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Summary of UK AAOmega Workshop

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SCUBA gals, starbursts, AGN) ... Old Stellar Populations at Early Epochs Ages and metallicities of stellar ... Old stellar populations: determine age ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Summary of UK AAOmega Workshop


1
Summary of UK AAOmega Workshop
  • Matthew Colless, AAOmega workshop, AAO, 18 Feb
    2005

2
Peacock Local z-surveys after 2dFSDSS
  • There are only 2,000,000 galaxies at z
  • No more big local leaps in survey size/volume

2dFGRS SDSS total 500,000
3
Achievements of 2dFGRS
  • Pure fluctuation issues
  • Shape of P(k) and ?h
  • Hints of baryon wiggles ? baryon fraction
  • Redshift-space distortions ? ?8
  • Joint with WMAP ? unique standard model
  • Galaxy-formation issues
  • LFs and bias as f(type)
  • LFs and SFR as f(environment)
  • Groups and properties as f(halo mass)

4
Outline for AA? survey
Halo mass-to-light ratios
  • Science goals
  • Halo M/L to local group level measure
    efficiency peak
  • Detailed conditional luminosity functions void
    LFs to deeper levels
  • Detail model of stochastic biasing
  • Survey parameters
  • B
  • 47,000 new galaxies at z
  • 88 fields _at_ 400 fibres 30 nights
  • photo-z selection to remove z 0.2
  • SDSS Southern repeated strip

Long tcool
Feedback
Efficient
Group luminosity
Stochastic biasing
Joint lognormal model
Wild et al. 2004
5
Lahav Challenges for z-surveys
  • Galaxy bimodality and relative biasing

6
High-order moments
  • The two big superclusters in the 2dFGRS mean that
    it is not a fair sample for high-order moments?

7 Abell clusters 77 groups (8)
20 Abell clusters 93 groups (8)
7
Limits on ? masses
Wn 0.05
  • Free streaming effect gives upper bound on total
    mass from power spectrum
  • In table, all upper limits are 95 CL, but
    different priors !

0.01
0.00
8
Edge Massive Galaxies
  • Goal tracing the formation and evolution of
    massive galaxies with UKIDSS and AAOmega
  • Edge 2SLAQ/LRG UKIDSS teams
  • Big picture massive, passive galaxies provide
    one of the cleanest tests of galaxy evolution
    models given relative simplicity (cf. SCUBA gals,
    starbursts, AGN)
  • Capability UK has unique access to facilities
    required (wide-field NIR imaging plus
    multi-object spectroscopy)

9
AA?UKIDSS survey
  • UKIDSS has two relevant surveys
  • Large Area Survey (J20,K18.4)
  • Deep eXtragalactic Survey (J23,K21)
  • Depth at z0.8 a 2L gal is K18 at z1.2 a 4L
    gal is K18.5
  • Survey options
  • LAS-selected objects that are intrinsically as
    luminous as 2SLAQ over 100 deg2 but with low sky
    density
  • DXS-selected objects over tens of deg2 with
    larger absolute magnitude range than 2SLAQ and
    higher sky density
  • Future to go to z1.2 needs NIR spectroscopy
  • This will be available from Subaru FMOS
  • DXS can be basis, but will have smaller abs mag
    range

10
Shanks w(z) via QSO z-surveys
  • Shanks Outram 2SLAQ collaboration
  • 2SLAQ science
  • Observed redshifts for 1500/10000 20.5QSOs
  • Break luminosity-redshift degeneracy in studies
    of QSO clusteringbias evolution
  • QSO luminosity evolution at L
  • QSO-LRG clustering environment out to z
  • QSO line-strengths as function of L and z
  • QSO lensing by groups and clusters
  • Benefit from UKIDSS (XMM?) surveys in same areas

11
AA? (LRG ) QSO Redshift Survey
  • Strategy for QSO component of survey
  • 2 accurate peak positions require 150,000
    SDSS-2dF z0.5 LRGs in 1000 2dF pointings
  • 150,000 g?w?0.15
  • Good z-coverage for w(z) ? complements WFMOS at
    z3?
  • Need 3000deg2 of CCD photometry in south
    SDSSVST?
  • Outcomes from survey
  • AAOmega LRGQSO survey will map w(z) from z0.5
    to z2.2 via baryon wiggles
  • QSO Survey will give unique constraints on DE EoS
    at z1.4
  • AAOmega QSO survey will also map w(z) via QSO
    lensing and the Alcock-Pacynzski test

12
Oliver AA?/ASTRO-F Survey
  • Seb Oliver with Rich Savage, Bob Nichol and the
    ASTRO-F team
  • ASTRO-F mid-far IR satellite
  • launch August 2005
  • All-sky FIR survey at 60?m 170?m
  • 106-107 sources, zs to beyond 1
  • AA? follow-up galaxy survey
  • 104 sq.deg. survey of 106 gals
  • Redshifts 0
  • Science from AA?/ASTRO-F z-surveys
  • Star-formation in galaxies
  • Cosmology and dark energy

13
ASTRO-F survey expectations
14
ASTRO-F/AA? Science - I
  • Star-formation in normal galaxies
  • as function of redshift
  • as function of scale
  • as function of environment
  • Star-forming monsters
  • the transition from IRAS to SCUBA
  • Proposed survey
  • for SFR(r,t) and ISW effect
  • 300 gals/fld 30mJy _at_ 70?m
  • 1,000 deg-2 ? 105 galaxies in 300 fields _at_
    1hr/field ? 40 nights

15
ASTRO-F AA? Science II
  • Integrated Sachs Wolfe (ISW) effect measures a
    differential redshift of photons in a evolving
    potential well and provides a direct physical
    measurement of dark energy
  • Baryon oscillations provide a standard rod for
    mapping the evolution of the geometry of the
    universe with redshift and measure the equation
    of state of the dark energy
  • Proposed survey
  • for baryon oscillations and dark energy
  • 106 redshifts over 104 sq.deg.
  • 3000 AAO? fields x 1hr/fld 400 nights
  • should measure w0 at 10s

16
Colless Galaxy Evolution
  • Stellar Populations in Low-Redshift Galaxies
    Characterize the stellar pops and star-formation
    histories of the current galaxy population as a
    function of properties and environment at low-z
    (2dFGRS)
  • Resolved Stellar Populations and Dynamics
    Use AA? IFU capability to obtain
    spatially-resolved dynamics, ages and abundances
    in nearby galaxies
  • Old Stellar Populations at Early Epochs
    Ages and metallicities of stellar
    populations in luminous red galaxies as a
    function of mass (velocity dispersion) at early
    epochs, from 0.45

17
Stellar Populations in Galaxies - I
  • Goal survey to characterize the stellar
    populations of galaxies (age, metallicity,
    star-formation history) as a function of global
    properties (luminosity, morphology, mass) and
    environment (local density/structures)
  • Sample use 2dF/SDSS to pick 100 galaxies in each
    bin of a grid sampling luminosity (20 bins, M-3
    to M5), local density (10 bins in log?, voids
    to clusters) and morphology (5 bins, E/S0 to Irr)
    ? 105 galaxies
  • Method obtain spectra at 1Å resolution and
    S/N50 to measure spectral indices (ages,
    metallicities, SFR) and, where possible, velocity
    dispersions (i.e. masses)

18
Stellar Populations in Galaxies - II
  • Observations 2hr exposures at 1.4Å resolution
    (R3500, 75 km/s) give S/N45 to bJ19.5 and
    S/N90 at bJ18
  • Spectral coverage chosen appropriately by
    type/colour
  • Late types red/blue arms cover 3700-4500Å and H?
    resp.
  • Early types red/blue arms cover 4600-5400Å and
    CaT resp.
  • Old stellar populations determine age
    (distribution?) and metallicity (distribution?)
    from multiple spectral indices
  • Star-formation rates obtain both current and
    recent star-formation rates from Balmer lines and
    other SFR indicators
  • Masses from velocity dispersions for E/S0
    galaxies and bulge-dominated spirals

19
Stellar Populations in Galaxies - II
  • Time required with 300 galaxies/field, 4
    fields/clear night and 60 clear fraction, a
    sample of 105 galaxies will take 140 nights (2
    years at 35 nights/semester)
  • Problems
  • Aperture effects with size, z and seeing
    ameliorate by choosing sample to minimize,
    correcting results via models
  • Rotation velocities how best to deal with bulge
    disks?
  • Partial solution IFU obsvns for subset allows
    calibration of aperture effects sample of disk
    gals with rotation curves
  • Stellar population models must improve to make
    full use of high S/N spectra substantial work
    required

20
Resolved Populations and Dynamics - I
  • Goal spatially-resolved dynamics, abundances and
    ages in individual nearby galaxies using AA? IFU
  • Observations use blue and red setups of pops
    survey to study bulgedisk/oldyoung stellar
    populations
  • Dynamics map velocity field (1st to 4th moments)
    at many locations, likewise spectral indices, to
    build picture of the dynamics and the stellar
    populations
  • Sample one galaxy in each of 8 bins in
    luminosity (M-3...M5), 5 bins in log? (voids
    to clusters) and 5 bins in morphology (E/S0 to
    Irr) ? 200 galaxies

21
Resolved Populations and Dynamics - II
  • Exposure times each IFU fibre is only
    0.5 arcsec2, and desired S/N is high (50) so
    exposure times critically depend on extent to
    which IFU pixels can be co-added
  • S/N and SB e.g. 4 hour exposures only reach a SB
    limit of 19.25 mag/arcsec2 and (if doing 2
    setups) this means the survey duration is 300
    nights!
  • Adaptive sampling need to co-add many IFU pixels
    to reach interestingly faint surface brightness
    levels
  • Competition should this be done with AA? on AAT
    or with SAURON on WHT or WIFES on SSO 2.3m?

22
Old-Population at Early Epochs - I
  • Goal study formation and evolution of the oldest
    stellar populations by observing luminous red
    galaxies (LRGs) over 0.452dF-SDSS LRG survey)
  • Sample select from LRG survey of 104 luminous
    (MMz0) galaxies with rest-frame colours of old
    stellar populations (age 5Gyr) n.b. 100
    LRGs/2dF field
  • Method obtain spectra at 1Å resolution and
    S/N30 to measure spectral indices (ages,
    metallicities, SFR histories) and velocity
    dispersions (masses) long time baseline resolves
    age-metallicity degeneracy in spectra

23
Old-Population at Early Epochs - II
  • Setup need new dichroic with split at 8000Å and
    another 1000R VPHG to allow blue arm to cover
    6900-8100Å and red arm to cover 8000-9200Å at
    0.6Å/pixel
  • Measurements measure spectral indices H?, Mgb
    and various Fe lines in rest-frame range
    4800-5400Å, plus velocity dispersions with
    resolution ? 50 km/s
  • Observations 8 hr exposures give S/N30 to
    i19.5-19.8 (LRG survey limit) superb
    sky-subtraction is needed, but as surface density
    of targets is 100/field can use beam-switching
    and NS to reach Poisson limit
  • Duration 50nt x 60 clear x 1 fld/nt x 100/fld
    3000 gal

24
Whiteboard from UK Workshop
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