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Featured researches published by V. Ripepi.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2005

The VIMOS-VLT Deep Survey: Evolution of the galaxy luminosity function up to z=2 in first epoch data

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

We investigate the evolution of the galaxy luminosity function from the VIMOS-VLT Deep Survey (VVDS) from the present to z=2 in five (U, B, V, R and I) rest-frame band-passes. We use the first epoch VVDS deep sample of 11,034 spectra selected at 17.5 <= I_{AB} <= 24.0, on which we apply the Algorithm for Luminosity Function (ALF), described in this paper. We observe a substantial evolution with redshift of the global luminosity functions in all bands. From z=0.05 to z=2, we measure a brightening of the characteristic magnitude M* included in the magnitude range 1.8-2.5, 1.7-2.4, 1.2-1.9, 1.1-1.8 and 1.0-1.6 in the U, B, V, R and I rest-frame bands, respectively. We confirm this differential evolution of the luminosity function with rest-frame wavelength, from the measurement of the comoving density of bright galaxies (M < M*(z=0.1)). This density increases by a factor of around 2.6, 2.2, 1.8, 1.5, 1.5 between z=0.05 and z=1 in the U, B, V, R, I bands, respectively. We also measure a possible steepening of the faint-end slope of the luminosity functions, with \\Delta\\alpha ~ -0.3 between z=0.05 and z=1, similar in all bands.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011

The Kepler characterization of the variability among A- and F-type stars. - I: General overview

K. Uytterhoeven; A. Moya; A. Grigahcène; Joyce Ann Guzik; J. Gutierrez-Soto; B. Smalley; G. Handler; L. A. Balona; E. Niemczura; L. Fox Machado; Serena Benatti; E. Chapellier; A. Tkachenko; R. Szabó; J. C. Suárez; V. Ripepi; J. Pascual; P. Mathias; S. Martín-Ruiz; H. Lehmann; Jason Jackiewicz; S. Hekker; M. Gruberbauer; R. A. García; X. Dumusque; D. Díaz-Fraile; P. A. Bradley; V. Antoci; M. Roth; B. Leroy

Context. The Kepler spacecraft is providing time series of photometric data with micromagnitude precision for hundreds of A-F type stars. Aims. We present a first general characterization of the pulsational behaviour of A-F type stars as observed in the Kepler light curves of a sample of 750 candidate A-F type stars, and observationally investigate the relation between γ Doradus (γ Dor), δ Scuti (δ Sct), and hybrid stars. Methods. We compile a database of physical parameters for the sample stars from the literature and new ground-based observations. We analyse the Kepler light curve of each star and extract the pulsational frequencies using different frequency analysis methods. We construct two new observables, “energy ”a nd “efficiency”, related to the driving energy of the pulsation mode and the convective efficiency of the outer convective zone, respectively. Results. We propose three main groups to describe the observed variety in pulsating A-F type stars: γ Dor, δ Sct, and hybrid stars. We assign 63% of our sample to one of the three groups, and identify the remaining part as rotationally modulated/active stars, binaries, stars of different spectral type, or stars that show no clear periodic variability. 23% of the stars (171 stars) are hybrid stars, which is a much higher fraction than what has been observed before. We characterize for the first time a large number of A-F type stars (475 stars) in terms of number of detected frequencies, frequency range, and typical pulsation amplitudes. The majority of hybrid stars show frequencies with all kinds of periodicities within the γ Dor and δ Sct range, also between 5 and 10 d −1 , which is a challenge for the current models. We find indications for the existence of δ Sct and γ Dor stars beyond the edges of the current observational instability strips. The hybrid stars occupy the entire region within the δ Sct and γ Dor instability strips and beyond. Non-variable stars seem to exist within the instability strips. The location of γ Dor and δ Sct classes in the (Teff ,l ogg)-diagram has been extended. We investigate two newly constructed variables, “efficiency ”a nd “energy”, as a means to explore the relation between γ Dor and δ Sct stars. Conclusions. Our results suggest a revision of the current observational instability strips of δ Sct and γ Dor stars and imply an investigation of pulsation mechanisms to supplement the κ mechanism and convective blocking effect to drive hybrid pulsations. Accurate physical parameters for all stars are needed to confirm these findings.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2006

The VIMOS-VLT deep survey - evolution of the luminosity functions by galaxy type up to z = 1.5 from first epoch data

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

From the first epoch observations of the VVDS up to z=1.5 we have derived luminosity functions (LF) of different spectral type galaxies. The VVDS data, covering ~70% of the life of the Universe, allow for the first time to study from the same sample and with good statistical accuracy the evolution of the LFs by galaxy type in several rest frame bands from a purely magnitude selected sample. The magnitude limit of the VVDS allows the determination of the faint end slope of the LF with unprecedented accuracy. Galaxies have been classified in four spectral classes, using their colours and redshift, and LFs have been derived in the U, B, V, R and I rest frame bands from z=0.05 to z=1.5. We find a significant steepening of the LF going from early to late types. The M* parameter is significantly fainter for late type galaxies and this difference increases in the redder bands. Within each of the galaxy spectral types we find a brightening of M* with increasing redshift, ranging from =< 0.5 mag for early type galaxies to ~1 mag for the latest type galaxies, while the slope of the LF of each spectral type is consistent with being constant with redshift. The LF of early type galaxies is consistent with passive evolution up to z~1.1, while the number of bright early type galaxies has decreased by ~40% from z~0.3 to z~1.1. We also find a strong evolution in the normalization of the LF of latest type galaxies, with an increase of more than a factor 2 from z~0.3 to z~1.3: the density of bright late type galaxies in the same redshift range increases of a factor ~6.6. These results indicate a strong type-dependent evolution and identifies the latest spectral types as responsible for most of the evolution of the UV-optical luminosity function out to z=1.5.


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.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

The cosmic star formation rate evolution from z = 5 to z = 0 from the VIMOS VLT deep survey

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

Context. The VIMOS VLT Deep Survey (VVDS) was undertaken to map the evolution of galaxies, large scale structures, and active galaxy nuclei from the redshift spectroscopic measurements of ∼10 5 objects down to an apparent magnitude I AB = 24, in combination with a multi-wavelength acquisition for radio, infrared, optical, ultraviolet, and X-rays data. Aims. We present the evolution of the comoving star formation rate (SFR) density in the redshift range 0 < z < 5 using the first epoch data release of the VVDS, that is 11564 spectra over 2200 arcmin 2 in two fields of view, the VVDS-0226-04 and the VVDS-CDFS-0332-27, and the cosmological parameters (Ω M , Ω Λ , h) = (0.3, 0.7, 0.7). Methods. We study the multi-wavelength non dust-corrected luminosity densities at 0 < z < 2 from the rest-frame far ultraviolet to the optical passbands, and the rest-frame 1500 A luminosity functions and densities at 2.7 < z < 5. Results. They evolve from z = 1.2 to z = 0.05 according to (1 + z) x with x = 2.05, 1.94, 1.92, 1.14, 0.73, 0.42, and 0.30 in the FUV-1500, NUV-2800, U-3600, B-4400, V-5500, R-6500, and I-7900 passbands, respectively. From z = 1.2 to z = 0.2 the B-band density for the irregular-like galaxies decreases markedly by a factor 3.5 while it increases by a factor 1.7 for the elliptical-like galaxies. We identify several SFR periods; from z = 5 to 3.4 the FUV-band density increases by at most 0.5 dex, from z = 3.4 to 1.2 it decreases by 0.08 dex, from z = 1.2 to z = 0.05 it declines steadily by 0.6 dex. For the most luminous M AB (1500 A) < -21 galaxies the FUV-band density drops by 2 dex from z = 3.9 to z = 1.2, and for the intermediate -21 < M AB (1500 A) < -20 galaxies it drops by 2 dex from z = 0.2 to z = 0. Comparing with dust corrected surveys, at 0.4 ≤ z ≤ 2 the FUV seems obscured by a constant factor of ∼ 1.8-2 mag, while at z < 0.5 it seems progressively less obscured by up to ∼0.9-1 mag when the dust-deficient early-type population is increasingly dominating the B-band density. Conclusions. The VVDS results agree with a downsizing picture where the most luminous sources cease to efficiently produce new stars 12 Gyrs ago (at z ≃ 4), while intermediate luminosity sources keep producing stars until 2.5 Gyrs ago (at z ≃ 0.2). A modest contribution of dry mergers and morphologies evolving towards early-type galaxies might contribute to increase the number density of the bright early types at z < 1.5. Our observed SFR density is not in agreement with a continuous smooth decrease since z ∼ 4.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

On a New Theoretical Framework for RR Lyrae Stars. I. The Metallicity Dependence

M. Marconi; G. Coppola; G. Bono; V. F. Braga; A. Pietrinferni; R. Buonanno; M. Castellani; I. Musella; V. Ripepi; R. F. Stellingwerf

We present new nonlinear, time-dependent convective hydrodynamical models of RR Lyrae stars computed assuming a constant helium-to-metal enrichment ratio and a broad range in metal abundances (Z=0.0001--0.02). The stellar masses and luminosities adopted to construct the pulsation models were fixed according to detailed central He burning Horizontal Branch evolutionary models. The pulsation models cover a broad range in stellar luminosity and effective temperatures and the modal stability is investigated for both fundamental and first overtones. We predict the topology of the instability strip as a function of the metal content and new analytical relations for the edges of the instability strip in the observational plane. Moreover, a new analytical relation to constrain the pulsation mass of double pulsators as a function of the period ratio and the metal content is provided. We derive new Period-Radius-Metallicity relations for fundamental and first-overtone pulsators. They agree quite well with similar empirical and theoretical relations in the literature. From the predicted bolometric light curves, transformed into optical (UBVRI) and near-infrared (JHK) bands, we compute the intensity-averaged mean magnitudes along the entire pulsation cycle and, in turn, new and homogenous metal-dependent (RIJHK) Period-Luminosity relations. Moreover, we compute new dual and triple band optical, optical--NIR and NIR Period-Wesenheit-Metallicity relations. Interestingly, we find that the optical Period-W(V,B-V) is independent of the metal content and that the accuracy of individual distances is a balance between the adopted diagnostics and the precision of photometric and spectroscopic datasets.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2006

The VIMOS-VLT Deep Survey: Galaxy luminosity function per morphological type up to z = 1.2

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

We have computed the evolution of the rest-frame B-band luminosity function (LF) for bulge and disk-dominated galaxies since z=1.2. We use a sample of 605 spectroscopic redshifts with I_{AB} 0.9 and bright galaxies showing a strongly decreasing LF slope \alpha=+0.55 \pm 0.21, and 32% of blue (B-I)_{AB}<0.9 and more compact galaxies which populate the LF faint-end. We observe that red bulge-dominated galaxies are already well in place at z~1, but the volume density of this population is increasing by a factor 2.7 between z~1 and z~0.6. It may be related to the building-up of massive elliptical galaxies in the hierarchical scenario. In addition, we observe that the blue bulge-dominated population is dimming by 0.7 magnitude between z~1 and z~0.6. Galaxies in this faint and more compact population could possibly be the progenitors of the local dwarf spheroidal galaxies.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2005

The VIMOS VLT deep survey. The evolution of galaxy clustering to z 2 from first epoch observations

O. Le Fèvre; L. Guzzo; B. Meneux; A. Pollo; A. Cappi; S. Colombi; A. Iovino; C. Marinoni; H. J. McCracken; R. Scaramella; D. Bottini; B. Garilli; V. Le Brun; D. Maccagni; J. P. Picat; M. Scodeggio; L. Tresse; G. Vettolani; A. Zanichelli; C. Adami; M. Arnaboldi; S. Arnouts; S. Bardelli; J. Blaizot; M. Bolzonella; S. Charlot; P. Ciliegi; T. Contini; Sylvie Foucaud; P. Franzetti

This paper presents the evolution of the clustering of the main population of galaxies from z=2.1 to z=0.2, from the first epoch VIMOS VLT Deep Survey (VVDS), a magnitude limited sample with 17.5<=I_{AB}<=24. We have computed the correlation functions \\xi(r_p,\\pi) and w_p(r_p), and the correlation length r_0(z), for the VVDS-02h and VVDS-CDFS fields, for a total of 7155 galaxies in a 0.61deg^2 area. We find that the correlation length in this sample stays roughly constant from z=0.5 to z=1.1, with r_0(z)=2.5-2.8 h^{-1} Mpc (comoving), for galaxies comparable in luminosity to the local 2dFGRS and SDSS samples, indicating that the amplitude of the correlation function was ~2.5x lower at z~1 than observed locally. The correlation length in our lowest redshift bin z=[0.2,0.5] is r_0=2.4 h^{-1} Mpc, lower than for any other population at the same redshift, indicating the low clustering of very low luminosity galaxies, 1.5 magnitudes fainter than in the 2dFGRS or SDSS. The correlation length is increasing to r_0~3.0 h^{-1} Mpc at higher redshifts z=[1.3,2.1], as we are observing increasingly brighter galaxies, comparable to galaxies with MB_AB=-20.5 locally. We compare our measurement to the DEEP2 measurements in the range z=[0.7,1.35] \\citep{coil} on the population selected applying the same magnitude and color selection criteria as in their survey, and find comparable results. The slowly varying clustering of VVDS galaxies as redshift increases is markedly different from the predicted evolution of the clustering of dark matter, indicating that bright galaxies are already tracing the large scale structures emerging from the dark matter distribution 9-10 billion years ago, a supporting evidence for a strong evolution of the galaxy vs. dark matter bias.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2006

A Pulsational Distance to ω Centauri Based on Near-Infrared Period-Luminosity Relations of RR Lyrae Stars*

M. Del Principe; A. M. Piersimoni; Jesper Storm; F. Caputo; G. Bono; P. B. Stetson; M. Castellani; R. Buonanno; A. Calamida; C. E. Corsi; M. Dall’Ora; I. Ferraro; L. M. Freyhammer; G. Iannicola; M. Monelli; M. Nonino; L. Pulone; V. Ripepi

We present new near-infrared (J and K) magnitudes for 114 RR Lyrae stars in the globular cluster ω Centauri (NGC 5139), which we combine with data from the literature to construct a sample of 180 RR Lyrae stars with J and K mean magnitudes on a common photometric system. This is currently the largest such sample in any stellar system. We also present updated predictions for J- and K-band period-luminosity relations for both fundamental and first-overtone RR Lyrae stars, based on synthetic horizontal branch models with metal abundance ranging from Z = 0.0001 to 0.004. By adopting for the ω Cen variables with measured metal abundances an α-element enhancement of a factor of 3 (≈0.5 dex) with respect to iron, we find a true distance modulus μ0 = 13.70 ± 0.06 ± 0.06 (random and systematic errors, respectively), corresponding to a distance d = 5.5 ± 0.03 ± 0.03 kpc. Our estimate is in excellent agreement with the distance inferred for the eclipsing binary OGLEGC 17, but differ significantly from the recent distance estimates based on cluster dynamics and on high-amplitude δ Scuti stars.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2005

The VIRMOS deep imaging survey - IV. Near-infrared observations

A. Iovino; H. J. McCracken; B. Garilli; Sylvie Foucaud; O. Le Fèvre; D. Maccagni; P. Saracco; S. Bardelli; G. Busarello; M. Scodeggio; A. Zanichelli; L. Paioro; D. Bottini; V. Le Brun; J. P. Picat; R. Scaramella; L. Tresse; G. Vettolani; C. Adami; M. Arnaboldi; Stephane Arnouts; M. Bolzonella; A. Cappi; S. Charlot; P. Ciliegi; T. Contini; P. Franzetti; I. Gavignaud; L. Guzzo; O. Ilbert

In this paper we present a new deep, wide-field near-infrared imaging survey. Our J- and K-band observations in four separate fields complement optical BVRI, ultraviolet and spectroscopic observations undertaken as part of the VIMOS-VLT deep survey (VVDS). In total, our survey spans ~400arcmis^2. Our catalogues are reliable in all fields to at least Kvega~20.75 and Jvega~21.50 (defined as the magnitude where object contamination is less than 10% and completeness greater than 90%). Taken together these four fields represents a unique combination of depth, wavelength coverage and area. We describe the complete data reduction process and outline a comprehensive series of tests carried out to characterise the reliability of the final catalogues. We compare the statistical properties of our catalogues with literature compilations. We find that our J- and K-selected galaxy counts are in good agreement with previously published works, as are our (J-K) versus K colour-magnitude diagrams. Stellar number counts extracted from our fields are consistent with a synthetic model of our galaxy. Using the location of the stellar locus in colour-magnitude space and the measured field-to-field variation in galaxy number counts we demonstrate that the absolute accuracy of our photometric calibration is at the 5% level or better. Finally, an investigation of the angular clustering of K- selected extended sources in our survey displays the expected scaling behaviour with limiting magnitude, with amplitudes in each magnitude bin in broad agreement with literature values.

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O. Le Fèvre

Aix-Marseille University

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V. Le Brun

Aix-Marseille University

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