Completeness and confusion in the identification of Lyman-break galaxies

HY-REDSHIFT UNIVERSE: GALAXY FORMATION AND EVOLUTION AT HIGH REDSHIFT 193 (1999) 513-516

Authors:

G Cotter, T Haynes, JC Baker, ME Jones, R Saunders

Cosmological evolution and hierarchical galaxy formation

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 309:4 (1999) 823-832

Authors:

W Percival, L Miller

Galactic bulges from Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS observations:: ages and dust

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 310:3 (1999) 703-716

Authors:

RF Peletier, M Balcells, RL Davies, Y Andredakis, A Vazdekis, A Burkert, F Prada

No evidence for a 'redshift cut-off' for the most powerful classical double radio sources

ASTR SOC P 193 (1999) 90-93

Authors:

MJ Jarvis, S Rawlings, CJ Willott, KM Blundell, S Eales, M Lacy

Abstract:

We use three samples (3CRR, 6CE and 6C*) to investigate the radio luminosity function (RLF) for the 'most powerful' low-frequency selected radio sources. We find that the data are well fitted by a model with a constant ca-moving space density at high redshift as well as by one with a declining co-moving space density above some particular redshift. This behaviour is very similar to that inferred for steep-spectrum radio quasars by Willott et al (1998) in Line with the expectations of Unified Schemes. We conclude that there is as yet no evidence for a 'redshift cutoff' in the co-moving space densities of powerful classical double radio sources, and rule out a art-off at z less than or similar to 2.5.

QSO clustering and the AAT 2dF QSO redshift survey

PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES 357:1750 (1999) 185-198

Authors:

BJ Boyle, SM Groom, RJ Smith, T Shanks, L Miller, N Loaring