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Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2003

SWIRE: The SIRTF Wide-Area Infrared Extragalactic Survey

Carol J. Lonsdale; Harding E. Smith; Michael Rowan-Robinson; Jason A. Surace; D. L. Shupe; Cong Xu; S. J. Oliver; Deborah Lynne Padgett; F. Fang; Tim Conrow; A. Franceschini; Nick Gautier; Matthew Joseph Griffin; Perry B. Hacking; Frank J. Masci; G. Morrison; Joanne O’Linger; Frazer N. Owen; I. Perez-Fournon; M. Pierre; Gordon J. Stacey; Sandra Castro; Maria del Carmen Polletta; D. Farrah; T. H. Jarrett; D. T. Frayer; Brian D. Siana; T. Babbedge; Simon Dye; M. Fox

The largest of the SIRTF Legacy programs, SWIRE will survey 65 sq. deg. in seven high latitude fields selected to be the best wide low-extinction windows into the extragalactic sky. SWIRE will detect millions of spheroids, disks and starburst galaxies to z>3 and will map L* and brighter systems on scales up to 150 Mpc at z∼0.5–1. It will also detect ∼104 low extinction AGN and large numbers of obscured AGN. An extensive program of complementary observations is underway. The data are non-proprietary and will be made available beginning in Spring 2004.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

The Lesser Role of Starbursts in Star Formation at z = 2

G. Rodighiero; E. Daddi; I. Baronchelli; A. Cimatti; A. Renzini; H. Aussel; P. Popesso; D. Lutz; Paola Andreani; S. Berta; A. Cava; D. Elbaz; A. Feltre; A. Fontana; N. M. Förster Schreiber; A. Franceschini; R. Genzel; A. Grazian; C. Gruppioni; O. Ilbert; E. Le Floc'h; G. Magdis; M. Magliocchetti; B. Magnelli; R. Maiolino; H. J. McCracken; R. Nordon; A. Poglitsch; P. Santini; F. Pozzi

Two main modes of star formation are know to control the growth of galaxies: a relatively steady one in disk-like galaxies, defining a tight star formation rate (SFR)-stellar mass sequence, and a starburst mode in outliers to such a sequence which is generally interpreted as driven by merging. Such starburst galaxies are rare but have much higher SFRs, and it is of interest to establish the relative importance of these two modes. PACS/Herschel observations over the whole COSMOS and GOODS-South fields, in conjunction with previous optical/near-IR data, have allowed us to accurately quantify for the first time the relative contribution of the two modes to the global SFR density in the redshift interval 1.5 1000 M ☉ yr-1, off-sequence sources significantly contribute to the SFR density (46% ± 20%). We conclude that merger-driven starbursts play a relatively minor role in the formation of stars in galaxies, whereas they may represent a critical phase toward the quenching of star formation and morphological transformation in galaxies.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011

PACS Evolutionary Probe (PEP) - A Herschel Key Program

D. Lutz; A. Poglitsch; B. Altieri; Paola Andreani; H. Aussel; S. Berta; A. Bongiovanni; D. Brisbin; A. Cava; J. Cepa; A. Cimatti; E. Daddi; H. Dominguez-Sanchez; D. Elbaz; N. M. Förster Schreiber; R. Genzel; A. Grazian; C. Gruppioni; Martin Harwit; G. Magdis; B. Magnelli; R. Maiolino; R. Nordon; A. M. Pérez García; P. Popesso; F. Pozzi; L. Riguccini; G. Rodighiero; A. Saintonge; M. Sánchez Portal

Deep far-infrared photometric surveys studying galaxy evolution and the nature of the cosmic infrared background are a key strength of the Herschel mission. We describe the scientific motivation for the PACS Evolutionary Probe (PEP) guaranteed time key program and its role within the entire set of Herschel surveys, and the field selection that includes popular multiwavelength fields such as GOODS, COSMOS, Lockman Hole, ECDFS, and EGS. We provide an account of the observing strategies and data reduction methods used. An overview of first science results illustrates the potential of PEP in providing calorimetric star formation rates for high-redshift galaxy populations, thus testing and superseding previous extrapolations from other wavelengths, and enabling a wide range of galaxy evolution studies.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

The deepest Herschel-PACS far-infrared survey: number counts and infrared luminosity functions from combined PEP/GOODS-H observations

B. Magnelli; P. Popesso; S. Berta; F. Pozzi; D. Elbaz; D. Lutz; M. Dickinson; B. Altieri; P. Andreani; H. Aussel; M. Béthermin; A. Bongiovanni; J. Cepa; V. Charmandaris; R.-R. Chary; Alessandro Cimatti; E. Daddi; N. M. Förster Schreiber; R. Genzel; C. Gruppioni; Martin Harwit; Ho Seong Hwang; R. J. Ivison; G. Magdis; Roberto Maiolino; E. J. Murphy; R. Nordon; M. Pannella; A. M. Pérez García; A. Poglitsch

We present results from the deepest Herschel-Photodetector Array Camera and Spectrometer (PACS) far-infrared blank field extragalactic survey, obtained by combining observations of the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODS) fields from the PACS Evolutionary Probe (PEP) and GOODS-Herschel key programmes. We describe data reduction and theconstruction of images and catalogues. In the deepest parts of the GOODS-S field, the catalogues reach 3σ depths of 0.9, 0.6 and 1.3 mJy at 70, 100 and 160 μm, respectively, and resolve ~75% of the cosmic infrared background at 100 μm and 160 μm into individually detected sources. We use these data to estimate the PACS confusion noise, to derive the PACS number counts down to unprecedented depths, and to determine the infrared luminosity function of galaxies down to L_(IR) = 10^(11) L⊙ at z ~ 1 and L_(IR) = 10^(12) L⊙ at z ~ 2, respectively. For the infrared luminosity function of galaxies, our deep Herschel far-infrared observations are fundamental because they provide more accurate infrared luminosity estimates than those previously obtained from mid-infrared observations. Maps and source catalogues (>3σ) are now publicly released. Combined with the large wealth of multi-wavelength data available for the GOODS fields, these data provide a powerful new tool for studying galaxy evolution over a broad range of redshifts.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

The first Herschel view of the mass-SFR link in high-z galaxies

G. Rodighiero; A. Cimatti; C. Gruppioni; P. Popesso; Paola Andreani; B. Altieri; H. Aussel; S. Berta; A. Bongiovanni; D. Brisbin; A. Cava; J. Cepa; E. Daddi; H. Dominguez-Sanchez; D. Elbaz; A. Fontana; N. M. Förster Schreiber; A. Franceschini; R. Genzel; A. Grazian; D. Lutz; G. Magdis; M. Magliocchetti; B. Magnelli; R. Maiolino; C. Mancini; R. Nordon; A. M. Pérez García; A. Poglitsch; P. Santini

Aims. We exploit deep observations of the GOODS-N field taken with PACS, the Photodetector Array Camera and Spectrometer, onboard of Herschel, as part of the PACS evolutionary probe guaranteed time (PEP), to study the link between star formation and stellar mass in galaxies to z ∼ 2. Methods. Starting from a stellar mass – selected sample of ∼4500 galaxies with mag4.5 μm < 23.0 (AB), we identify ∼350 objects with a PACS detection at 100 or 160 μ ma nd∼ 1500 with only Spitzer 24 μm counterpart. Stellar masses and total IR luminosities (LIR) are estimated by fitting the spectral energy distributions (SEDs). Results. Consistently with other Herschel results, we find that LIR based only on 24 μm data is overestimated by a median factor ∼ 1. 8a tz ∼ 2, whereas it is underestimated (with our approach) up to a factor ∼ 1. 6a t 0.5 < z < 1.0. We then exploit this calibration to correct LIR based on the MIPS/Spitzer fluxes. These results clearly show how Herschel is fundamental to constrain LIR, and hence the star formation rate (SFR), of high redshift galaxies. Using the galaxies detected with PACS (and/or MIPS), we investigate the existence and evolution of the relations between the SFR, the specific star formation rate (SSFR=SFR/mass) and the stellar mass. Moreover, in order to avoid selection effects, we also repeat this study through a stacking analysis on the PACS images to fully exploit the far-IR information also for the Herschel and Spitzer undetected subsamples. We find that the SSFR-mass relation steepens with redshift, being almost flat at z < 1.0 and reaching a slope of α = −0.50 +0.13 −0.16 at z ∼ 2, at odds with recent works based on radio-stacking analysis at the same redshift. The mean SSFR of galaxies increases with redshift, by a factor ∼15 for


The Astrophysical Journal | 2006

Chandra and Spitzer Unveil Heavily Obscured Quasars in the Chandra/SWIRE Survey*

Maria del Carmen Polletta; Belinda J. Wilkes; Brian D. Siana; Carol J. Lonsdale; Roy E. Kilgard; Harding E. Smith; Dong-Woo Kim; Frazer N. Owen; A. Efstathiou; T. H. Jarrett; Gordon J. Stacey; A. Franceschini; Michael Rowan-Robinson; T. Babbedge; S. Berta; F. Fang; D. Farrah; E. Gonzalez-Solares; G. Morrison; Jason A. Surace; Dave Shupe

Using the large multi-wavelength data set in the chandra/SWIRE Survey (0.6 square degrees in the Lockman Hole), we show evidence for the existence of highly obscured (Compton-thick) AGN, estimate a lower limit to their surface density and characterize their multi-wavelength properties. Two independent selection methods based on the X-ray and infrared spectral properties are presented. The two selected samples contain 1) 5 X-ray sources with hard X-ray spectra and column densities > 10^24 cm-2, and 2) 120 infrared sources with red and AGN-dominated infrared spectral energy distributions (SEDs). We estimate a surface density of at least 25 Compton-thick AGN per square degree detected in the infrared in the chandra/SWIRE field of which ~40% show distinct AGN signatures in their optical/near-infrared SEDs, the remainings being dominated by the host-galaxy emission. Only ~33% of all Compton-thick AGN are detected in the X-rays at our depth (F(0.3-8 keV)>10^-15 erg/cm2/s. We report the discovery of two sources in our sample of Compton-thick AGN, SWIRE_J104409.95+585224.8 (z=2.54) and SWIRE_J104406.30+583954.1 (z=2.43), which are the most luminous Compton-thick AGN at high-z currently known. The properties of these two sources are discussed in detail with an analysis of their spectra, SEDs, luminosities and black-hole masses.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

The mean star formation rate of X-ray selected active galaxies and its evolution from z ~ 2.5: results from PEP-Herschel

D. Rosario; P. Santini; D. Lutz; L. Shao; R. Maiolino; D. M. Alexander; B. Altieri; P. Andreani; H. Aussel; F. E. Bauer; S. Berta; A. Bongiovanni; W. N. Brandt; M. Brusa; J. Cepa; A. Cimatti; Thomas J. Cox; E. Daddi; D. Elbaz; A. Fontana; N. M. Förster Schreiber; R. Genzel; A. Grazian; E. Le Floc'h; B. Magnelli; V. Mainieri; Hagai Netzer; R. Nordon; I. Pérez Garcia; A. Poglitsch

We study relationships between star-formation rate (SFR) and the accretion luminosity and nuclear obscuration of X-ray selected active galactic nuclei (AGNs) using a combination of deep far-infrared (FIR) and X-ray data in three key extragalactic survey fields (GOODS-South, GOODS-North and COSMOS), as part of the PACS Evolutionary Probe (PEP) program. The use of three fields with differing areas and depths enables us to explore trends between the global FIR luminosity of the AGN hosts and the luminosity of the active nucleus across 4.5 orders of magnitude in AGN luminosity (LAGN) and spanning redshifts from the Local Universe to z = 2.5. Using imaging from the Herschel/PACS instrument in 2−3 bands, we combine FIR detections and stacks of undetected objects to arrive at mean fluxes for subsamples in bins of redshift and X-ray luminosity. We constrain the importance of AGN-heated dust emission in the FIR and confirm that the majority of the FIR emission of AGNs is produced by cold dust heated by star-formation in their host galaxies. We uncover characteristic trends between the mean FIR luminosity (L60) and accretion luminosity of AGNs, which depend both on LAGN and redshift. At low AGN luminosities, accretion and SFR are uncorrelated at all redshifts, consistent with a scenario where most low-luminosity AGNs are primarily fueled by secular processes in their host galaxies. At high AGN luminosities, a significant correlation is observed between L60 and LAGN, but only among AGNs at low and moderate redshifts (z 1) suggesting that the role of mergers is less important at these epochs. At all redshifts, we find essentially no relationship between L60 and nuclear obscuration across five orders of magnitude in obscuring Hydrogen column density (NH), suggesting that various mechanisms are likely to be responsible for obscuring X-rays in active galaxies. We discuss a broad scenario which can account for these trends: one in which two different modes of AGN fueling operate in the low- and high-luminosity regimes of SMBH accretion. We postulate that the dominant mode of accretion among high-luminosity AGNs evolves with redshift. Our study, as well as a body of evidence from the literature and emerging knowledge about the properties of high redshift galaxies, supports this scenario.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

A Herschel view of the far-infrared properties of submillimetre galaxies

B. Magnelli; D. Lutz; P. Santini; A. Saintonge; S. Berta; M. Albrecht; B. Altieri; P. Andreani; H. Aussel; Frank Bertoldi; M. Béthermin; A. Bongiovanni; P. Capak; S. C. Chapman; J. Cepa; A. Cimatti; A. Cooray; E. Daddi; A. L. R. Danielson; H. Dannerbauer; James Dunlop; D. Elbaz; D. Farrah; N. M. Förster Schreiber; R. Genzel; Ho Seong Hwang; E. Ibar; R. J. Ivison; E. Le Floc'h; G. Magdis

We study a sample of 61submillimetre galaxies (SMGs) selected from ground-based surveys, with known spectroscopic redshifts and observed with the Herschel Space Observatory as part of the PACS Evolutionary Probe (PEP) and the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES) guaranteed time key programmes. Our study makes use of the broad far-infrared and submillimetre wavelength coverage (100−600  μm) only made possible by the combination of observations from the PACS and SPIRE instruments aboard the Herschel Space Observatory. Using a power-law temperature distribution model to derive infrared luminosities and dust temperatures, we measure a dust emissivity spectral index for SMGs of β = 2.0 ± 0.2. Our results unambiguously unveil the diversity of the SMG population. Some SMGs exhibit extreme infrared luminosities of ~10^(13) L_⊙ and relatively warm dust components, while others are fainter (a few times 10^(12) L_⊙) and are biased towards cold dust temperatures. Although at z~2 classical SMGs (>5 mJy at 850 μm) have large infrared luminosities (~10^(13) L_⊙ ), objects only selected on their submm flux densities (without any redshift informations) probe a large range in dust temperatures and infrared luminosities. The extreme infrared luminosities of some SMGs (L_IR ≳ 10^(12.7) L_⊙, 26/61 systems) imply star formation rates (SFRs) of >500 M_⊙ yr^(-1) (assuming a Chabrier IMF and no dominant AGN contribution to the FIR luminosity). Such high SFRs are difficult to reconcile with a secular mode of star formation, and may instead correspond to a merger-driven stage in the evolution of these galaxies. Another observational argument in favour of this scenario is the presence of dust temperatures warmer than that of SMGs of lower luminosities (~40 K as opposed to ~25 K), consistent with observations of local ultra-luminous infrared galaxies triggered by major mergers and with results from hydrodynamic simulations of major mergers combined with radiative transfer calculations. Moreover, we find that luminous SMGs are systematically offset from normal star-forming galaxies in the stellar mass-SFR plane, suggesting that they are undergoing starburst events with short duty cycles, compatible with the major merger scenario. On the other hand, a significant fraction of the low infrared luminosity SMGs have cold dust temperatures, are located close to the main sequence of star formation, and therefore might be evolving through a secular mode of star formation. However, the properties of this latter population, especially their dust temperature, should be treated with caution because at these luminosities SMGs are not a representative sample of the entire star-forming galaxy population.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012

Accreting supermassive black holes in the COSMOS field and the connection to their host galaxies

A. Bongiorno; Andrea Merloni; M. Brusa; B. Magnelli; M. Salvato; M. Mignoli; G. Zamorani; F. Fiore; D. Rosario; V. Mainieri; H. Hao; A. Comastri; C. Vignali; I. Balestra; S. Bardelli; S. Berta; F. Civano; P. Kampczyk; E. Le Floc'h; E. Lusso; D. Lutz; L. Pozzetti; F. Pozzi; L. Riguccini; F. Shankar; J. D. Silverman

Using the wide multiband photometry available in the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) field, we explore the host galaxy properties of a large sample of active galactic nuclei (AGNs; ∼1700 objects) with Lbol ranging from 1043 to 1047 erg s−1, obtained by combining X-ray and optical spectroscopic selections. Based on a careful study of their spectral energy distributions, which have been parametrized using a two-component (AGN+galaxy) model fit, we have derived dust-corrected rest-frame magnitudes, colours and stellar masses of the obscured and unobscured AGN hosts up to high redshift (). Moreover, for the sample of obscured AGNs, we have also derived reliable star formation rates (SFRs). We find that AGN hosts span a large range of stellar masses and SFRs. No colour-bimodality is seen at any redshift in the AGN hosts, which are found to be mainly massive, red galaxies. Once we have accounted for the colour–mass degeneracy in well-defined mass-matched samples, we find a residual (marginal) enhancement of the incidence of AGNs in redder galaxies with lower specific SFRs. We argue that this result might emerge because of our ability to properly account for AGN light contamination and dust extinction, compared to surveys with a more limited multiwavelength coverage. However, because these colour shifts are relatively small, systematic effects could still be considered responsible for some of the observed trends. Interestingly, we find that the probability for a galaxy to host a black hole that is growing at any given ‘specific accretion rate’ (i.e. the ratio of X-ray luminosity to the host stellar mass) is almost independent of the host galaxy mass, while it decreases as a power law with LX/M*. By analysing the normalization of such a probability distribution, we show how the incidence of AGNs increases with redshift as rapidly as (1 + z)4, which closely resembles the overall evolution of the specific SFR of the entire galaxy population. We provide analytical fitting formulae that describe the probability of a galaxy of any mass (above the completeness limit of the COSMOS) to host an AGN of any given specific accretion rate as a function of redshift. These can be useful tools for theoretical studies of the growing population of black holes within galaxy evolution models. Although AGN activity and star formation in galaxies do appear to have a common triggering mechanism, at least in a statistical sense, within the COSMOS sample, we do not find any conclusive evidence to suggest that AGNs have a powerful influence on the star-forming properties of their host galaxies.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2008

Photometric redshifts in the SWIRE Survey

Michael Rowan-Robinson; T. Babbedge; Seb Oliver; M. Trichas; S. Berta; Carol J. Lonsdale; Gene Smith; D. L. Shupe; Jason A. Surace; Stephane Arnouts; O. Ilbert; Olivier Le Fevre; A. Afonso-Luis; I. Perez-Fournon; E. Hatziminaoglou; Mari Polletta; D. Farrah; M. Vaccari

We present the SWIRE Photometric Redshift Catalogue 1 025 119 redshifts of unprecedented reliability and of accuracy comparable with or better than previous work. Our methodology is based on fixed galaxy and quasi-stellar object templates applied to data at 0.36–4.5 μm, and on a set of four infrared emission templates fitted to infrared excess data at 3.6–170 μm. The galaxy templates are initially empirical, but are given greater physical validity by fitting star formation histories to them, which also allows us to estimate stellar masses. The code involves two passes through the data, to try to optimize recognition of active galactic nucleus (AGN) dust tori. A few carefully justified priors are used and are the key to supression of outliers. Extinction, A_V , is allowed as a free parameter. The full reduced χ^2_ν (z) distribution is given for each source, so the full error distribution can be used, and aliases investigated. We use a set of 5982 spectroscopic redshifts, taken from the literature and from our own spectroscopic surveys, to analyse the performance of our method as a function of the number of photometric bands used in the solution and the reduced χ^2_ν . For seven photometric bands (5 optical + 3.6, 4.5 μm), the rms value of (z_(phot)−z_(spec)/(1 +z_(spec) is 3.5 per cent, and the percentage of catastrophic outliers [defined as >15 per cent error in (1 +z)], is ∼1 per cent. These rms values are comparable with the best achieved in other studies, and the outlier fraction is significantly better. The inclusion of the 3.6- and 4.5-μm IRAC bands is crucial in supression of outliers. We discuss the redshift distributions at 3.6 and 24 μm. In individual fields, structure in the redshift distribution corresponds to clusters which can be seen in the spectroscopic redshift distribution, so the photometric redshifts are a powerful tool for large-scale structure studies. 10 per cent of sources in the SWIRE photometric redshift catalogue have z > 2, and 4 per cent have z > 3, so this catalogue is a huge resource for high-redshift galaxies. A key parameter for understanding the evolutionary status of infrared galaxies is L_(ir)/L_(opt) . For cirrus galaxies this is a measure of the mean extinction in the interstellar medium of the galaxy. There is a population of ultraluminous galaxies with cool dust and we have shown SEDs for some of the reliable examples. For starbursts, we estimate the specific star formation rate, φ_*/M_* . Although the very highest values of this ratio tend to be associated with Arp220 starbursts, by no means all ultraluminous galaxies are. We discuss an interesting population of galaxies with elliptical-like spectral energy distributions in the optical and luminous starbursts in the infrared. For dust tori around type 1 AGN, L_(tor)/L_(opt) is a measure of the torus covering factor and we deduce a mean covering factor of 40 per cent. Our infrared templates also allow us to estimate dust masses for all galaxies with an infrared excess.

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F. Pozzi

University of Bologna

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