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DIFFUSE [CII] 158 MICRON LINE EMISSION FROM THE INTERSTELLAR MATTER AT HIGH GALACTIC LATITUDE
MATSUHARA H.,TANAKA M.,KAWADA M.,MAKIUTI S.,MATSUMOTO T.,NAKAGAWA T.,OKUDA H.,SHIBAI H.,HIROMOTO N.,OKUMURA K.,LANGE A. E.,BOCK J. J. The Korean Astronomical Society 1996 Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society Vol.29 No.suppl1
We present the results of an rocket-borne observation of far-infrared [CII] line at 157.7 ${\mu}m$ from the diffuse inter-stellar medium in the Ursa Major. We also introduce a part of results on the [CII] emission recently obtained by the IRTS, a liquid-helium cooled 15cm telescope onboard the Space Flyer Unit. From the rocket-borne observation we obtained the cooling rate of the diffuse HI gas due to the [CII] line emission, which is $1.3{\pm}0.2 {\times} 10^{-26}$ $ergss^{-1} H^{-1}_{atom}$. We also observed appreciable [CII] emission from the molecular clouds, with average CII/CO intensity ratio of 420. The IRTS observation provided the [CII] line emission distribution over large area of the sky along great circles crossing the Galactic plane at I = $50^{\circ}$ and I = $230^{\circ}$. We found two components in their intensity distributions, one concentrates on the Galactic plane and the another extends over at least $20^{\circ}$ in Galactic latitude. We ascribe one component to the emission from the Galactic disk, and the another one to the emission from the local interstellar gas. The [CII] cooling rate of the latter component is $5.6 {\pm} 2.2 {\times}10$.
OVERVIEW OF THE NORTH ECLIPTIC POLE DEEP MULTI-WAVELENGTH SURVEY (NEP-DEEP)
Matsuhara, H.,Wada, T.,Takagi, T.,Nakagawa, T.,Murata, K.,Churei, S.,Goto, T.,Oyabu, S.,Takeuchi, T.T.,Ohyama, Y.,Miyaji, T.,Krumpe, M.,Lee, H.M.,Im, M.,Serjeant, S.,Peason, C.P.,White, G.,Malkan, M.A The Korean Astronomical Society 2012 天文學論叢 Vol.27 No.4
An overview of the North Ecliptic Pole (NEP) deep multi-wavelength survey covering from X-ray to radio wavelengths is presented. The main science objective of this multi-wavelength project is to unveil the star-formation and AGN activities obscured by dust in the violent epoch of the Universe (z=0.5-2), when the star formation and black-hole evolution activities were much stronger than the present. The NEP deep survey with AKARI/IRC consists of two survey projects: shallow wide (8.2 sq. deg, NEP-Wide) and the deep one (0.6 sq. deg, NEP-Deep). The NEP-Deep provides us with a $15{\mu}m$ or $18{\mu}m$ selected sample of several thousands of galaxies, the largest sample ever made at these wavelengths. A continuous filter coverage at mid-IR wavelengths (7, 9, 11, 15, 18, and $24{\mu}m$) is unique and vital to diagnose the contribution from starbursts and AGNs in the galaxies at the violent epoch. The recent updates of the ancillary data are also provided: optical/near-IR magnitudes (Subaru, CFHT), X-ray (Chandra), FUV/NUV (GALEX), radio (WSRT, GMRT), optical spectra (Keck/DEIMOS etc.), Subaru/FMOS, Herschel/SPIRE, and JCMT/SCUBA-2.
OVERVIEW OF NORTH ECLIPTIC POLE DEEP MULTI-WAVELENGTH SURVEY (NEP-DEEP)
H. Matsuhara,T. Wada,N. Oi,T. Takagi,T. Nakagawa,K. Murata,T. Goto,S. Oyabu,T.T. Takeuchi,K. Ma lek,A. Solarz,Y. Ohyama,T. Miyaji,M. Krumpe,H. M. Lee,임명신,S. Serjeant,C. P. Pearson,G. J. White,M. A. Ma 한국천문학회 2017 天文學論叢 Vol.32 No.1
The recent updates of the North Ecliptic Pole deep (0.5~deg$^2$, NEP-Deep)multi-wavelength survey covering from X-ray to radio-wave is presented. The NEP-Deep provides us with several thousands of 15~$\mu$m or 18~$\mu$mselected galaxies, which is the largest sample ever made at thesewavelengths. A continuous filter coverage in the mid-infrared wavelength(7, 9, 11, 15, 18, and 24~$\mu$m) is unique and vital to diagnose thecontributions from starbursts and AGNs in the galaxies out to $z$=2. The new goal of the project is to resolve the nature of the cosmic star formationhistory at the violent epoch (e.g. $z$=1--2), and to find a clue to understandits decline from $z$=1 to presentuniverse by utilizing the unique power of the multiwavelength survey. The progressin this context is briefly mentioned.
<i>Spitzer</i> Observations of the North Ecliptic Pole
Nayyeri, H.,Ghotbi, N.,Cooray, A.,Bock, J.,Clements, D. L.,Im, M.,Kim, M. G.,Korngut, P.,Lanz, A.,Lee, H. M.,Lee, D. H.,Malkan, M.,Matsuhara, H.,Matsumoto, T.,Matsuura, S.,Nam, U. W.,Pearson, C.,Serje American Astronomical Society 2018 The Astrophysical journal Supplement series Vol.234 No.2
<P>We present a photometric catalog for Spitzer Space Telescope warm mission observations of the North Ecliptic Pole (NEP; centered at R.A. = 18(h)00(m)00(s), decl. = 66(d)33(m)38(s).552). The observations are conducted with IRAC in the 3.6 and 4.5 mu m bands over an area of 7.04 deg(2), reaching 1 sigma depths of 1.29 mu Jy and 0.79 mu Jy in the 3.6 mu m and 4.5 mu m bands, respectively. The photometric catalog contains 380,858 sources with 3.6 and 4.5 mu m band photometry over the full-depth NEP mosaic. Point-source completeness simulations show that the catalog is 80% complete down to 19.7 AB. The accompanying catalog can be used for constraining the physical properties of extragalactic objects, studying the AGN population, measuring the infrared colors of stellar objects, and studying the extragalactic infrared background light.</P>
The AKARI NEP-Deep survey: a mid-infrared source catalogue
Takagi, T.,Matsuhara, H.,Goto, T.,Hanami, H.,Im, M.,Imai, K.,Ishigaki, T.,Lee, H. M.,Lee, M. G.,Malkan, M.,Ohyama, Y.,Oyabu, S.,Pearson, C. P.,Serjeant, S.,Wada, T.,White, G. J. Springer-Verlag 2012 Astronomy and astrophysics Vol.537 No.-
<P>We present a new catalogue of mid-IR sources using the AKARI NEP-Deep survey. The InfraRed Camera (IRC) onboard AKARI has a comprehensive mid-IR wavelength coverage with 9 photometric bands at 2–24?µm. We utilized all of these bands to cover a nearly circular area adjacent to the north ecliptic pole (NEP). We designed the catalogue to include most of sources detected in 7, 9, 11, 15 and 18?µm bands, and found 7284 sources in a 0.67?deg<SUP>2</SUP> area. From our simulations, we estimate that the catalogue is~80 per cent complete to 200µJy at 15–18µm, and ~10 per cent of sources are missed, owing to source blending. Star-galaxy separation is conducted using only AKARI photometry, as a result of which 10 per cent of catalogued sources are found to be stars. The number counts at 11, 15, 18, and 24µm are presented for both stars and galaxies. A drastic increase in the source density is found in between 11 and 15µm at the flux level of~300micro;Jy. This is likely due to the redshifted PAH emission at 8µm, given our rough estimate of redshifts from an AKARI colour–colour plot. Along with the mid-IR source catalogue, we present optical-NIR photometry for sources falling inside a Subaru/Sprime-cam image covering part of the AKARI NEP-Deep field, which is deep enough to detect most of AKARI mid-IR sources, and useful to study optical characteristics of a complete mid-IR source sample.</P>
CHANDRA OBSERVATIONS OF THE AKARI NEP DEEP FIELD
T. Miyaji,M. Krumpe,H. Brunner,T. Ishigaki,H. Hanami,A. Markowitz,T. Takagi,T. Goto,M. A. Malkan,H. Matsuhara,C. Pearson,Y. Ueda,T. Wada 한국천문학회 2017 天文學論叢 Vol.32 No.1
The AKARI NEP Deep Field Survey is an international multiwavelength survey over 0.4 deg$^2$ of the sky. This is the deepest survey made by the InfraRed Camera (IRC) of the infrared astronomical satellite AKARI with 9 filters continuously covering the 2-25 μm range, including three filters in the Spitzer gap between the IRAC and MIPS coverages. This enabled us to make sensitive MIR detection of AGN candidates at z ~ 1, based on hot dust emission in the AGN torus. It is also efficient in detecting highly obscured Compton-thick AGN population. In this article, we report the first results of X-ray observations on this field. The field was covered by 15 overlapping Chandra ACIS-I observations with a total exposure of ~ 300 ks, detecting $\approx 450$ X-ray sources. We utilize rest-frame stacking analysis of the MIR AGN candidates that are not detected individually. Our preliminary analysis shows a marginal detection of the rest-frame stacked Fe K$\alpha$ line from our strong Compton-thick candidates.
AKARI mid-infrared slitless spectroscopic survey of star-forming galaxies at <i>z</i> ≲ 0.5
Ohyama, Y.,Wada, T.,Matsuhara, H.,Takagi, T.,Malkan, M.,Goto, T.,Egami, E.,Lee, H.-M.,Im, M.,Kim, J.H.,Pearson, C.,Inami, H.,Oyabu, S.,Usui, F.,Burgarella, D.,Mazyed, F.,Imanishi, M.,Jeong, W.-S.,Miya EDP Sciences 2018 Astronomy and astrophysics Vol.618 No.-
<P><I>Context.</I> Deep mid-infrared (MIR) surveys have revealed numerous strongly star-forming galaxies at redshift <I>z</I> ≲ 2. Their MIR fluxes are produced by a combination of continuum and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission features. The PAH features can dominate the total MIR flux, but are difficult to measure without spectroscopy.</P><P><I>Aims.</I> We aim to study star-forming galaxies by using a blind spectroscopic survey at MIR wavelengths to understand evolution of their star formation rate (SFR) and specific SFR (SFR per stellar mass) up to <I>z</I> ≃ 0.5, by paying particular attention to their PAH properties.</P><P><I>Methods.</I> We conducted a low-resolution (<I>R</I> ≃ 50) slitless spectroscopic survey at 5-13 <I>μ</I>m of 9 <I>μ</I>m flux-selected sources (>0.3 mJy) around the north ecliptic pole with the infrared camera (IRC) onboard AKARI. After removing 11 AGN candidates by using the IRC photometry, we identify 48 PAH galaxies with PAH 6.2, 7.7, and 8.6 <I>μ</I>m features at <I>z</I> < 0.5. The rest-frame optical-MIR spectral energy distributions (SEDs) based on CFHT and IRC imaging covering 0.37-18 <I>μ</I>m were produced, and analysed in conjunction with the PAH spectroscopy. We defined the PAH enhancement by using the luminosity ratio of the 7.7 <I>μ</I>m PAH feature over the 3.5 <I>μ</I>m stellar component of the SEDs.</P><P><I>Results.</I> The rest-frame SEDs of all PAH galaxies have a universal shape with stellar and 7.7 <I>μ</I>m bumps, except that the PAH enhancement significantly varies as a function of the PAH luminosities. We identify a PAH-enhanced population at <I>z</I> ≳ 0.35, whose SEDs and luminosities are typical of luminous infrared galaxies. They show particularly larger PAH enhancement at high luminosity, implying that they are vigorous star-forming galaxies with elevated specific SFR. Our composite starburst model that combines a very young and optically very thick starburst with a very old population can successfully reproduce most of their SED characteristics, although we cannot confirm this optically think component from our spectral analysis.</P>
AKARI OBSERVATION OF THE FLUCTUATION OF THE NEAR-INFRARED BACKGROUND
Matsumoto, T.,Seo, H.J.,Jeong, W.S.,Lee, H.M.,Matsuura, S.,Matsuhara, H.,Oyabu, S.,Pyo, J.,Wada, T. The Korean Astronomical Society 2012 天文學論叢 Vol.27 No.4
We report a search for fluctuations of the sky brightness toward the North Ecliptic Pole with AKARI, at 2.4, 3.2, and $4.1{\mu}m$. The stacked images with a diameter of 10 arcminutes of the AKARI-Monitor Field show a spatial structure on the scale of a few hundred arcseconds. A power spectrum analysis shows that there is a significant excess fluctuation at angular scales larger than 100 arcseconds that cannot be explained by zodiacal light, diffuse Galactic light, shot noise of faint galaxies, or clustering of low-redshift galaxies. These findings indicate that the detected fluctuation could be attributed to the first stars of the universe, i.e., Population III stars.