mpc−1. Allowing for massive neutrinos in ΛCDM, we find Σmv <0.62 eV at the 95 per cent confidence level. If we instead consider the effective number of relativistic species Neff as a free parameter, we find Neff= 4.8+1.8−1.7. Combining also with the Kowalski et al. supernova sample, we find Ωtot= 1.011 ± 0.009 and w=−0.99 ± 0.11 for an open cosmology with constant dark energy equation of state w. The power spectrum and a module to calculate the likelihoods are publicly available at http://lambda.gsfc.nasa.gov/toolbox/lrgdr/.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2004

The ensemble photometric variability of ∼25,000 quasars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey

Daniel E. Vanden Berk; Brian C. Wilhite; Richard G. Kron; Scott F. Anderson; Robert J. Brunner; Patrick B. Hall; Željko Ivezić; Gordon T. Richards; Donald P. Schneider; Donald G. York; Jonathan Brinkmann; D. Q. Lamb; Robert C. Nichol; David J. Schlegel

Using a sample of over 25,000 spectroscopically confirmed quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, we show how quasar variability in the rest-frame optical/UV regime depends on rest-frame time lag, luminosity, rest wavelength, redshift, the presence of radio and X-ray emission, and the presence of broad absorption line systems. Imaging photometry is compared with three-band spectrophotometry obtained at later epochs spanning time lags up to about 2 yr. The large sample size and wide range of parameter values allow the dependence of variability to be isolated as a function of many independent parameters. The time dependence of variability (the structure function) is well fitted by a single power law with an index γ = 0.246 ± 0.008, on timescales from days to years. There is an anticorrelation of variability amplitude with rest wavelength—e.g., quasars are about twice as variable at 1000 A as at 6000 A—and quasars are systematically bluer when brighter at all redshifts. There is a strong anticorrelation of variability with quasar luminosity—variability amplitude decreases by a factor of about 4 when luminosity increases by a factor of 100. There is also a significant positive correlation of variability amplitude with redshift, indicating evolution of the quasar population or the variability mechanism. We parameterize all of these relationships. Quasars with ROSAT All-Sky Survey X-ray detections are significantly more variable (at optical/UV wavelengths) than those without, and radio-loud quasars are marginally more variable than their radio-quiet counterparts. We find no significant difference in the variability of quasars with and without broad absorption line troughs. Currently, no models of quasar variability address more than a few of these relationships. Models involving multiple discrete events or gravitational microlensing are unlikely by themselves to account for the data. So-called accretion disk instability models are promising, but more quantitative predictions are needed.


The Astronomical Journal | 2008

The Sloan Digital Sky Survey - II:supernova survey: technical summary

Joshua A. Frieman; Bruce A. Bassett; Andrew Cameron Becker; Changsu Choi; D. Cinabro; F. DeJongh; D. L. DePoy; Ben Dilday; Mamoru Doi; Peter Marcus Garnavich; Craig J. Hogan; Jon A. Holtzman; Myungshin Im; Saurabh W. Jha; Richard Kessler; Kohki Konishi; Hubert Lampeitl; John P. Marriner; J. L. Marshall; David P. McGinnis; Gajus A. Miknaitis; Robert C. Nichol; Jose Luis Palacio Prieto; Adam G. Riess; Michael W. Richmond; Roger W. Romani; Masao Sako; Donald P. Schneider; Mathew Smith; Naohiro Takanashi

The Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II (SDSS-II) has embarked on a multi-year project to identify and measure light curves for intermediate-redshift (0.05 < z < 0.35) Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) using repeated five-band (ugriz) imaging over an area of 300 sq. deg. The survey region is a stripe 2.5° wide centered on the celestial equator in the Southern Galactic Cap that has been imaged numerous times in earlier years, enabling construction of a deep reference image for the discovery of new objects. Supernova imaging observations are being acquired between September 1 and November 30 of 2005-7. During the first two seasons, each region was imaged on average every five nights. Spectroscopic follow-up observations to determine supernova type and redshift are carried out on a large number of telescopes. In its first two three-month seasons, the survey has discovered and measured light curves for 327 spectroscopically confirmed SNe Ia, 30 probable SNe Ia, 14 confirmed SNe Ib/c, 32 confirmed SNe II, plus a large number of photometrically identified SNe Ia, 94 of which have host-galaxy spectra taken so far. This paper provides an overview of the project and briefly describes the observations completed during the first two seasons of operation.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

EIGHT NEW MILKY WAY COMPANIONS DISCOVERED IN FIRST-YEAR DARK ENERGY SURVEY DATA

K. Bechtol; A. Drlica-Wagner; E. Balbinot; A. Pieres; J. D. Simon; Brian Yanny; B. Santiago; Risa H. Wechsler; Joshua A. Frieman; Alistair R. Walker; P. Williams; Eduardo Rozo; Eli S. Rykoff; A. Queiroz; E. Luque; A. Benoit-Lévy; Douglas L. Tucker; I. Sevilla; Robert A. Gruendl; L. N. da Costa; A. Fausti Neto; M. A. G. Maia; T. D. Abbott; S. Allam; R. Armstrong; A. Bauer; G. M. Bernstein; R. A. Bernstein; E. Bertin; David J. Brooks

We report the discovery of eight new Milky Way companions in ~1,800 deg^2 of optical imaging data collected during the first year of the Dark Energy Survey (DES). Each system is identified as a statistically significant over-density of individual stars consistent with the expected isochrone and luminosity function of an old and metal-poor stellar population. The objects span a wide range of absolute magnitudes (M_V from -2.2 mag to -7.4 mag), physical sizes (10 pc to 170 pc), and heliocentric distances (30 kpc to 330 kpc). Based on the low surface brightnesses, large physical sizes, and/or large Galactocentric distances of these objects, several are likely to be new ultra-faint satellite galaxies of the Milky Way and/or Magellanic Clouds. We introduce a likelihood-based algorithm to search for and characterize stellar over-densities, as well as identify stars with high satellite membership probabilities. We also present completeness estimates for detecting ultra-faint galaxies of varying luminosities, sizes, and heliocentric distances in the first-year DES data.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2005

Spectral Variability of Quasars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. I. Wavelength Dependence

Brian C. Wilhite; Daniel E. Vanden Berk; Richard G. Kron; Donald P. Schneider; Nicholas Pereyra; Robert J. Brunner; Gordon T. Richards; Jonathan Brinkmann

SDSS repeat spectroscopic observations have resulted in multiepoch spectroscopy for ~2500 quasars observed more than 50 days apart. From this sample, calibrating against stars observed simultaneously, we identify 315 quasars that have varied significantly between observations (with respect to assumed nonvariable stars observed concurrently). These variable quasars range in redshift from 0.5 to 4.72. This is the first large quasar sample studied spectroscopically for variability and represents a potentially useful sample for future high-redshift reverberation mapping studies. This also marks the first time the precise wavelength dependence of quasar variability has been determined, allowing both the continuum and emission-line variability to be studied. We create an ensemble difference spectrum (bright phase minus faint phase) covering rest-frame wavelengths from 1000 to 6000 A. This average difference spectrum is bluer than the average single-epoch quasar spectrum; a power-law fit to the difference spectrum yields a spectral index αλ = -2.00, compared to an index of αλ = -1.35 for the single-epoch spectrum. This confirms that quasar continua are bluer when brighter. The difference spectrum also exhibits very weak or absent emission-line features; the strongest emission lines vary only 30% as much as the continuum. This small emission-line variability with respect to the continuum is consistent with the intrinsic Baldwin effect. Due to the lack of variability of the lines, measured photometric color is not always bluer in brighter phases but depends on redshift and the filters used. Lastly, the difference spectrum is bluer than the ensemble quasar spectrum only for λrest < 2500 A, indicating that the variability cannot result from a simple scaling of the average quasar spectrum.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1995

High-resolution spectra of distant compact narrow emission line galaxies: Progrenitors of spheroidal galaxies

David C. Koo; Rafael Guzman; S. M. Faber; Garth D. Illingworth; Matthew A. Bershady; Richard G. Kron; Marianne Takamiya

Emission-line velocity widths have been determined for 17 faint (B approximately 20-23) very blue, compact galaxies whose redshifts range from z = 0.095 to 0.66. The spectra have a resolution of 8 Km/s and were taken with the HIRES echelle spectrograph of the Keck 10 m telescope. The galaxies are luminous with all but two within 1 mag of M(sub B) approximately -21. Yet they exhibit narrow velocity widths between sigma = 28-157 km/s, more consistent with typical values of extreme star-forming galaxies than with those of nearby spiral galaxies of similar luminosity. In particular, objects with sigma is less than or equal to 65 km/s follow the same correlations between sigma and both blue and H beta luminosities as those of nearby H II galaxies. These results strengthen the identification of H II glaxies as thier local counterparts. The blue colors and strong emission lines suggest these compact galaxies are undergoing a recent, strong burst of star formation. Like those which characterize some H II galaxies, this burst could be a nuclear star-forming event within a much larger, older stellar population. If the burst is instead a major episode in the total star-forming history, these distant galaxies could fade enough to match the low luminosities and surface brightnesses typical of nearby spheroidals like NGC 185 or NGC 205. Together with evidence for recent star formation, exponential light profiles, and subsolar metallicities, the postfading correlations between luminosity and velocity width and bewtween luminosity and surface brightness suggest that among the low-sigma galaxies, we may be witnessing, in situ, the progenitors of todays spheroidal galaxies.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2006

Characteristic QSO Accretion Disk Temperatures from Spectroscopic Continuum Variability

Nicolas A. Pereyra; Daniel E. Vanden Berk; David A. Turnshek; D. John Hillier; Brian C. Wilhite; Richard G. Kron; Donald P. Schneider; Jonathan Brinkmann

Using Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) QSO spectra taken at multiple epochs, we find that the composite flux differences in the rest-frame wavelength range 1300-6000 A can be fit by a standard thermal accretion disk model in which the accretion rate has changed from one epoch to the next (without considering additional continuum emission components). The fit to the composite residual has two free parameters: a normalizing constant and the average characteristic temperature *. In turn, in a standard disk the characteristic temperature is dependent on the ratio of the mass accretion rate to the square of the black hole mass. Therefore, provided enough time has elapsed for a composite disk spectrum to adjust to a new average characteristic temperature, reasonably consistent with the standard model, we conclude that most of the UV-optical variability observed in QSOs may be due to processes involving changes in disk accretion rates. This is consistent with the conclusion that a significant fraction of a QSOs UV-optical spectrum comes directly from the disk.

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David C. Koo

University of California

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Donald P. Schneider

Pennsylvania State University

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Daniel E. Vanden Berk

Pennsylvania State University

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Michael A. Strauss

Russian Academy of Sciences

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