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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

SpIES: THE SPITZER IRAC EQUATORIAL SURVEY

Timlin, John D., Ross, Nicholas P., Richards, Gordon T., Lacy, Mark, Ryan, Erin L., Stone, Robert B., Bauer, Franz E., Brandt, W. N., Fan, Xiaohui, Glikman, Eilat, Haggard, Daryl, Jiang, Linhua, LaMassa, Stephanie M., Lin, Yen-Ting, Makler, Martin, McGehee, Peregrine, Myers, Adam D., Schneider, Donald P., Urry, C. Megan, Wollack, Edward J., Zakamska, Nadia L. 29 June 2016 (has links)
We describe the first data release from the Spitzer-IRAC Equatorial Survey (SpIES); a large-area survey of similar to 115 deg(2) in the Equatorial SDSS Stripe 82 field using Spitzer during its "warm" mission phase. SpIES was designed to probe sufficient volume to perform measurements of quasar clustering and the luminosity function at z >= 3 to test various models for "feedback" from active galactic nuclei (AGNs). Additionally, the wide range of available multi-wavelength, multi-epoch ancillary data enables SpIES to identify both high-redshift (z >= 5) quasars as well as obscured quasars missed by optical surveys. SpIES achieves 5 sigma depths of 6.13 mu Jy (21.93 AB magnitude) and 5.75 mu Jy (22.0 AB magnitude) at 3.6 and 4.5 mu m, respectively-depths significantly fainter than the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE). We show that the SpIES survey recovers a much larger fraction of spectroscopically confirmed quasars (similar to 98%) in Stripe 82 than are recovered by WISE (similar to 55%). This depth is especially powerful at high-redshift (z >= 3.5), where SpIES recovers 94% of confirmed quasars, whereas WISE only recovers 25%. Here we define the SpIES survey parameters and describe the image processing, source extraction, and catalog production methods used to analyze the SpIES data. In addition to this survey paper, we release 234 images created by the SpIES team and three detection catalogs: a 3.6 mu m. only detection catalog containing similar to 6.1 million sources, a 4.5 mu m. only detection catalog containing similar to 6.5 million sources, and a dual-band detection catalog containing similar to 5.4 million sources.
2

SPIRITS: Uncovering Unusual Infrared Transients with Spitzer

Kasliwal, Mansi M., Bally, John, Masci, Frank, Cody, Ann Marie, Bond, Howard E., Jencson, Jacob E., Tinyanont, Samaporn, Cao, Yi, Contreras, Carlos, Dykhoff, Devin A., Amodeo, Samuel, Armus, Lee, Boyer, Martha, Cantiello, Matteo, Carlon, Robert L., Cass, Alexander C., Cook, David, Corgan, David T., Faella, Joseph, Fox, Ori D., Green, Wayne, Gehrz, R. D., Helou, George, Hsiao, Eric, Johansson, Joel, Khan, Rubab M., Lau, Ryan M., Langer, Norbert, Levesque, Emily, Milne, Peter, Mohamed, Shazrene, Morrell, Nidia, Monson, Andy, Moore, Anna, Ofek, Eran O., Sullivan, Donal O’, Parthasarathy, Mudumba, Perez, Andres, Perley, Daniel A., Phillips, Mark, Prince, Thomas A., Shenoy, Dinesh, Smith, Nathan, Surace, Jason, Dyk, Schuyler D. Van, Whitelock, Patricia A., Williams, Robert 19 April 2017 (has links)
We present an ongoing, five-year systematic search for extragalactic infrared transients, dubbed SPIRITS-SPitzer InfraRed Intensive Transients Survey. In the first year, using Spitzer/IRAC, we searched 190 nearby galaxies with cadence baselines of one month and six months. We discovered over 1958 variables and 43 transients. Here, we describe the survey design and highlight 14 unusual infrared transients with no optical counterparts to deep limits, which we refer to as SPRITEs (eSPecially Red Intermediate-luminosity Transient Events). SPRITEs are in the infrared luminosity gap between novae and supernovae, with [4.5] absolute magnitudes between -11 and -14 (Vega-mag) and [3.6]-[4.5] colors between 0.3 mag and 1.6 mag. The photometric evolution of SPRITEs is diverse, ranging from < 0.1 mag yr(-1) to > 7 mag yr(-1). SPRITEs occur in star-forming galaxies. We present an indepth study of one of them, SPIRITS 14ajc in Messier 83, which shows shock-excited molecular hydrogen emission. This shock may have been triggered by the dynamic decay of a non-hierarchical system of massive stars that led to either the formation of a binary or a protostellar merger.

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