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Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

The 4MOST instrument concept overview

Roger Haynes; Samuel C. Barden; Roelof S. de Jong; Olivier Schnurr; Olga Bellido; Jakob Walcher; Dionne M. Haynes; R. Winkler; Svend-Marian Bauer; Frank Dionies; Allar Saviauk; Cristina Chiappini; A. D. Schwope; Joar Brynnel; Matthias Steinmetz; Richard McMahon; Sofia Feltzing; Patrick Francois; Scott Trager; Ian R. Parry; M. J. Irwin; Nicholas A. Walton; David A. King; David Sun; Eduaro Gonzalez-Solares; Ian Tosh; Gavin Dalton; Kevin Middleton; P. Bonifacio; Pascal Jagourel

The 4MOST[1] instrument is a concept for a wide-field, fibre-fed high multiplex spectroscopic instrument facility on the ESO VISTA telescope designed to perform a massive (initially >25x106 spectra in 5 years) combined all-sky public survey. The main science drivers are: Gaia follow up of chemo-dynamical structure of the Milky Way, stellar radial velocities, parameters and abundances, chemical tagging; eROSITA follow up of cosmology with x-ray clusters of galaxies, X-ray AGN/galaxy evolution to z~5, Galactic X-ray sources and resolving the Galactic edge; Euclid/LSST/SKA and other survey follow up of Dark Energy, Galaxy evolution and transients. The surveys will be undertaken simultaneously requiring: highly advanced targeting and scheduling software, also comprehensive data reduction and analysis tools to produce high-level data products. The instrument will allow simultaneous observations of ~1600 targets at R~5,000 from 390-900nm and ~800 targets at R<18,000 in three channels between ~395-675nm (channel bandwidth: 45nm blue, 57nm green and 69nm red) over a hexagonal field of view of ~ 4.1 degrees. The initial 5-year 4MOST survey is currently expect to start in 2020. We provide and overview of the 4MOST systems: optomechanical, control, data management and operations concepts; and initial performance estimates.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2006

The SAURON project – IV. The mass-to-light ratio, the virial mass estimator and the Fundamental Plane of elliptical and lenticular galaxies

Michele Cappellari; Roland Bacon; Martin Bureau; M.C. Damen; Roger L. Davies; P. T. de Zeeuw; Eric Emsellem; J. Falcón-Barroso; Davor Krajnović; Harald Kuntschner; Richard M. McDermid; Reynier F. Peletier; Marc Sarzi; Remco C. E. van den Bosch; Glenn van de Ven

We investigate the well-known correlations between the dynamical mass-to-light ratio M/L and other global observables of elliptical (E) and lenticul ar (S0) galaxies. We construct twointegral Jeans and three-integral Schwarzschild dynamical models for a sample of 25 E/S0 galaxies with SAURON integral-field stellar kinematics to about one effective (h alf-light) radius Re. They have well-calibrated I-band Hubble Space TelescopeWFPC2 and large-field ground-based photometry, accurate surface brightness fluc tuation distances, and their observed kinematics is consistent with an axisymmetric intrinsic sh ape. All these factors result in an unprecedented accuracy in the M/L measurements. We find a tight correlation of the form (M/L) = (3.80 ± 0.14) × (σe/200 km s 1 ) 0.84±0.07 between the M/L (in the I-band) measured from the dynamical models and the luminosity-weighted second moment σe of the lineof-sight velocity-distribution within Re. The observed rms scatter in M/L for our sample is 18%, while the inferred intrinsic scatter is � 13%. The (M/L)‐σe relation can be included in the remarkable series of tight correlations between σe and other galaxy global observables. The comparison of the observed correlations with the predictions of the Fundamental Plane (FP), and with simple virial estimates, shows that the ‘tilt ’ of the FP of early-type galaxies, describing the deviation of the FP from the virial relation, is almost exclusively due to a real M/L variation, while structural and orbital non-homology have a negligible effect. When the photometric parameters are determined in the ‘classic’ way , using growth curves, and the σe is measured in a large aperture, the virial mass appears to be a reliable estimator of the mass in the central regions of galaxies, and can be safely used where more ‘expensive’ models are not feasible (e.g. in high redshift studies). In this case th e best-fitting virial relation has the form (M/L)vir = (5.0±0.1)×Reσ 2 e/(L G), in reasonable agreement with simple theoretical predictions. We find no difference between the M/L of the galaxies in clusters and in the field. The comparison of the dynamical M/L with the (M/L)pop inferred from the analysis of the stellar population, indicates a median dark matter fractio n in early-type galaxies of � 30% of the total mass inside one Re, in broad agreement with previous studies, and it also shows that the stellar initial mass function varies little among d ifferent galaxies. Our results suggest a variation in M/L at constant (M/L)pop, which seems to be linked to the galaxy dynamics. We speculate that fast rotating galaxies have lower dark matte r fractions than the slow rotating and generally more massive ones. If correct, this would suggest a connection between the galaxy assembly history and the dark matter halo structure. The tightness of our correlation provides some evidence against cuspy nuclear dark matter profiles in g alaxies.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

The ATLAS3D project – I. A volume‐limited sample of 260 nearby early‐type galaxies: science goals and selection criteria

Michele Cappellari; Eric Emsellem; Davor Krajnović; Richard M. McDermid; Nicholas Scott; G. Verdoes Kleijn; Lisa M. Young; Katherine Alatalo; Roland Bacon; Leo Blitz; Maxime Bois; Frédéric Bournaud; Martin Bureau; Roger L. Davies; Timothy A. Davis; P. T. de Zeeuw; Pierre-Alain Duc; Sadegh Khochfar; Harald Kuntschner; Pierre-Yves Lablanche; Raffaella Morganti; Thorsten Naab; Tom Oosterloo; Marc Sarzi; Paolo Serra; Anne-Marie Weijmans

The ATLAS3D project is a multiwavelength survey combined with a theoretical modelling effort. The observations span from the radio to the millimetre and optical, and provide multicolour imaging, two-dimensional kinematics of the atomic (H i), molecular (CO) and ionized gas (H beta, [O iii] and [N i]), together with the kinematics and population of the stars (H beta, Fe5015 and Mg b), for a carefully selected, volume-limited (1.16 x 105 Mpc3) sample of 260 early-type (elliptical E and lenticular S0) galaxies (ETGs). The models include semi-analytic, N-body binary mergers and cosmological simulations of galaxy formation. Here we present the science goals for the project and introduce the galaxy sample and the selection criteria. The sample consists of nearby (D 15 degrees) morphologically selected ETGs extracted from a parent sample of 871 galaxies (8 per cent E, 22 per cent S0 and 70 per cent spirals) brighter than M-K <-21.5 mag (stellar mass M-star greater than or similar to 6 x109 M-circle dot). We analyse possible selection biases and we conclude that the parent sample is essentially complete and statistically representative of the nearby galaxy population. We present the size-luminosity relation for the spirals and ETGs and show that the ETGs in the ATLAS3D sample define a tight red sequence in a colour-magnitude diagram, with few objects in the transition from the blue cloud. We describe the strategy of the SAURON integral field observations and the extraction of the stellar kinematics with the ppxf method. We find typical 1 Sigma errors of delta V approximate to 6 km s-1, delta Sigma approximate to 7 km s-1, delta h(3) approximate to delta h(4) approximate to 0.03 in the mean velocity, the velocity dispersion and Gauss-Hermite (GH) moments for galaxies with effective dispersion Sigma(e) greater than or similar to 120 km s-1. For galaxies with lower Sigma(e) (approximate to 40 per cent of the sample) the GH moments are gradually penalized by ppxf towards zero to suppress the noise produced by the spectral undersampling and only V and Sigma can be measured. We give an overview of the characteristics of the other main data sets already available for our sample and of the ongoing modelling projects.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2007

The SAURON project --IX. A kinematic classification for early-type galaxies

Eric Emsellem; Michele Cappellari; Davor Krajnović; Glenn van de Ven; Roland Bacon; Martin Bureau; Roger L. Davies; P. T. de Zeeuw; J. Falcón-Barroso; Harald Kuntschner; Richard M. McDermid; Reynier F. Peletier; Marc Sarzi

Two-dimensional stellar kinematics of 48 representative elliptical (E) and lenticular (S0) galaxies obtained with the SAURON integral-field spectrograph reveal that early-type galaxies appear in two broad flavours, depending on whether they exhibit clear large-scale rotation or not. We define a new parameter lambda(R) equivalent to / , which involves luminosity-weighted averages over the full two-dimensional kinematic field as a proxy to quantify the observed projected stellar angular momentum per unit mass. We use it as a basis for a new kinematic classification: early-type galaxies are separated into slow and fast rotators, depending on whether they have lambda(R) values within their effective radius R(e) below or above 0.1, respectively. Slow and fast rotators are shown to be physically distinct classes of galaxies, a result which cannot simply be the consequence of a biased viewing angle. Fast rotators tend to be relatively low-luminosity galaxies with M(B) greater than or similar to-20.5. Slow rotators tend to be brighter and more massive galaxies, but are still spread over a wide range of absolute magnitude. Three slow rotators of our sample, among the most massive ones, are consistent with zero rotation. Remarkably, all other slow rotators (besides the atypical case of NGC 4550) contain a large kpc-scale kinematically decoupled core (KDC). All fast rotators (except one galaxy with well-known irregular shells) show well-aligned photometric and kinemetric axes, and small velocity twists, in contrast with most slow rotators which exhibit significant misalignments and velocity twists. These results are supported by a supplement of 18 additional early-type galaxies observed with SAURON. In a companion paper (Paper X), we also show that fast and slow rotators are distinct classes in terms of their orbital distribution. We suggest that gas is a key ingredient in the formation and evolution of fast rotators, and that the slowest rotators are the extreme evolutionary end point reached deep in gravitational potential wells where dissipationless mergers had a major role in the evolution, and for which most of the baryonic angular momentum was expelled outwards. Detailed numerical simulations in a cosmological context are required to understand how to form large-scale KDCs within slow rotators, and more generally to explain the distribution of lambda(R) values within early-type galaxies and the distinction between fast and slow rotators.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2001

The sauron project. I. the panoramic integral-field spectrograph

Roland Bacon; Yannick Copin; Guy J. Monnet; Bryan W. Miller; Jeremy R. Allington-Smith; Martin Bureau; C. Marcella Carollo; Roger L. Davies; Eric Emsellem; Harald Kuntschner; Reynier F. Peletier; E. K. Verolme; P. Tim de Zeeuw

A new integral-field spectrograph, SAURON, is described. It is based on the TIGER principle, and uses a lenslet array. SAURON has a large field of view and high throughput, and allows simultaneous sky subtraction. Its design is optimized for studies of the stellar kinematics, gas kinematics, and line-strength distributions of nearby early-type galaxies. The instrument design and specifications are described, as well as the extensive analysis software which was developed to obtain fully calibrated spectra, and the associated kinematic and line-strength measurements. A companion paper will report on the first results obtained with SAURON on the William Herschel Telescope.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

The SAURON project: XVII. Stellar population analysis of the absorption line strength maps of 48 early-type galaxies

Harald Kuntschner; Eric Emsellem; Roland Bacon; Michele Cappellari; Roger L. Davies; P. Tim de Zeeuw; J. Falcón-Barroso; Davor Krajnović; Richard M. McDermid; Reynier F. Peletier; Marc Sarzi; Kristen L. Shapiro; Remco C. E. van den Bosch; Glenn van de Ven

We present a stellar population analysis of the absorption line strength maps for 48 early-type galaxies from the SAURON sample. Using the line strength index maps of H beta, Fe5015 and Mgb, measured in the Lick/IDS system and spatially binned to a constant signal-to-noise ratio, together with predictions from up-to-date stellar population models, we estimate the simple stellar population-equivalent (SSP-equivalent) age, metallicity and abundance ratio [alpha/Fe] over a two-dimensional field extending up to approximately one effective radius. A discussion of calibrations and differences between model predictions is given. Maps of SSP-equivalent age, metallicity and abundance ratio [alpha/Fe] are presented for each galaxy. We find a large range of SSP-equivalent ages in our sample, of which similar to 40 per cent of the galaxies show signs of a contribution from a young stellar population. The most extreme cases of post-starburst galaxies, with SSP-equivalent ages of The flattened components with disc-like kinematics previously identified in all fast rotators are shown to be connected to regions of distinct stellar populations. These range from the young, still star-forming circumnuclear discs and rings with increased metallicity preferentially found in intermediate-mass fast rotators, to apparently old structures with extended disc-like kinematics, which are observed to have an increased metallicity and mildly depressed [alpha/Fe] ratio compared to the main body of the galaxy. The slow rotators, often harbouring kinematically decoupled components (KDC) in their central regions, generally show no stellar population signatures over and above the well-known metallicity gradients in early-type galaxies and are largely consistent with old (>= 10 Gyr) stellar populations. Using radially averaged stellar population gradients we find in agreement with Spolaor et al. a mass-metallicity gradient relation where low-mass fast rotators form a sequence of increasing metallicity gradient with increasing mass. For more massive systems (above similar to 3.5 x 10(10) M-circle dot) there is an overall downturn such that metallicity gradients become shallower with increased scatter at a given mass leading to the most massive systems being slow rotators with relatively shallow metallicity gradients. The observed shallower metallicity gradients and increased scatter could be a consequence of the competition between different star formation and assembly scenarios following a general trend of diminishing gas fractions and more equal-mass mergers with increasing mass, leading to the most massive systems being devoid of ordered motion and signs of recent star formation.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

The SAURON project – XVI. On the sources of ionization for the gas in elliptical and lenticular galaxies

Marc Sarzi; Joseph C. Shields; Kevin Schawinski; Hyunjin Jeong; Kristen L. Shapiro; Roland Bacon; Martin Bureau; Michele Cappellari; Roger L. Davies; P. Tim de Zeeuw; Eric Emsellem; J. Falcón-Barroso; Davor Krajnović; Harald Kuntschner; Richard M. McDermid; Reynier F. Peletier; Remco C. E. van den Bosch; Glen van den Ven; Sukyoung K. Yi

Following our study on the incidence, morphology and kinematics of the ionised gas in early-type galaxies we now address the question of what is powering the observed nebular


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2006

The SAURON project - VI. Line strength maps of 48 elliptical and lenticular galaxies

Harald Kuntschner; Eric Emsellem; Roland Bacon; Martin Bureau; Michele Cappellari; Roger L. Davies; P. T. de Zeeuw; J. Falcón-Barroso; Davor Krajnović; Richard M. McDermid; Reynier F. Peletier; Marc Sarzi

We present absorption line strength maps of 48 representative elliptical and lenticular galaxies obtained as part of a survey of nearby galaxies using our custom-built integral-field spectrograph, SAURON, operating on the William Herschel Telescope. Using high-quality spectra, spatially binned to a constant signal-to-noise, we measure four key age, metallicity and abundance ratio sensitive indices from the Lick/IDS system over a two-dimensional field extending up to approximately one effective radius. A discussion of calibrations and offsets is given, as well as a description of error estimation and nebular emission correction. We modify the classical Fe5270 index to define a new index, Fe5270 S, which maximizes the usable spatial coverage ofSAURON. Maps of H�, Fe5015, Mgb and Fe5270S are presented for each galaxy. We use the maps to compute average line strengths integrated over circular apertures of oneeighth effective radius, and compare the resulting relatio ns of index versus velocity dispersion with previous long-slit work. The metal line strength maps show generally negative gradients with increasing radius roughly consistent with the morphology of the light profiles. Remarkable deviations from this general trend exist, particularl y the Mgb isoindex contours appear to be flatter than the isophotes of the surface brightness for ab out 40% of our galaxies without significant dust features. Generally these galaxies exhibi t significant rotation. We infer from this that the fast-rotating component features a higher met allicity and/or an increased Mg/Fe


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2002

Overview of the Nearby Supernova Factory

G. Aldering; Gilles Adam; P. Antilogus; Pierre Astier; Roland Bacon; Sébastien Bongard; C. Bonnaud; Yannick Copin; D. Hardin; D. Andy Howell; Jean-Pierre Lemmonnier; Joseph Levy; Stewart C. Loken; Peter E. Nugent; R. Pain; Arlette Pecontal; Emmanuel Pecontal; S. Perlmutter; Robert Michael Quimby; Kyan Schahmaneche; Gerard Smadja; W. Michael Wood-Vasey

The Nearby Supernova Factory (Snfactory) is an international experiment designed to lay the foundation for the next generation of cosmology experiments (such as CFHTLS, wP, SNAP and LSST) which will measure the expansion history of the Universe using Type Ia supernovae. The Snfactory will discover and obtain frequent lightcurve spectrophotometry covering 3200-10000Å for roughly 300 Type Ia supernovae at the low-redshift end of the smooth Hubble flow. The quantity, quality, breadth of galactic environments, and homogeneous nature of the Snfactory dataset will make it the premier source of calibration for the Type Ia supernova width-brightness relation and the intrinsic supernova colors used for K-correction and correction for extinction by host-galaxy dust. This dataset will also allow an extensive investigation of additional parameters which possibly influence the quality of Type Ia supernovae as cosmological probes. The Snfactory search capabilities and follow-up instrumentation include wide-field CCD imagers on two 1.2-m telescopes (via collaboration with the Near Earth Asteroid Tracking team at JPL and the QUEST team at Yale), and a two-channel integral-field-unit optical spectrograph/imager being fabricated for the University of Hawaii 2.2-m telescope. In addition to ground-based follow-up, UV spectra for a subsample of these supernovae will be obtained with HST. The pipeline to obtain, transfer via wireless and standard internet, and automatically process the search images is in operation. Software and hardware development is now underway to enable the execution of follow-up spectroscopy of supernova candidates at the Hawaii 2.2-m telescope via automated remote control of the telescope and the IFU spectrograph/imager.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2006

The SAURON project – VIII. OASIS/CFHT integral‐field spectroscopy of elliptical and lenticular galaxy centres

Richard M. McDermid; Eric Emsellem; Kristen L. Shapiro; Roland Bacon; Martin Bureau; Michele Cappellari; Roger L. Davies; Tim de Zeeuw; J. Falcón-Barroso; Davor Krajnović; Harald Kuntschner; Reynier F. Peletier; Marc Sarzi

We present high spatial resolution integral-field spectros copy of 28 elliptical (E) and lenticular (S0) galaxies from the SAURON representative survey obtained with the OASIS spectrograph during its operation at the CFHT. These seeing-limited observations explore the central 8 ′′ ×10 ′′ (typically one kiloparsec diameter) regions of these galax ies using a spatial sampling four times higher than SAURON (0. 27 vs. 0. 94 spatial elements), resulting in almost a factor of two improvement in the median PSF. These data allow accurate study of the central regions to complement the large-scale view provided by SAURON. Here we present the stellar and gas kinematics, stellar absorption-line strengths and neb ular emission-line strengths for this sample. We also characterise the stellar velocity maps using the ‘kinemetry’ technique, and derive maps of the luminosity-weighted stellar age, metallicity and abundance ratio via stellar population models. We give a brief review of the structures found in our maps, linking also to larger-scale structures measured with SAURON. We present two previously unreported kinematically-decoupled components (KDCs) in the centres of NGC 3032 and NGC 4382. We compare the intrinsic size and luminosity-weighted stellar age of all the visible KDCs in the full SAURON sample, and find two types of components: kiloparsec-scale K DCs, which are older than 8 Gyr, and are found in galaxies with little net rot ation; and compact KDCs, which have intrinsic diameters of less than a few hundred parsec, show a range of stellar ages from 0.5 - 15 Gyr (with 5/6 younger than 5 Gyr), are found exclusively in fast-rotating galaxies, and are close to counter-rotating around the same axis as their host. Of the 7 galaxies in the SAURON sample with integrated luminosity-weighted ages less than 5 Gyr, 5 show such compact KDCs, suggesting a link between counter-rotation and recent star-formation. We show that this may be due to a combination of small sample size at young ages, and an observational bias, since young KDCs are easier to detect than their older and/or co-rotating counterparts.

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Reynier F. Peletier

Kapteyn Astronomical Institute

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Harald Kuntschner

European Southern Observatory

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Davor Krajnović

European Southern Observatory

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Johan Richard

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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