Xinwen Shu
Anhui Normal University
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Featured researches published by Xinwen Shu.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
Dan Coe; Adi Zitrin; Mauricio Carrasco; Xinwen Shu; Wei Zheng; Marc Postman; L. Bradley; Anton M. Koekemoer; R. J. Bouwens; Tom Broadhurst; A. Monna; Ole Host; Leonidas A. Moustakas; Holland C. Ford; John Moustakas; Arjen van der Wel; Megan Donahue; Steven A. Rodney; N. Benítez; S. Jouvel; S. Seitz; Daniel D. Kelson; P. Rosati
We present a candidate for the most distant galaxy known to date with a photometric redshift of z = 10.7+0.6 –0.4 (95% confidence limits; with z < 9.5 galaxies of known types ruled out at 7.2σ). This J-dropout Lyman break galaxy, named MACS0647-JD, was discovered as part of the Cluster Lensing and Supernova survey with Hubble (CLASH). We observe three magnified images of this galaxy due to strong gravitational lensing by the galaxy cluster MACSJ0647.7+7015 at z = 0.591. The images are magnified by factors of ~80, 7, and 2, with the brighter two observed at ~26th magnitude AB (~0.15 μJy) in the WFC3/IR F160W filter (~1.4-1.7 μm) where they are detected at 12σ. All three images are also confidently detected at 6σ in F140W (~1.2-1.6 μm), dropping out of detection from 15 lower wavelength Hubble Space Telescope filters (~0.2-1.4 μm), and lacking bright detections in Spitzer/IRAC 3.6 μm and 4.5 μm imaging (~3.2-5.0 μm). We rule out a broad range of possible lower redshift interlopers, including some previously published as high-redshift candidates. Our high-redshift conclusion is more conservative than if we had neglected a Bayesian photometric redshift prior. Given CLASH observations of 17 high-mass clusters to date, our discoveries of MACS0647-JD at z ~ 10.8 and MACS1149-JD at z ~ 9.6 are consistent with a lensed luminosity function extrapolated from lower redshifts. This would suggest that low-luminosity galaxies could have reionized the universe. However, given the significant uncertainties based on only two galaxies, we cannot yet rule out the sharp drop-off in number counts at z 10 suggested by field searches.
Nature | 2012
Wei Zheng; Marc Postman; Adi Zitrin; John Moustakas; Xinwen Shu; S. Jouvel; Ole Host; A. Molino; L. Bradley; Dan Coe; Leonidas A. Moustakas; Mauricio Carrasco; Holland C. Ford; N. Benítez; Tod R. Lauer; S. Seitz; R. J. Bouwens; Anton M. Koekemoer; Elinor Medezinski; Matthias Bartelmann; Tom Broadhurst; Megan Donahue; C. Grillo; Leopoldo Infante; Saurabh W. Jha; Daniel D. Kelson; Ofer Lahav; Doron Lemze; P. Melchior; Massimo Meneghetti
Re-ionization of the intergalactic medium occurred in the early Universe at redshift z ≈ 6–11, following the formation of the first generation of stars. Those young galaxies (where the bulk of stars formed) at a cosmic age of less than about 500 million years (z ≲ 10) remain largely unexplored because they are at or beyond the sensitivity limits of existing large telescopes. Understanding the properties of these galaxies is critical to identifying the source of the radiation that re-ionized the intergalactic medium. Gravitational lensing by galaxy clusters allows the detection of high-redshift galaxies fainter than what otherwise could be found in the deepest images of the sky. Here we report multiband observations of the cluster MACS J1149+2223 that have revealed (with high probability) a gravitationally magnified galaxy from the early Universe, at a redshift of z = 9.6 ± 0.2 (that is, a cosmic age of 490 ± 15 million years, or 3.6 per cent of the age of the Universe). We estimate that it formed less than 200 million years after the Big Bang (at the 95 per cent confidence level), implying a formation redshift of ≲14. Given the small sky area that our observations cover, faint galaxies seem to be abundant at such a young cosmic age, suggesting that they may be the dominant source for the early re-ionization of the intergalactic medium.Johns Hopkins University, 3701 San Martin Drive, Baltimore , MD 21218, U.S.A. Space Telescope Science Institute Universität Heidelberg University of California, San Diego University of Science and Technology of China University College London Institute de Ciencies de l’Espai Instituto de Astrofı́sica de Andalucı́a Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Techno logy Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile National Optical Astronomical Observatory Universitas Sternwarte, München Leiden Observatory University of Basque Country
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015
C. Schreiber; M. Pannella; D. Elbaz; M. Béthermin; Hanae Inami; Mark Dickinson; B. Magnelli; Tao Wang; H. Aussel; Emanuele Daddi; S. Juneau; Xinwen Shu; M. Sargent; V. Buat; Sandra M. Faber; Henry C. Ferguson; Mauro Giavalisco; Anton M. Koekemoer; G. Magdis; G. Morrison; Casey Papovich; P. Santini; Douglas Scott
We present an analysis of the deepest Herschel images in four major extragalactic fields GOODS–North, GOODS–South, UDS, and COSMOS obtained within the GOODS–Herschel and CANDELS–Herschel key programs. The star formation picture provided by a total of 10 497 individual far-infrared detections is supplemented by the stacking analysis of a mass complete sample of 62 361 star-forming galaxies from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) H band-selected catalogs of the CANDELS survey and from two deep ground-based Ks band-selected catalogs in the GOODS–North and the COSMOS-wide field to obtain one of the most accurate and unbiased understanding to date of the stellar mass growth over the cosmic history. We show, for the first time, that stacking also provides a powerful tool to determine the dispersion of a physical correlation and describe our method called “scatter stacking”, which may be easily generalized to other experiments. The combination of direct UV and far-infrared UV-reprocessed light provides a complete census on the star formation rates (SFRs), allowing us to demonstrate that galaxies at z = 4 to 0 of all stellar masses (M∗) follow a universal scaling law, the so-called main sequence of star-forming galaxies. We find a universal close-to-linear slope of the log 10(SFR)–log 10(M∗) relation, with evidence for a flattening of the main sequence at high masses (log 10(M∗/M⊙) > 10.5) that becomesless prominent with increasing redshift and almost vanishes by z ≃ 2. This flattening may be due to the parallel stellar growth of quiescent bulges in star-forming galaxies, which mostly happens over the same redshift range. Within the main sequence, we measure a nonvarying SFR dispersion of 0.3 dex: at a fixed redshift and stellar mass, about 68% of star-forming galaxies form stars at a universal rate within a factor 2. The specific SFR (sSFR = SFR/M∗) of star-forming galaxies is found to continuously increase from z = 0 to 4. Finally we discuss the implications of our findings on the cosmic SFR history and on the origin of present-day stars: more than two-thirds of present-day stars must have formed in a regime dominated by the “main sequence” mode. As a consequence we conclude that, although omnipresent in the distant Universe, galaxy mergers had little impact in shaping the global star formation history over the last 12.5 billion years.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
M. Pannella; D. Elbaz; E. Daddi; M. Dickinson; Ho Seong Hwang; C. Schreiber; V. Strazzullo; H. Aussel; M. Béthermin; V. Buat; V. Charmandaris; A. Cibinel; S. Juneau; R. J. Ivison; D. Le Borgne; E. Le Floc'h; R. Leiton; Lihwai Lin; G. Magdis; G. Morrison; J. R. Mullaney; M. Onodera; A. Renzini; Samir Salim; M. Sargent; D. Scott; Xinwen Shu; Tao Wang
We use the deep panchromatic dataset available in the GOODS-N field, spanning all the way from GALEX ultra-violet to VLA radio continuum data, to select a star-forming galaxy sample at z~[0.5-4] and robustly measure galaxy photometric redshifts, star formation rates, stellar masses and UV rest-frame properties. We quantitatively explore, using mass-complete samples, the evolution of the star formation activity and dust attenuation properties of star-forming galaxies up to z~4. Our main results can be summarized as follows: i) we find that the slope of the SFR-M correlation is consistent with being constant, and equal to ~0.8 at least up to z~1.5, while the normalization keeps increasing to the highest redshift, z~4, we are able to explore; ii) for the first time in this work, we are able to explore the FIR-radio correlation for a mass-selected sample of star-forming galaxies: the correlation does not evolve up to z~4; iii) we confirm that galaxy stellar mass is a robust proxy for UV dust attenuation in star-forming galaxies, with more massive galaxies being more dust attenuated; iv) strikingly, we find that this attenuation relation evolves very weakly with redshift, the amount of dust attenuation increasing by less than 0.3 magnitudes over the redshift range [0.5-4] for a fixed stellar mass, as opposed to a tenfold increase of star formation rate; v) this finding explains the evolution of the SFR-Auv relation reported in literature: the same amount of star formation is less attenuated at higher redshift because it is hosted in less massive, and less metal rich, galaxies; vi) the correlation between dust attenuation and the UV spectral slope evolves in redshift, with the median UV spectral slope of star-forming galaxies becoming bluer with redshift. By z~3, typical UV slopes are inconsistent, given the measured dust attenuation, with the predictions of commonly used empirical laws: this means that the present cosmic star formation rate density estimates at redshift z > 3 need to be increased by a factor of around 2. Finally, building on the measured AUV–logM correlation and on existing results, we find evidence that line reddening is marginally larger (by a factor of around 1.3) than continuum reddening at all redshifts probed, and also that the amount of dust attenuation at a fixed ISM metallicity increases with redshift. We speculate that our results point toward an evolution of the ISM conditions of the median star-forming galaxy, such that at z >1.5, Main Sequence galaxies have ISM properties more similar to those found in local starbursts.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Adi Zitrin; Wei Zheng; Tom Broadhurst; John Moustakas; Daniel Lam; Xinwen Shu; Xingxing Huang; J. M. Diego; Holland C. Ford; Jeremy Lim; F. E. Bauer; Leopoldo Infante; Daniel D. Kelson; A. Molino
The deflection angles of lensed sources increase with their distance behind a given lens. We utilize this geometric effect to corroborate the z_phot ≃ 9.8 photometric redshift estimate of a faint near-IR dropout, triply imaged by the massive galaxy cluster A2744 in deep Hubble Frontier Fields images. The multiple images of this source follow the same symmetry as other nearby sets of multiple images that bracket the critical curves and have well-defined redshifts (up to z_spec ≃ 3.6), but with larger deflection angles, indicating that this source must lie at a higher redshift. Similarly, our different parametric and non-parametric lens models all require this object be at z ≳ 4, with at least 95% confidence, thoroughly excluding the possibility of lower-redshift interlopers. To study the properties of this source, we correct the two brighter images for their magnifications, leading to a star formation rate of ~0.3 M_☉ yr^(−1), a stellar mass of ~4 × 10^7 M_☉, and an age of ≲220 Myr (95% confidence). The intrinsic apparent magnitude is 29.9 AB (F160W), and the rest-frame UV (~1500 A) absolute magnitude is M_UV, AB = −17.6. This corresponds to ~0.1 L*_(z=8) (~0.2 L*_(z=10), adopting dM*/dz ~ 0.45), making this candidate one of the least luminous galaxies discovered at z ~ 10.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015
E. Merlin; A. Fontana; Henry C. Ferguson; James Dunlop; D. Elbaz; N. Bourne; Victoria Bruce; Fernando Buitrago; M. Castellano; C. Schreiber; A. Grazian; Ross J. McLure; K. Okumura; Xinwen Shu; Tao Wang; R. Amorin; K. Boutsia; N. Cappelluti; A. Comastri; S. Derriere; S. M. Faber; P. Santini
Context. The advent of deep multiwavelength extragalactic surveys has led to the necessity for advanced and fast methods for photometric analysis. In fact, codes which allow analyses of the same regions of the sky observed at different wavelengths and resolutions are becoming essential to thoroughly exploit current and future data. In this context, a key issue is the confusion (i.e. blending) of sources in low-resolution images.Aims. We present t-phot, a publicly available software package developed within the astrodeep project. t-phot is aimed at extracting accurate photometry from low-resolution images, where the blending of sources can be a serious problem for the accurate and unbiased measurement of fluxes and colours.Methods. t-phot can be considered as the next generation to tfit, providing significant improvements over and above it and other similar codes (e.g. convphot). t-phot gathers data from a high-resolution image of a region of the sky, and uses this information (source positions and morphologies) to obtain priors for the photometric analysis of the lower resolution image of the same field. t-phot can handle different types of datasets as input priors, namely i) a list of objects that will be used to obtain cutouts from the real high-resolution image; ii) a set of analytical models (as .fits stamps); iii) a list of unresolved, point-like sources, useful for example for far-infrared (FIR) wavelength domains.Results. By means of simulations and analysis of real datasets, we show that t-phot yields accurate estimations of fluxes within the intrinsic uncertainties of the method, when systematic errors are taken into account (which can be done thanks to a flagging code given in the output). t-phot is many times faster than similar codes like tfit and convphot (up to hundreds, depending on the problem and the method adopted), whilst at the same time being more robust and more versatile. This makes it an excellent choice for the analysis of large datasets. When used with the same parameter sets as for tfit it yields almost identical results (although in a much shorter time); in addition we show how the use of different settings and methods significantly enhances the performance.Conclusions. t-phot proves to be a state-of-the-art tool for multiwavelength optical to far-infrared image photometry. Given its versatility and robustness, t-phot can be considered the preferred choice for combined photometric analysis of current and forthcoming extragalactic imaging surveys.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
M. Castellano; R. Amorin; E. Merlin; A. Fontana; Ross J. McLure; E. Mármol-Queraltó; Alice Mortlock; S. Parsa; James Dunlop; D. Elbaz; I. Balestra; A. Boucaud; N. Bourne; K. Boutsia; Gabriel B. Brammer; Victoria Bruce; Fernando Buitrago; P. Capak; N. Cappelluti; L. Ciesla; A. Comastri; F. Cullen; S. Derriere; S. M. Faber; E. Giallongo; A. Grazian; C. Grillo; A. Mercurio; M. J. Michałowski; M. Nonino
Aims. We present the first public release of photometric redshifts, galaxy rest frame properties and associated magnification values in the cluster and parallel pointings of the first two Frontier Fields, Abell-2744 and MACS-J0416. The released catalogues aim to provide a reference for future investigations of extragalactic populations in these legacy fields: from lensed high-redshift galaxies to cluster members themselves. Methods. We exploit a multiwavelength catalogue, ranging from Hubble Space Telescope (HST) to ground-based K and Spitzer IRAC, which is specifically designed to enable detection and measurement of accurate fluxes in crowded cluster regions. The multiband information is used to derive photometric redshifts and physical properties of sources detected either in the H-band image alone, or from a stack of four WFC3 bands. To minimize systematics, median photometric redshifts are assembled from six different approaches to photo-z estimates. Their reliability is assessed through a comparison with available spectroscopic samples. State-of-the-art lensing models are used to derive magnification values on an object-by-object basis by taking into account sources positions and redshifts. Results. We show that photometric redshifts reach a remarkable ~3–5% accuracy. After accounting for magnification, the H-band number counts are found to be in agreement at bright magnitudes with number counts from the CANDELS fields, while extending the presently available samples to galaxies that, intrinsically, are as faint as H ~ 32−33, thanks to strong gravitational lensing. The Frontier Fields allow the galaxy stellar mass distribution to be probed, depending on magnification, at 0.5–1.5 dex lower masses with respect to extragalactic wide fields, including sources at M_(star) ~ 10^7–10^8 M_⊙ at z > 5. Similarly, they allow the detection of objects with intrinsic star formation rates (SFRs) >1 dex lower than in the CANDELS fields reaching 0.1–1 M_⊙/yr at z ~ 6–10.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
Tao Wang; D. Elbaz; Emanuele Daddi; Alexis Finoguenov; Daizhong Liu; C. Schreiber; Sergio Martin; V. Strazzullo; Francesco Valentino; Remco F. J. van der Burg; Anita Zanella; Laure Ciesla; R. Gobat; Amandine M. C. Le Brun; M. Pannella; M. Sargent; Xinwen Shu; Qinghua Tan; N. Cappelluti; Yanxia Li
We report the discovery of a remarkable concentration of massive galaxies with extended X-ray emission at zspec=2.506, which contains 11 massive (M∗≳1011M⊙) galaxies in the central 80-kpc region (11.6σ overdensity). We have spectroscopically confirmed 17 member galaxies with 11 from CO and the remaining ones from Hα. The X-ray luminosity, stellar mass content and velocity dispersion all point to a collapsed, cluster-sized dark matter halo with mass M200c=1013.9±0.2M⊙, making it the most distant X-ray-detected cluster known to date. Unlike other clusters discovered so far, this structure is dominated by star-forming galaxies (SFGs) in the core with only two out of the 11 massive galaxies classified as quiescent. The star formation rate (SFR) in the 80-kpc core reaches ∼3400 M⊙ yr−1 with gas depletion time of ∼200 Myr, suggesting that we caught this cluster in rapid build-up of a dense core. The high SFR is driven by both a high abundance of SFGs and a higher starburst fraction (∼25%, compared to 3\%-5\% in the field). The presence of both a collapsed, cluster-sized halo and a predominant population of massive SFGs suggests that this structure could represent an important transition phase between protoclusters and mature clusters. It provides evidence that the main phase of massive galaxy passivization will take place after galaxies accrete onto the cluster, providing new insights into massive cluster formation at early epochs. The large integrated stellar mass at such high redshift challenges our understanding of massive cluster formation.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2012
Adi Zitrin; John Moustakas; L. Bradley; D. Coe; Leonidas A. Moustakas; Marc Postman; Xinwen Shu; W. Zheng; N. Benítez; R. J. Bouwens; Tom Broadhurst; Holland C. Ford; Ole Host; S. Jouvel; Anton M. Koekemoer; Massimo Meneghetti; P. Rosati; Megan Donahue; C. Grillo; D. Kelson; Doron Lemze; Elinor Medezinski; A. Molino; M. Nonino; Sara Ogaz
We report the discovery of a z_{phot}=6.18^{+0.05}_{-0.07} (95% confidence level) dwarf galaxy, lensed into four images by the galaxy cluster MACS J0329.6-0211 (z_{l}=0.45). The galaxy is observed as a high-redshift dropout in HST/ACS/WFC3 CLASH and Spitzer/IRAC imaging. Its redshift is securely determined due to a clear detection of the Lyman-break in the 18-band photometry, making this galaxy one of the highest-redshift multiply-lensed objects known to date with an observed magnitude of F125W=24.00\pm0.04 AB mag for its highest-magnified image. We also present the first strong-lensing analysis of this cluster uncovering 15 additional multiply-imaged candidates of five lower-redshift sources spanning the range z_{s}~2-4. The mass model independently supports the high photometric redshift and reveals magnifications of 11.6^{+8.9}_{-4.1}, 17.6^{+6.2}_{-3.9}, 3.9^{+3.0}_{-1.7}, and 3.7^{+1.3}_{-0.2}, respectively, for the four images of the high-redshift galaxy. With this we construct a source image with a physical resolution of ~200 pc when the universe was ~0.9 Gyr old, where the z~6.2 galaxy occupies a source-plane area of approximately 2.2 kpc^{2}. Modeling the observed spectral energy distribution using population synthesis models, we find a demagnified stellar mass of ~10^{9} {M}_{sun}, subsolar metallicity (Z/Z_{sun}~0.5), low dust content (A_{V}~0.1 mag), a demagnified star formation rate (SFR) of ~3.2 {M}_{sun} yr^{-1}, and a specific SFR of ~3.4 Gyr^{-1}, all consistent with the properties of local dwarf galaxies.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
E. Merlin; R. Amorin; M. Castellano; A. Fontana; Fernando Buitrago; James Dunlop; D. Elbaz; A. Boucaud; N. Bourne; K. Boutsia; Gabriel B. Brammer; Victoria Bruce; P. Capak; N. Cappelluti; L. Ciesla; A. Comastri; F. Cullen; S. Derriere; S. M. Faber; Henry C. Ferguson; E. Giallongo; A. Grazian; Jennifer M. Lotz; M. J. Michałowski; D. Paris; L. Pentericci; S. Pilo; P. Santini; C. Schreiber; Xinwen Shu
We present multiwavelength photometric catalogues (HST, Spitzer and Hawk-I K band) for the first two of the Frontier Fields, Abell2744 and MACSJ0416 (plus their parallel fields). To detect faint sources even in the central regions of the clusters, we develop a robust and repeatable procedure that uses the public codes Galapagos and Galfit to model and remove most of the light contribution from both the brightest cluster members as well as the ICL. We perform the detection on the HST H160 processed image to obtain a pure H-selected sample. We also add a sample of sources which are undetected in the H160 image but appear on a stacked infrared image. Photometry in the other HST bands is obtained using SExtractor, performed again on residual images after the Galfit procedure for foreground light removal. Photometry on the Hawk-I and IRAC bands has been obtained using our PSF-matching deconfusion code T-PHOT. A similar procedure, but without the need for the foreground light removal, is adopted for the Parallel fields. The procedure allows for the detection and the photometric measurements of ~2500 sources per field. We deliver and release complete photometric H-detected catalogues, with the addition of a complementary sample of infrared-detected sources. All objects have multiwavelength coverage including B to H HST bands, plus K band from Hawk-I, and 3.6 - 4.5 {\mu}m from Spitzer. Full and detailed treatment of photometric errors is included. We perform basic sanity checks on the reliability of our results. The multiwavelength catalogues are publicly available and are ready to be used for scientific purposes. Our procedures allows for the detection of outshined objects near the bright galaxies, which, coupled with the magnification effect of the clusters, can reveal extremely faint high redshift sources. Full analysis on photometric redshifts is presented in a companion Paper II. [abridged]