AEGIS-X: Results from the Chandra survey of the Extended Groth Strip

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Quenched and Quenching Galaxies at Low to High Redshifts S.M. Faber & UCSC and CANDELS collaborators Dekel60 Fest December 13, 2011 M31: UV GALEX.
Advertisements

207th AAS Meeting Washington D.C., 8-13 January The Spitzer SWIRE Legacy Program Spitzer Wide-Area Infrared Extragalactic Survey Mari Polletta (UCSD)
18 July Monte Carlo Markov Chain Parameter Estimation in Semi-Analytic Models Bruno Henriques Peter Thomas Sussex Survey Science Centre.
Kevin Bundy, Caltech The Mass Assembly History of Field Galaxies: Detection of an Evolving Mass Limit for Star-Forming Galaxies Kevin Bundy R. S. Ellis,
Dark Matter and Galaxy Formation Section 4: Semi-Analytic Models of Galaxy Formation Joel R. Primack 2009, eprint arXiv: Presented by: Michael.
Weak-Lensing selected, X-ray confirmed Clusters and the AGN closest to them Dara Norman NOAO/CTIO 2006 November 6-8 Boston Collaborators: Deep Lens Survey.
Eight billion years of galaxy evolution Eric Bell Borch, Zheng, Wolf, Papovich, Le Floc’h, & COMBO-17, MIPS, and GEMS teams Venice
AGN and Quasar Clustering at z= : Results from the DEEP2 + AEGIS Surveys Alison Coil Hubble Fellow University of Arizona Chandra Science Workshop.
SURVEY CHALLENGES Kirpal Nandra Imperial College London With help from… Antonis Georgakakis, Elise Laird, James Aird, and the AEGIS team….
X-ray Bright, Optically Normal Galaxies - XBONGS Forman, Anderson, Hickox, Jones, Murray, Vikhlinin, Kenter and the Bootes Team Bootes Survey 9.3 sq. degrees.
“false-color” keV X-ray image of the Bootes field A large population of mid-infrared selected, obscured AGN in the Bootes field Ryan C. Hickox Harvard-Smithsonian.
Claudia Lagos U. 8 Abril 2008 Seminario de Astrofísica “Semi-analytic galaxies (SAG) model: results on BH and galaxy population” Claudia Lagos (PUC, Chile)
PRESIDENCY UNIVERSITY
Sugata Kaviraj Hertfordshire Heidelberg 14 July 2014 With: Stas Shabala, Richard Ellis, Adam Deller, Enno Middelberg, Kevin Schawinski, Sukyoung Yi Star.
Clustering of QSOs and X-ray AGN at z=1 Alison Coil Hubble Fellow University of Arizona October 2007 Collaborators: Jeff Newman, Joe Hennawi, Marc Davis,
Large-Scale Structure at z=1: Results from the DEEP2 Survey Alison Coil Steward Observatory University of Arizona March 2006.
The Clustering of AGN Using Photometric Redshifts Elias Koulouridis Antonis Georgakakis National Observatory of Athens.
Establishing the Connection Between Quenching and AGN MGCT II November, 2006 Kevin Bundy (U. of Toronto) Caltech/Palomar: R. Ellis, C. Conselice Chandra:
Star Formation Downsizing: Testing the Role of Mergers and AGN Kevin Bundy (University of Toronto) Richard Ellis (Caltech), Tommaso Treu (UCSB), Antonis.
How to start an AGN: the role of host galaxy environment Rachel Gilmour (ESO Chile & IfA, Edinburgh) Philip Best (Edinburgh), Omar Almaini & Meghan Gray.
Obscured AGN in the (z)COSMOS survey AGN9, Ferrara, May Angela Bongiorno Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik, Garching, GERMANY AND.
X-ray Surveys with Space Observatory Khyung Hee University Kim MinBae Park Jisook.
The Evolution of Quasars and Massive Black Holes “Quasar Hosts and the Black Hole-Spheroid Connection”: Dunlop 2004 “The Evolution of Quasars”: Osmer 2004.
Black Hole Growth and Galaxy Evolution Meg Urry Yale University.
Coevolution of black holes and galaxies at high redshift David M Alexander (Durham)
Unravelling the formation and evolutionary histories of the most massive galaxies Ilani Loubser (Univ. of the Western Cape)
RADIO OBSERVATIONS IN VVDS FIELD : PAST - PRESENT - FUTURE P.Ciliegi(OABo), Marco Bondi (IRA) G. Zamorani(OABo), S. Bardelli (OABo) + VVDS-VLA collaboration.
Conference “Summary” Alice Shapley (Princeton). Overview Multitude of new observational, multi-wavelength results on massive galaxies from z~0 to z>5:
Science Achievements of the DEEP2/AEGIS survey by S. M. Faber and the DEEP & AEGIS Teams Supported by CARA, UCO/Lick Observatory, the National Science.
The coordinated growth of stars, haloes and large-scale structure since z=1 Michael Balogh Department of Physics and Astronomy University of Waterloo.
Properties of the point-like sources in the XMM-LSS field Olga Melnyk and XMM-LSS collaboration N. Clerc, L. Chiappetti, A. Elyiv, P.Gandhi, E.Gosset,
MMT Science Symposium1 “false-color” keV X-ray image of the Bootes field Thousands of AGNs in the 9.3 square degree Bootes field * X-ray and infrared.
The Chandra/SWIRE Survey: Radio Properties Of X-Ray Selected AGN Manuela Molina INAF/IASF Milano AGN9 – Ferrara, 24/27 May 2010 In collaboration with:
The Accretion History of SMBHs in Massive Galaxies Kate Brand STScI Collaborators: M. Brown, A. Dey, B. Jannuzi, and the XBootes and Bootes MIPS teams.
Galaxy and Quasar Clustering at z=1 Alison Coil University of Arizona April 2007.
HST Workshop Bologna Jan 31, 2008 Heavily obscured SMBH at high redshift Andrea Comastri INAF - OABologna C. Vignali, R. Gilli, K. Iwasawa, F. Civano,
1 Carlo Nipoti Dipartimento di Astronomia Università di Bologna Thermal evaporation, AGN feedback and quenched star formation in massive galaxies Chandra.
Black hole accretion history of active galactic nuclei 曹新伍 中国科学院上海天文台.
Semi-analytical model of galaxy formation Xi Kang Purple Mountain Observatory, CAS.
AGN Demographics Christine Black 3/1/12
Robust identification of distant Compton-thick AGNs IR AGN Optical AGN Need for deep optical-mid-IR spectroscopy: multiple lines of evidence for intrinsic.
What is EVLA? Giant steps to the SKA-high ParameterVLAEVLAFactor Point Source Sensitivity (1- , 12 hr.)10  Jy1  Jy 10 Maximum BW in each polarization0.1.
Tools for computing the AGN feedback: radio-loudness and the kinetic luminosity function Gabriele Melini Fabio La Franca Fabrizio Fiore Active Galactic.
Multiwavelength AGN Number Counts in the GOODS fields Ezequiel Treister (Yale/U. de Chile) Meg Urry (Yale) And the GOODS AGN Team.
9 Gyr of massive galaxy evolution Bell (MPIA), Wolf (Oxford), Papovich (Arizona), McIntosh (UMass), and the COMBO-17, GEMS and MIPS teams Baltimore 27.
T. J. Cox Phil Hopkins Lars Hernquist + many others (the Hernquist Mafia) Feedback from AGN during Galaxy Mergers.
Maracalagonis, 24/05/ Semi-Analytic Modeling of Galaxy Formation PhD student: Elena Ricciardelli Supervisor: prof. Alberto Franceschini.
Dipartimento di Astronomia Università di Bologna
Fueling QSOs: The Relevance of Mergers
The formation and dynamical state of the brightest cluster galaxies
Sugata Kaviraj Hertfordshire Based on: Kaviraj 2014, MN, 440, 2944
Quasars: old black holes with young stars (?)
Molecular gas in cooling flows Interplay with AGN and starbursts
An Arecibo HI 21-cm Absorption Survey of Rich Abell Clusters
Clustering properties and environment of AGN
DIFFUSE RADIO SOURCES in GROUPS and POOR CLUSTERS
The Evolving Luminosity Function of Red Galaxies
Paul Alexander Dave Green, Malcolm Longair, Julia Riley, Martin Krause
Lecture 10: Black Holes and How They Shine
The X-ray Evolution of Young Post-Merger
Tracing the Accretion History of the Universe by stacking X-rays from Red Galaxies in the NDWFS Kate Brand, NOAO, Tucson A. Dey, B. Jannuzi, M. Brown,
- = + = Quasars, Mergers, and the Formation of Elliptical Galaxies
Active Versus Normal Galaxies
Spectral Energy Distributions of a Hard X-ray Selected AGN Sample in the Extended Groth Strip Cristina Ramos Almeida1, Jose Miguel Rodríguez Espinosa1,
QSO2 and their host galaxies
Black Holes in the Deepest Extragalactic X-ray Surveys
Cluster Cosmology in Deep Fields
Shaji Vattakunnel - University of Trieste
Borislav Nedelchev et al. 2019
Compact Star-Forming Galaxies as Old Starbursts Becoming Quiescent
Presentation transcript:

AEGIS-X: Results from the Chandra survey of the Extended Groth Strip Elise Laird A Georgakakis (NOA), K Nandra (PI: Imperial), J Aird (Imperial), D Croton (Berkeley), K Bundy (U Toronto), A Coil (Steward), C Pierce (UCSC), and the AEGIS team

All Wavelength Extra-Galactic International Survey Deep multiwavelength data Wide area (~0.5 -1.0 deg2) Keck/DEIMOS DEEP2 spectroscopy: >10,000 redshifts with R<24.1, mainly 0.6<z<1.4 GALEX Chandra HST/ACS Palomar aegis.ucolick.org; Davis et al. (2007) The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada

AEGIS-X survey 1.6 Ms over 0.67 deg2 (8 ACIS-I pointings) Flux limits (1% complete); SB (0.5-2 keV) 5.3 x 10-17 cgs HB (2-10 keV) 3.8 x10-16 cgs 1325 sources, selected between 0.5 and 7 keV <1.5% spurious sources 0.79” astrometric accuracy Laird et al. submitted to ApJS The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada

AEGIS-X survey 1.6 Ms over 0.67 deg2 (8 ACIS-I pointings) Flux limits (1% complete); SB (0.5-2 keV) 5.3 x 10-17 cgs HB (2-10 keV) 3.8 x10-16 cgs 1325 sources, selected between 0.5 and 7 keV <1.5% spurious sources 0.79” astrometric accuracy AO9: additional 1.8 Ms over 0.2 deg2 Laird et al. submitted to ApJS Reduced data, data products, catalogues publicly available at http://astro.imperial.ac.uk/research/aegis The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada

AEGIS-X survey ---- L* at z=1 Using Maximum Likelihood technique to find secure counterparts: optical: 76%, complete to RAB=24.1, 6% spurious matches IRAC 3.6m: 94% (of sources with coverage), complete to mAB=23.8, 1% spurious matches Currently ~35% spectroscopic completeness (with DEEP3  60%) 800ks data Spectroscopy: Keck/DEEP2 (Davis et al. 2003) MMT (Coil et al. 2008) The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada

AGN formation models “QSO mode” Merger (QSO-mode) models (e.g. Hopkins et al. 2005): • gas rich major merger • gas inflows trigger BH accretion & starbursts • dust/gas clouds obscure AGN • AGN feedback sweeps away gas, quenching SF and BH accretion “Radio mode” Weak AGN feedback models in dense regions (e.g. Croton et al. 2006; Bower et al. 2006): • cooling flows in groups or clusters   large cold-gas reservoirs at galaxy centre • weak AGN activity invoked to suppress cooling flows by either heating of mechanically sweeping away the gas Hydra-A cluster, McNamara et al. 2000 Kazantzidis et al. 2005 The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada

Colour-magnitude relation DEEP2 survey, 0.4<z<1.4; Willmer et al. 2006 Colour bimodality: Blue cloud: star-forming Red sequence: evolved stellar pop Galaxy stellar mass builds via mergers in blue cloud Rapid quenching RS Are AGN responsible for quenching? Or for maintaining galaxies on RS? Dry mergers? Quenching Merger-driven star formation e.g. Strateva et al 2001; Bell et al 2004; Faber et al 2007 The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada

Colour-magnitude relation for AGN z=0.6-1.4; Nandra et al. 2007 The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada

Colour-magnitude relation for AGN Are AGN responsible for the quenching? Obscured X-ray sources in RED cloud: old stellar populations X-ray surveys select AGN after the quenching of the star-formation Are there obscured AGN (in star forming galaxies) below X-ray detection threshold? Are obscured AGN found in post starburst galaxies? z=0.2-0.7 z=0.7-1.4 Coil et al. 2008 The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada

X-ray stacking results: 24m bright sample  Stack X-ray emission of galaxies at different regions of CMD and in post starburst galaxies Georgakakis et al. 2008 Hard signal around valley and in red sequence, C>–0.15 Obscured AGN associated with transition galaxies <Lx> = 1041 erg s-1 Stacked signal of 26 post starbursts: HR > 0.35. <LX>~1041 ergs/s The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada

AGN host galaxy morphologies 0.2<z<1.4 LX>1042 erg s-2 65% E/S0/Sa Massive, bulge dominated, red, evolved hosts Pierce et al. 2007 Gini coefficient: clumpiness; M20: central concentration Abraham et al. 2003; Lotz et al. 2004 The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada

AGN stellar mass function Hasinger et al. 2005 No Evidence for AGN hosts “downsizing” in mass Bundy et al. 2008 Accretion rate evolution? Also Babic et al. 2007 for z<1 in CFD-S The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada

AGN: Massive galaxies tracing large scale structure A. Coil AGN: Massive galaxies tracing large scale structure Also ECDF-S: Silverman et al. 2008; XBootes Murray et al. 2005; Hickox et al. 2008 The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada

AGN/Galaxy cross-correlation function Split into 2 redshift bins: z=0.2-0.7 and z=0.7-1.4 X-ray AGN cluster like red galaxies, at z~0.5 and z~0.9 Relative bias of X-ray AGN to galaxies: z=0.7-1.4 red gals: 1.1 (0.1) blue gals: 1.7 (0.1) z=0.2-0.7 red gals: 1.1 (0.1) blue gals: 1.4 (0.1) Coil et al. 2006 Coil et al. 2008 The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada

AGN: relationship to groups Gerke et al. (2006) optical spectroscopic groups 42% of X-ray AGN in groups Excess compared to general population (~99%) Tentative excess relative to matched galaxy population (~91%) Tentative evidence that field AGN more luminous than group AGN (~98%) X-ray Randomised optical Randomised optical X-ray Also Miyaji et al. 2007; Silverman et al. 2008 0.7< z< 1.4; Georgakakis et al. 2008 The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada

Conclusions Most black hole growth at z<1 not in “QSO mode” Typical AGN at z~1 are in massive, red host galaxies Star formation has terminated or is terminating Many obscured AGN on red sequence Bulge dominated, mergers not main trigger Stellar Mass Function Flat, non-evolving, no downsizing in mass Large scale structure environment Dense environments (cluster like hosts) Around ~40% in groups Most black hole growth at z<1 not in “QSO mode” The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada

AEGIS-X advertisement All reduced data and data products for AEGIS-X released 1 May 2008. Processed other Chandra deep fields in same way and reduced data, data products & source catalogues also released Chandra Deep Field North (2Ms) Chandra Deep Field South (2Ms) Extended Chandra Deep Field South (4 x 250 ks) Also large area, shallow ELAIS-N1 and XBootes surveys http://astro.imperial.ac.uk/research/aegis The X-ray Universe 2008, Granada