Browsing by Author "Rhoads, J. E."
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- ItemA large, deep 3 deg2 survey of H α, [O iii], and [O ii] emitters from LAGER: constraining luminosity functions(OUP, 2020) Khostovan, A. A.; Malhotra, S.; Rhoads, J. E.; Jiang, C.; Wang, J.; Wold, I.; Zheng, Z. Y.; Barrientos, Luis Felipe; Coughlin, A.; Harish, S.; Hu, W.; Infante Lira, Leopoldo; Perez, L. A.; Pharo, J.; Valdes, F.; Walker, A. R.; Yan, H.We present our measurements of the H α, [O iii], and [O ii] luminosity functions as part of the Lyman Alpha Galaxies at Epoch of Reionization (LAGER) survey using our samples of 1577 z = 0.47 H α-, 3933 z = 0.93 [O iii]-, and 5367 z = 1.59 [O ii]-selected emission line galaxies in a 3 deg 2 single, CTIO/Blanco DECam pointing of the COSMOS field. Our observations reach 5σ depths of 8.2 × 10 −18 erg s −1 cm −2 and comoving volumes of (1−7) × 10 5 Mpc 3 making our survey one of the deepest narrow-band surveys. We select our emission line galaxies via spectroscopic confirmation, photometric redshifts, and colour–colour selections. We measure the observed luminosity functions for each sample and find best fits of ϕ⋆=10−3.16+0.09−0.09 Mpc −3 and L⋆=1041.72+0.09−0.09 erg s −1 for H α, ϕ⋆=10−2.16+0.10−0.12 Mpc −3 and L⋆=1041.38+0.07−0.06 erg s −1 for [O iii], and ϕ⋆=10−1.97+0.07−0.07 Mpc −3 and L⋆=1041.66+0.03−0.03 erg s −1 for [O ii], with α fixed to −1.75, −1.6, and −1.3, respectively. An excess of bright >10 42 erg s −1 [O iii] emitters is observed and may be due to active galactic nucleus (AGN) contamination. Corrections for dust attenuation are applied assuming A Hα = 1 mag. We also design our own empirical rest-frame g − r calibration using SDSS DR12 data, test it against our z = 0.47 H α emitters with zCOSMOS 1D spectra, and calibrate it for (g − r) between −0.8 and 1.3 mag. Dust and AGN-corrected star formation rate densities (SFRDs) are measured as log 10 ρ SFR /(M ⊙ yr −1 Mpc −3 ) = −1.63 ± 0.04, −1.07 ± 0.06, and −0.90 ± 0.10 for H α, [O iii], and [O ii], respectively. We find our [O iii] and [O ii] samples fully trace cosmic star formation activity at their respective redshifts in comparison to multiwavelength SFRDs, while the H α sample traces ∼70 per cent of the total z = 0.47 SFRD.
- ItemCorrelations between H α equivalent width and galaxy properties at z = 0.47: Physical or selection-driven?(2021) Khostovan, A. A.; Malhotra, S.; Rhoads, J. E.; Harish, S.; Jiang, C.; Wang, J.; Wold, I.; Zheng, Z. -Y.; Barrientos, L. F.; Coughlin, A.; Hu, W.; Infante, L.; Perez, L. A.; Pharo, J.; Valdes, F.; Walker, A. R.The H alpha equivalent width (EW) is an observational proxy for specific star formation rate (sSFR) and a tracer of episodic, bursty star-formation activity. Previous assessments show that the H alpha EW strongly anticorrelates with stellar mass as M-0.25 similar to the sSFR - stellar mass relation. However, such a correlation could be driven or even formed by selection effects. In this study, we investigate how H alpha EW distributions correlate with physical properties of galaxies and how selection biases could alter such correlations using a z = 0.47 narrow-band-selected sample of 1572 H alpha emitters from the Ly alpha Galaxies in the Epoch of Reionization (LAGER) survey as our observational case study. The sample covers a 3 deg(2) area of COSMOS with a survey comoving volume of 1.1 x 10(5) Mpc(3). We assume an intrinsic EW distribution to form mock samples of H alpha emitters and propagate the selection criteria to match observations, giving us control on how selection biases can affect the underlying results. We find that H alpha EW intrinsically correlates with stellar mass as W-0 proportional to M-0.16 +/- 0.03 and decreases by a factor of similar to 3 from 10(7) M-circle dot to 10(10) M-circle dot, while not correcting for selection effects steepens the correlation as M-025 +/- 0.04, We find low-mass H alpha emitters to be similar to 320 times more likely to have rest-frame EW > 200 angstrom compared to high-mass H alpha emitters. Combining the intrinsic W-0-stellar mass correlation with an observed stellar mass function correctly reproduces the observed H alpha luminosity function, while not correcting for selection effects underestimates the number of bright emitters. This suggests that the W-0-stellar mass correlation when corrected for selection effects is physically significant and reproduces three statistical distributions of galaxy populations (line luminosity function, stellar mass function, EW distribution). At lower stellar masses, we find there are more high-EW outliers compared to high stellar masses, even after we take into account selection effects. Our results suggest that high sSFR outliers indicative of bursty star formation activity are intrinsically more prevalent in low-mass H alpha emitters and not a byproduct of selection effects.
- ItemDETECTION OF THREE GAMMA-RAY BURST HOST GALAXIES AT z similar to 6(IOP PUBLISHING LTD, 2016) McGuire, J. T. W.; Tanvir, N. R.; Levan, A. J.; Trenti, M.; Stanway, E. R.; Shull, J. M.; Wiersema, K.; Perley, D. A.; Starling, R. L. C.; Bremer, M.; Stocke, J. T.; Hjorth, J.; Rhoads, J. E.; Curtis Lake, E.; Schulze, S.; Levesque, E. M.; Robertson, B.; Fynbo, J. P. U.; Ellis, R. S.; Fruchter, A. S.Long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) allow us to pinpoint and study star-forming galaxies in the early universe, thanks to their orders of magnitude brighter peak luminosities compared to other astrophysical sources, and their association with the deaths of massive stars. We present Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera 3 detections of three Swift GRB host galaxies lying at redshifts z = 5.913 (GRB 130606A), z = 6.295 (GRB 050904), and z = 6.327 (GRB 140515A) in the F140W (wide-JH band, lambda(obs) similar to 1.4 mu m) filter. The hosts have magnitudes (corrected for Galactic extinction) of m(lambda obs) = 26.34(-0.16)(+0.14), 27.56(-0.22)(+0.18), and 28.30(-0.33)(+0.25) respectively. In all three cases, the probability of chance coincidence of lower redshift galaxies is less than or similar to 2%, indicating that the detected galaxies are most likely the GRB hosts. These are the first detections of high-redshift (z > 5) GRB host galaxies in emission. The galaxies have luminosities in the range 0.1-0.6 L-z=6* (with M-1600* = -20.95 +/- 0.12) and half-light radii in the range 0.6-0.9 kpc. Both their half-light radii and luminosities are consistent with existing samples of Lyman-break galaxies at z similar to 6. Spectroscopic analysis of the GRB afterglows indicate low metallicities ([M/H] less than or similar to -1) and low dust extinction (AV less than or similar to 0.1) along the line of sight. Using stellar population synthesis models, we explore the implications of each galaxy's luminosity for its possible star-formation history and consider the potential for emission line metallicity determination with the upcoming James Webb Space Telescope.