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91探花
Black Hole

Lensing of space time around a black hole. At 91探花 we study black holes observationally and theoretically on all size and time scales - it is some of our core work.

Credit: ALAIN RIAZUELO, IAP/UPMC/CNRS. CLICK HERE TO VIEW MORE IMAGES.

Prof. Matt Jarvis

Professor of Astrophysics

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Cosmology
  • Galaxy formation and evolution
  • Hintze Centre for Astrophysical Surveys
  • MeerKAT
  • Rubin-LSST
  • The Square Kilometre Array (SKA)
Matt.Jarvis@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)83654
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 703
  • About
  • Publications

The contribution of discrete sources to the sky temperature at 144 MHz

Astronomy and Astrophysics EDP Sciences 648 (2021) A10

Authors:

Mj Hardcastle, Tw Shimwell, C Tasse, Pn Best, A Drabent, Mj Jarvis, I Prandoni, Hja Roettgering, J Sabater, Dj Schwarz

Abstract:

In recent years, the level of the extragalactic radio background has become a point of considerable interest, with some lines of argument pointing to an entirely new cosmological synchrotron background. The contribution of the known discrete source population to the sky temperature is key to this discussion. Because of the steep spectral index of the excess over the cosmic microwave background, it is best studied at low frequencies where the signal is strongest. The Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR) wide and deep sky surveys give us the best constraints yet on the contribution of discrete extragalactic sources at 144 MHz, and in particular allow us to include contributions from diffuse, low-surface-brightness emission that could not be fully accounted for in previous work. We show that, even with these new data, known sources can still only account for around a quarter of the estimated extragalactic sky temperature at LOFAR frequencies.

The VANDELS ESO public spectroscopic survey: final data release of 2087 spectra and spectroscopic measurements

Astronomy and Astrophysics EDP Sciences 647 (2021) A150

Authors:

B Garilli, R McLure, L Pentericci, P Franzetti, A Gargiulo, A Carnall, O Cucciati, A Iovino, R Amorin, M Bolzonella, A Bongiorno, M Castellano, A Cimatti, M Cirasuolo, F Cullen, J Dunlop, D Elbaz, S Finkelstein, A Fontana, F Fontanot, M Fumana, L Guaita, W Hartley, M Jarvis, S Juneau, D Maccagni, D McLeod, K Nandra, E Pompei, L Pozzetti, M Scodeggio, M Talia, A Calabro, G Cresci, Jpu Fynbo, Np Hathi, P Hibon, Am Koekemoer, M Magliocchetti, M Salvato, G Vietri, G Zamorani, O Almaini, I Balestra, S Bardelli, R Begley, G Brammer, Ef Bell, Raa Bowler, M Brusa

Abstract:

VANDELS is an ESO Public Spectroscopic Survey designed to build a sample of high-signal-to-noise ratio, medium-resolution spectra of galaxies at redshifts between 1 and 6.5. Here we present the final Public Data Release of the VANDELS Survey, comprising 2087 redshift measurements. We provide a detailed description of sample selection, observations, and data reduction procedures. The final catalogue reaches a target selection completeness of 40% at iAB = 25. The high signal-to-noise ratio of the spectra (above 7 in 80% of the spectra) and the dispersion of 2.5 Å allowed us to measure redshifts with high precision, the redshift measurement success rate reaching almost 100%. Together with the redshift catalogue and the reduced spectra, we also provide optical mid-infrared photometry and physical parameters derived through fitting the spectral energy distribution. The observed galaxy sample comprises both passive and star forming galaxies covering a stellar mass range of 8.3 < Log(M∗/M⊙) < 11.7.

The infrared-radio correlation of star-forming galaxies is strongly M-star-dependent but nearly redshift-invariant since z similar to 4

Astronomy and Astrophysics European Southern Observatory 647 (2021) A123

Authors:

I Delvecchio, E Daddi, Mt Sargent, Matt Jarvis, D Elbaz, S Jin, D Liu, Imogen Whittam, H Algera, R Carraro, C D'Eugenio, J Delhaize, Bs Kalita, S Leslie, D Cs Molnar, M Novak, I Prandoni, V Smolcic, Y Ao, M Aravena, F Bournaud, Jd Collier, Sm Randriamampandry, Z Randriamanakoto, G Rodighiero, J Schober, Sv White, G Zamorani

Abstract:

Over the past decade, several works have used the ratio between total (rest 8鈭1000 渭m) infrared and radio (rest 1.4 GHz) luminosity in star-forming galaxies (qIR), often referred to as the infrared-radio correlation (IRRC), to calibrate the radio emission as a star formation rate (SFR) indicator. Previous studies constrained the evolution of qIR with redshift, finding a mild but significant decline that is yet to be understood. Here, for the first time, we calibrate qIR as a function of both stellar mass (M鈰) and redshift, starting from an M鈰-selected sample of > 400 000 star-forming galaxies in the COSMOS field, identified via (NUV鈥呪垝鈥卹)/(r鈥呪垝鈥匤) colours, at redshifts of 0.1鈥<鈥剒鈥<鈥4.5. Within each (M鈰,z) bin, we stacked the deepest available infrared/sub-mm and radio images. We fit the stacked IR spectral energy distributions with typical star-forming galaxy and IR-AGN templates. We then carefully removed the radio AGN candidates via a recursive approach. We find that the IRRC evolves primarily with M鈰, with more massive galaxies displaying a systematically lower qIR. A secondary, weaker dependence on redshift is also observed. The best-fit analytical expression is the following: qIR(M鈰,鈥唞) = (2.646 卤 0.024) 脳 (1鈥+鈥厇)(鈥呪垝鈥0.023鈥吢扁0.008)鈥(0.148 卤 0.013) 脳 (log鈥哅鈰/M鈯欌呪垝鈥10). Adding the UV dust-uncorrected contribution to the IR as a proxy for the total SFR would further steepen the qIR dependence on M鈰. We interpret the apparent redshift decline reported in previous works as due to low-M鈰 galaxies being progressively under-represented at high redshift, as a consequence of binning only in redshift and using either infrared or radio-detected samples. The lower IR/radio ratios seen in more massive galaxies are well described by their higher observed SFR surface densities. Our findings highlight the fact that using radio-synchrotron emission as a proxy for SFR requires novel M鈰-dependent recipes that will enable us to convert detections from future ultra-deep radio surveys into accurate SFR measurements down to low-M鈰 galaxies with low SFR.

Deep extragalactic visible legacy survey (DEVILS): stellar mass growth by morphological type since z=1

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Royal Astronomical Society 505:1 (2021) 136-160

Authors:

Abdolhosein Hashemizadeh, Simon P Driver, Luke JM Davies, Aaron SG Robotham, Sabine Bellstedt, Rogier A Windhorst, Malcolm Bremer, Steven Phillipps, Matt Jarvis, Benne W Holwerda, Claudia del P Lagos, Soheil Koushan, Malgorzata Siudek, Natasha Maddox, Jessica E Thorne, Pascal Elahi

Abstract:

Using high-resolution Hubble Space Telescope imaging data, we perform a visual morphological classification of 鈭36鈥000 galaxies at z < 1 in the deep extragalactic visible legacy survey/cosmological evolution survey region. As the main goal of this study, we derive the stellar mass function (SMF) and stellar mass density (SMD) sub-divided by morphological types. We find that visual morphological classification using optical imaging is increasingly difficult at z > 1 as the fraction of irregular galaxies and merger systems (when observed at rest-frame UV/blue wavelengths) dramatically increases. We determine that roughly two-thirds of the total stellar mass of the Universe today was in place by z 鈭 1. Double-component galaxies dominate the SMD at all epochs and increase in their contribution to the stellar mass budget to the present day. Elliptical galaxies are the second most dominant morphological type and increase their SMD by 鈭2.5 times, while by contrast, the pure-disc population significantly decreases by 鈭85 per cent鈦. According to the evolution of both high- and low-mass ends of the SMF, we find that mergers and in situ evolution in discs are both present at z < 1, and conclude that double-component galaxies are predominantly being built by the in situ evolution in discs (apparent as the growth of the low-mass end with time), while mergers are likely responsible for the growth of ellipticals (apparent as the increase of intermediate/high-mass end).

The radio galaxy population in the SIMBA simulations

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Royal Astronomical Society 503:3 (2021) 3492-3509

Authors:

Nicole Thomas, Romeel Dav茅, Matt J Jarvis, Daniel Angl茅s-Alc谩zar

Abstract:

We examine the 1.4鈥塆Hz radio luminosities of galaxies arising from star formation and active galactic nuclei (AGNs) within the state-of-the-art cosmological hydrodynamic simulation SIMBA. SIMBA grows black holes via gravitational torque limited accretion from cold gas and Bondi accretion from hot gas, and employs AGN feedback including jets at low Eddington ratios. We define a population of radio loud AGNs (RLAGNs) based on the presence of ongoing jet feedback. Within RLAGN, we define high and low excitation radio galaxies (HERGs and LERGs) based on their dominant mode of black hole accretion: torque limited accretion representing feeding from a cold disc, or Bondi representing advection-dominated accretion from a hot medium. SIMBA predicts good agreement with the observed radio luminosity function (RLF) and its evolution, overall as well as separately for HERGs and LERGs. Quiescent galaxies with AGN-dominated radio flux dominate the RLF at 鈮1022鈭23 W Hz鈭1, while star formation dominates at lower radio powers. Overall, RLAGNs have higher black hole accretion rates and lower star formation rates than non-RLAGN at a given stellar mass or velocity dispersion, but have similar black hole masses. SIMBA predicts an LERG number density of 8.53 Mpc鈭3, 鈭10脳 higher than for HERGs, broadly as observed. While LERGs dominate among most massive galaxies with the largest black holes and HERGs dominate at high specific star formation rates, they otherwise largely populate similar-sized dark matter haloes and have similar host galaxy properties. SIMBA thus predicts that deeper radio surveys will reveal an increasing overlap between the host galaxy demographics of HERGs and LERGs.

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