Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where S. Bardelli is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by S. Bardelli.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2006

Accurate photometric redshifts for the CFHT Legacy Survey calibrated using the VIMOS VLT Deep Survey

O. Ilbert; S. Arnouts; H. J. McCracken; M. Bolzonella; E. Bertin; O. Le Fèvre; Y. Mellier; G. Zamorani; R. Pello; A. Iovino; L. Tresse; V. Le Brun; D. Bottini; B. Garilli; D. Maccagni; J. P. Picat; R. Scaramella; M. Scodeggio; G. Vettolani; A. Zanichelli; C. Adami; S. Bardelli; A. Cappi; S. Charlot; P. Ciliegi; T. Contini; O. Cucciati; S. Foucaud; P. Franzetti; I. Gavignaud

We present photometric redshifts for an uniquely large and deep sample of 522286 objects with i_{AB}<25 in the Canada-France Legacy Survey ``Deep Survey fields, which cover a total effective area of 3.2 deg^2. We use 3241 spectroscopic redshifts with 0


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 = 0.70u2009±u20090.26, which corresponds to a growth rate of structure at that time of f = 0.91u2009±u20090.36. 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.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2005

The GALEX-VVDS measurement of the evolution of the far-ultraviolet luminosity density and the cosmic star formation rate

David Schiminovich; O. Ilbert; S. Arnouts; B. Milliard; L. Tresse; O. Le Fèvre; Marie Treyer; Ted K. Wyder; Tamas Budavari; E. Zucca; G. Zamorani; D. C. Martin; C. Adami; M. Arnaboldi; S. Bardelli; Tom A. Barlow; Luciana Bianchi; M. Bolzonella; D. Bottini; Yong-Ik Byun; A. Cappi; T. Contini; S. Charlot; J. Donas; Karl Forster; S. Foucaud; P. Franzetti; Peter G. Friedman; B. Garilli; I. Gavignaud

In a companion paper (Arnouts et al. 2004) we presented new measurements of the galaxy luminosity function at 1500 Angstroms out to z~1 using GALEX-VVDS observations (1039 galaxies with NUV 0.2) and at higher z using existing data sets. In this paper we use the same sample to study evolution of the FUV luminosity density. We detect evolution consistent with a (1+z)^{2.5+/-0.7} rise to z~1 and (1+z)^{0.5+/-0.4} for z>1. The luminosity density from the most UV-luminous galaxies (UVLG) is undergoing dramatic evolution (x30) between 025%) of the total FUV luminosity density at z<1. We measure dust attenuation and star formation rates of our sample galaxies and determine the star formation rate density as a function of redshift, both uncorrected and corrected for dust. We find good agreement with other measures of the SFR density in the rest ultraviolet and Halpha given the still significant uncertainties in the attenuation correction.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2005

The GALEX VIMOS-VLT Deep Survey Measurement of the Evolution of the 1500 Å Luminosity Function

S. Arnouts; David Schiminovich; O. Ilbert; L. Tresse; B. Milliard; Marie Treyer; S. Bardelli; Tamas Budavari; Ted K. Wyder; E. Zucca; O. Le Fèvre; D. C. Martin; Giampaolo Vettolani; C. Adami; M. Arnaboldi; Tom A. Barlow; Luciana Bianchi; M. Bolzonella; D. Bottini; Yong-Ik Byun; A. Cappi; S. Charlot; T. Contini; J. Donas; Karl Forster; Sylvie Foucaud; P. Franzetti; Peter G. Friedman; B. Garilli; I. Gavignaud

We present the first measurement of the galaxy luminosity function (LF) at 1500 A in the range 0.2 ≤ z ≤ 1.2 based on Galaxy Evolution Explorer VIMOS-VLT Deep Survey observations (~1000 spectroscopic redshifts for galaxies with NUV ≤ 24.5) and at higher z using existing data sets. Our main results are summarized as follows: (1) Luminosity evolution is observed with ΔM* ~ -2.0 mag between z = 0 and z = 1 and ΔM* ~ -1.0 mag between z = 1 and z = 3. This confirms that the star formation activity was significantly higher in the past. (2) The LF slopes vary in the range -1.2 ≥ α ≥ -1.65, with a marginally significant hint of increase at higher z. (3) We split the sample in three rest-frame (B - I) intervals, providing an approximate spectral type classification: Sb-Sd, Sd-Irr, and unobscured starbursts. We find that the bluest class evolves less strongly in luminosity than the two other classes. On the other hand, their number density increases sharply with z (~15% in the local universe to ~55% at z ~ 1), while that of the reddest classes decreases.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2005

The VVDS data reduction pipeline: introducing VIPGI, the VIMOS Interactive Pipeline and Graphical Interface

M. Scodeggio; P. Franzetti; B. Garilli; A. Zanichelli; S. Paltani; D. Maccagni; D. Bottini; V. Le Brun; T. Contini; R. Scaramella; C. Adami; S. Bardelli; E. Zucca; L. Tresse; O. Ilbert; S. Foucaud; A. Iovino; R. Merighi; G. Zamorani; I. Gavignaud; D. Rizzo; H. J. McCracken; O. Le Fèvre; J. P. Picat; G. Vettolani; M. Arnaboldi; S. Arnouts; M. Bolzonella; A. Cappi; S. Charlot

The VIMOS VLT Deep Survey (VVDS), designed to measure 150,000 galaxy redshifts, requires a dedicated data reduction and analysis pipeline to process in a timely fashion the large amount of spectroscopic data being produced. This requirement has lead to the development of the VIMOS Interactive Pipeline and Graphical Interface (VIPGI), a new software package designed to simplify to a very high degree the task of reducing astronomical data obtained with VIMOS, the imaging spectrograph built by the VIRMOS Consortium for the European Southern Observatory, and mounted on Unit 3 (Melipal) of the Very Large Telescope (VLT) at Paranal Observatory (Chile). VIPGI provides the astronomer with specially designed VIMOS data reduction functions, a VIMOS-centric data organizer, and dedicated data browsing and plotting tools, that can be used to verify the quality and accuracy of the various stages of the data reduction process. The quality and accuracy of the data reduction pipeline are comparable to those obtained using well known IRAF tasks, but the speed of the data reduction process is significantly increased, thanks to the large set of dedicated features. In this paper we discuss the details of the MOS data reduction pipeline implemented in VIPGI, as applied to the reduction of some 20,000 VVDS spectra, assessing quantitatively the accuracy of the various reduction steps. We also provide a more general overview of VIPGI capabilities, a tool that can be used for the reduction of any kind of VIMOS data.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

The VIMOS VLT deep survey final data release: A spectroscopic sample of 35 016 galaxies and AGN out to z ∼ 6.7 selected with 17.5 ≤ iAB ≤ 24.75

O. Le Fèvre; P. Cassata; O. Cucciati; B. Garilli; O. Ilbert; V. Le Brun; D. Maccagni; C. Moreau; M. Scodeggio; L. Tresse; G. Zamorani; C. Adami; S. Arnouts; S. Bardelli; M. Bolzonella; M. Bondi; A. Bongiorno; D. Bottini; A. Cappi; S. Charlot; P. Ciliegi; T. Contini; S. de la Torre; S. Foucaud; P. Franzetti; I. Gavignaud; L. Guzzo; A. Iovino; B. C. Lemaux; C. López-Sanjuan

We describe the completed VIMOS VLT Deep Survey, and the final data release of 35016 galaxies and type-I AGN with measured spectroscopic redshifts up to redshift z~6.7, in areas 0.142 to 8.7 square degrees, and volumes from 0.5x10^6 to 2x10^7h^-3Mpc^3. We have selected samples of galaxies based solely on their i-band magnitude reaching i_{AB}=24.75. Spectra have been obtained with VIMOS on the ESO-VLT, integrating 0.75h, 4.5h and 18h for the Wide, Deep, and Ultra-Deep nested surveys. A total of 1263 galaxies have been re-observed independently within the VVDS, and from the VIPERS and MASSIV surveys. They are used to establish the redshift measurements reliability, to assess completeness, and to provide a weighting scheme taking into account the survey selection function. We describe the main properties of the VVDS samples, and the VVDS is compared to other spectroscopic surveys. In total we have obtained spectroscopic redshifts for 34594 galaxies, 422 type-I AGN, and 12430 Galactic stars. The survey has enabled to identify galaxies up to very high redshifts with 4669 redshifts in 1 3, and specific populations like LAE have been identified out to z=6.62. We show that the VVDS occupies a unique place in the parameter space defined by area, depth, redshift coverage, and number of spectra. The VVDS provides a comprehensive survey of the distant universe, covering all epochs since z, or more than 12 Gyr of cosmic time, with a uniform selection, the largest such sample to date. A wealth of science results derived from the VVDS have shed new light on the evolution of galaxies and AGN, and their distribution in space, over this large cosmic time. A final public release of the complete VVDS spectroscopic redshift sample is available at http://cesam.lam.fr/vvds.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

Photometric redshifts for the CFHTLS T0004 deep and wide fields

J. Coupon; O. Ilbert; Martin Kilbinger; H. J. McCracken; Y. Mellier; S. Arnouts; E. Bertin; P. Hudelot; Mathias Schultheis; O. Le Fèvre; V. Le Brun; L. Guzzo; S. Bardelli; E. Zucca; M. Bolzonella; B. Garilli; G. Zamorani; A. Zanichelli

We compute photometric redshifts based on the template-fitting method in the fourth public release of the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey. This unique multi-colour catalogue comprises u*,g,r,i,z photometry in four deep fields of 1 deg2 each and 35 deg2 distributed over three Wide fields. Our photometric redshifts are calibrated with and compared to 16,983 high-quality spectroscopic redshifts from several surveys. We find a dispersion of 0.028 and an outlier rate of 3.5% in the Deep field at iAB < 24 and a dispersion of 0.036 and an outlier rate of 2.8% in the Wide field at iAB < 22.5. Beyond iAB = 22.5 in the Wide field the number of outliers rises from 5% to 10% at iAB<23 and iAB<24 respectively. For the Wide sample, we find the systematic redshift bias keeps below 1% to iAB < 22.5, whereas we find no significant bias in the Deep field. We investigated the effect of tile-to-tile photometric variations and demonstrate that the accuracy of our photometric redshifts is reduced by at most 21%. We separate stars from galaxies using both the size and colour information, reducing the contamination by stars in our catalogues from 50% to 8% at iAB < 22.5 in fields with the highest stellar density while keeping a complete galaxy sample. Our CFHTLS T0004 photometric redshifts are distributed to the community. Our release include 592,891 (iAB < 22.5) and 244,701 (iAB < 24) reliable galaxy photometric redshifts in the Wide and Deep fields, respectively.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2003

The VLA-VIRMOS Deep Field I. Radio observations probing the microJy source population

M. Bondi. P. Ciliegi; G. Zamorani; L. Gregorini; G. Vettolani; P. Parma; H. R. de Ruiter; O. Le Fèvre; M. Arnaboldi; L. Guzzo; D. Maccagni; R. Scaramella; C. Adami; S. Bardelli; M. Bolzonella; D. Bottini; A. Cappi; Sylvie Foucaud; P. Franzetti; B. Garilli; S. Gwyn O. Ilbert; A. Iovino; V. Le Brun; B. Marano; C. Marinoni; H. J. McCracken; B. Meneux; A. Pollo; L. Pozzetti; M. Radovich; V. Ripepi

We have conducted a deep survey (r.m.s noise 17 microJy) with the Very Large Array (VLA) at 1.4 GHz, with a resolution of 6 arcsec, of a 1 square degree region included in the VIRMOS VLT Deep Survey. In the same field we already have multiband photometry down to I(AB)=25, and spectroscopic observations will be obtained during the VIRMOS VLT survey. The homogeneous sensitivity over the whole field has allowed to derive a complete sample of 1054 radio sources (5 sigma limit). We give a detailed description of the data reduction and of the analysis of the radio observations, with particular care to the effects of clean bias and bandwidth smearing, and of the methods used to obtain the catalogue of radio sources. To estimate the effect of the resolution bias on our observations we have modelled the effective angular-size distribution of the sources in our sample and we have used this distribution to simulate a sample of radio sources. Finally we present the radio count distribution down to 0.08 mJy derived from the catalogue. Our counts are in good agreement with the best fit derived from earlier surveys, and are about 50 % higher than the counts in the HDF. The radio count distribution clearly shows, with extremely good statistics, the change in the slope for the sub-mJy radio sources.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 1994

A study of the core of the Shapley Concentration – I. The sample

S. Bardelli; E. Zucca; Giampaolo Vettolani; G. Zamorani; R. Scaramella; Chris A. Collins; H. T. MacGillivray

We report the first results of a spectroscopic survey of galaxies in the core of the Shapley Concentration, the richest nearby supercluster of clusters of galaxies. We have measured 311 new galaxy redshifts in an area of ∼4.5 deg 2 centred on the Abell cluster A3558. When the data already available in the literature are also considered, the total number of galaxy redshifts in this area amounts to more than 500. On the basis of these data, we estimate the mean velocities and the velocity dispersions of the Abell clusters A3556 and A3558 and the poor cluster SC 1329-314


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2000

A study of the core of the Shapley Concentration — IV. Distribution of intercluster galaxies and supercluster properties

S. Bardelli; E. Zucca; G. Zamorani; Lauro Moscardini; R. Scaramella

(abridged) We present the results of a redshift survey of intercluster galaxies in the central region of the Shapley Concentration supercluster, aimed at determining the distribution of galaxies in between obvious overdensities. Our sample is formed by 442 new redshifts, mainly in the b_J magnitude range 17-18.8. Adding the data from our redshift surveys on the A3558 and A3528 complexes, which are close to the geometrical centre of this supercluster, we obtain a total sample of ~2000 radial velocities. Using the 1440 galaxies of our total sample in the magnitude range 17 - 18.8, we reconstructed the density profile in the central part of the Shapley Concentration; moreover we detected another significant overdensity at ~30000 km/s (dubbed S300). We estimate the total overdensity in galaxies, the mass and the dynamical state of these structures, and discuss the effect of considering a bias between the galaxy distribution and the underlying matter. We find an indication that the value of the bias between clusters and galaxies in the Shapley Concentration is higher that that reported in literature, confirming the impression that this supercluster is very rich in clusters. Finally, from the comparison with some theoretical scenarios, we find that the existence of the Shapley Concentration is more consistent with the predictions of the models with a matter density parameter<1, such as open CDM and Lambda CDM.

Collaboration


Dive into the S. Bardelli's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

O. Le Fèvre

Aix-Marseille University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

V. Le Brun

Aix-Marseille University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

E. Zucca

University of Bologna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge