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ANGULAR CLUSTERING OF FIR-SELECTED GALAXIES IN THE AKARI ALL-SKY SURVEY
Pollo, A.,Takeuchi, T.T.,Suzuki, T.L.,Oyabu, S. The Korean Astronomical Society 2012 天文學論叢 Vol.27 No.4
We present the first measurement of the angular two-point correlation function for AKARI $90{\mu}m$ point sources, detected outside of the Milky Way plane and selected as candidates for extragalactic sources. This is the first measurement of the large-scale angular clustering of galaxies selected in the far-infrared after IRAS. We find a positive clustering signal in both hemispheres extending up to ~ 40 degrees, without any significant fluctuations at larger scales. The observed correlation function is well fitted by a power law function. However, southern galaxies seem to be more strongly clustered than northern ones and the difference is statistically significant. The reason for this difference - technical or physical - is still to be found.
CLASSIFICATION SCHEMES AND PROPERTIES OF INFRARED GALAXIES
Rybka, P.,Pollo, A.,Takeuchi, T.T. The Korean Astronomical Society 2012 天文學論叢 Vol.27 No.4
We established a separation scheme to distinguish galaxies from stars with the aid of AKARI/FIS color-color (CC) diagrams. In all the combinations of CC diagrams we can distinguish two separate clouds. It was shown that in all cases one of them contains more than 95% of galaxies and the other one, in most cases, consists in more than 80% of stars (Pollo et al., 2010). Currently we are looking into more detailed classifications. We are especially interested in separating different morphological types of galaxies, mainly within spiral galaxies. Moreover, we study the properties of infrared galaxies.
INFRARED COMPOSITION OF THE LARGE MAGELLANIC CLOUD
Siudek, M.,Pollo, A.,Takeuchi, T.T.,Ita, Y.,Kato, D.,Onaka, T. The Korean Astronomical Society 2012 天文學論叢 Vol.27 No.4
Understanding the birth and evolution of galaxies, and the history of star formation in them, is one of the most important problems in astronomy. Using the data from the AKARI IRC survey of the Large Magellanic Cloud at 3.2, 7, 11, 15, and $24{\mu}m$, we have constructed a multi-wavelength catalog containing data from the cross-correlation with a number of other databases at different wavelengths. We present the first approach with a Support Vector Machine (SVM)-based method to separate different classes of stars in LMC in the color-color and color-magnitude diagrams.
A MULTICOLOR STAR-GALAXY SEPARATION FROM THE NIR AND MIR AKARI DATA
Solarz, A.,Pollo, A.,Takeuchi, T.T.,Pepiak, A. The Korean Astronomical Society 2012 天文學論叢 Vol.27 No.4
We present the method of star/galaxy separation based on the support vector machines (SVM) in the data from the AKARI North Ecliptic Pole (NEP) Deep survey collected through nine AKARI / IRC bands from 2 to $24{\mu}m$, with a classification accuracy of 93 %.
FAR INFRARED GALAXIES IN AKARI'S EYE
Malek, K.,Pollo, A.,Takeuchi, T.T.,Giovannoli, E.,Buat, V.,Burgarella, D.,Malkan, M. The Korean Astronomical Society 2012 天文學論叢 Vol.27 No.4
We present the results of Spectral Energy Distribution (SED) fitting of far-infrared galaxies detected in the AKARI Deep Field-South (ADF-S) Survey and discuss their physical properties. Additionally, we perform a comparison between photometric redshifts estimated using only optical and both optical and infrared data. We conclude that our sample consists mostly of nearby galaxies rich in dust and young stars. We observe an improvement in the estimation of photometric redshifts when the IR data are included, comparing to a standard approach based mainly on the optical to UV photometry.
RADIO EMISSION FROM AKARI GALAXIES
Pepiak, A.,Solarz, A.,Pollo, A.,Takeuchi, T.T.,Jurusik, W.,AKARI Team, AKARI Team The Korean Astronomical Society 2012 天文學論叢 Vol.27 No.4
It is a long known fact that there exists a tight correlation between far-infrared and radio emission both for galaxies hosting active galactic nuclei and for star forming galaxies. We probe the radio - infrared correlation for a sample of extragalactic sources constructed by the cross-correlation of the AKARI/IRC All-Sky Survey Point Source Catalogue, the AKARI/FIS All-Sky Survey Bright Source Catalogue, and the NRAO VLA Sky Survey. Additionally, all objects of our sample were identified as galaxies in NED and SIMBAD databases, and a part of them is known to host active galactic nuclei (AGNs). After remeasuring all the fluxes, in order to avoid small aperture effects, we compare the ratio of radio to infrared emission from different types of extragalactic sources, and discuss the FIR/radio correlation as seen by AKARI and make a comparison to the previous results obtained thanks to IRAS.
DETECTION OF THE COSMIC FAR-INFRARED BACKGROUND IN AKARI DEEP FIELD SOUTH
Matsuura, S.,Shirahata, M.,Kawada, M.,Takeuchi, T. T.,Burgarella, D.,Clements, D. L.,Jeong, W.-S.,Hanami, H.,Khan, S. A.,Matsuhara, H.,Nakagawa, T.,Oyabu, S.,Pearson, C. P.,Pollo, A.,Serjeant, S.,Taka IOP Publishing 2011 The Astrophysical journal Vol.737 No.1
<P>We report new limits on the absolute brightness and spatial fluctuations of the cosmic infrared background (CIB) via the AKARI satellite. We carried out observations at 65, 90, 140, and 160 mu m as a cosmological survey in AKARI Deep Field South, which is one of the lowest cirrus regions with a contiguous area of the sky. After removing bright galaxies and subtracting zodiacal and Galactic foregrounds from the measured sky brightness, we successfully measured the CIB brightness and its fluctuations across a wide range of angular scales, from arcminutes to degrees. The measured CIB brightness is consistent with previous results reported from COBE data, but significantly higher than the lower limits at 70 and 160 mu m obtained via Spitzer from the stacking analysis of selected 24 mu m sources. The discrepancy with the Spitzer result is possibly due to a new galaxy population at high redshift obscured by hot dust or unknown diffuse emission. From a power spectrum analysis at 90 mu m, two components were identified: the CIB fluctuations with shot noise due to individual galaxies in a small angular scale from the beam size up to 10 arcminutes, and Galactic cirrus emission dominating at the largest angular scales of a few degrees. The overall shape of the power spectrum at 90 mu m is very similar to that at longer wavelengths, as observed by Spitzer and the Balloon-borne Large-Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST). Our power spectrum, with an intermediate angular scale of 10-30 arcminutes, gives a firm upper limit for galaxy clustering, which was found by Spitzer and BLAST. Moreover, the color of the CIB fluctuations, which is obtained by combining our data with the previous results, is as red as ultra-luminous infrared galaxies at high redshift. These galaxies are not likely to provide the majority of the CIB emission at 90 mu m, but are responsible for the fluctuations. Our results provide new constraints on the evolution and clustering properties of distant infrared galaxies and any diffuse emission from the early universe.</P>