M
M. J. Page
Researcher at University College London
Publications - 271
Citations - 18036
M. J. Page is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Galaxy & Redshift. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 263 publications receiving 16745 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Photometric calibration of the Swift ultraviolet/optical telescope
T. S. Poole,A. A. Breeveld,M. J. Page,Wayne B. Landsman,Stephen T. Holland,Stephen T. Holland,P. W. A. Roming,N. P. M. Kuin,Peter J. Brown,Caryl Gronwall,S. D. Hunsberger,S. Koch,Keith O. Mason,Keith O. Mason,Patricia Schady,D. E. Vanden Berk,A. J. Blustin,P. Boyd,Patrick S. Broos,M. Carter,M. M. Chester,Antonino Cucchiara,B. Hancock,H. Huckle,Stefan Immler,M. Ivanushkina,T. Kennedy,Frank Marshall,Adam N. Morgan,Shashi B. Pandey,M. de Pasquale,Philip J. Smith,M. Still +32 more
TL;DR: In this article, the photometric calibration of the Swift Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope (UVOT) was performed with observations of standard stars and standard star fields that represent a wide range of spectral star types.
Journal ArticleDOI
A dust-obscured massive maximum-starburst galaxy at a redshift of 6.34
Dominik Riechers,Dominik Riechers,Charles M. Bradford,Charles M. Bradford,David L. Clements,C. D. Dowell,C. D. Dowell,Ismael Perez-Fournon,Ismael Perez-Fournon,Rob Ivison,Rob Ivison,Carrie Bridge,A. Conley,Hai Fu,Joaquin Vieira,Julie Wardlow,J. A. Calanog,Asantha Cooray,Asantha Cooray,Peter Hurley,R. Neri,Julia Kamenetzky,James E. Aguirre,Bruno Altieri,V. Arumugam,Dominic J. Benford,Matthieu Béthermin,Matthieu Béthermin,James J. Bock,James J. Bock,Denis Burgarella,A. Cabrera-Lavers,A. Cabrera-Lavers,Scott Chapman,Peter Timothy Cox,James Dunlop,L. Earle,Duncan Farrah,P. Ferrero,P. Ferrero,Alberto Franceschini,Raphael Gavazzi,Jason Glenn,E. A. González Solares,Mark Gurwell,Mark Halpern,Evanthia Hatziminaoglou,A. Hyde,Edo Ibar,Attila Kovács,Attila Kovács,M. Krips,Roxana Lupu,P. R. Maloney,P. Martinez-Navajas,P. Martinez-Navajas,Hideo Matsuhara,Eric J. Murphy,B. J. Naylor,H. T. Nguyen,H. T. Nguyen,Seb Oliver,Alain Omont,M. J. Page,Glen Petitpas,Naseem Rangwala,Isaac Roseboom,Isaac Roseboom,Douglas Scott,Anthony J. Smith,Johannes Staguhn,Johannes Staguhn,Alina Streblyanska,Alina Streblyanska,Alasdair Thomson,Ivan Valtchanov,Marco P. Viero,Lin Wang,Michael Zemcov,Michael Zemcov,Jonas Zmuidzinas,Jonas Zmuidzinas +81 more
TL;DR: Despite the overall downturn in cosmic star formation towards the highest redshifts, it seems that environments mature enough to form the most massive, intense starbursts existed at least as early as 880 million years after the Big Bang.
Journal ArticleDOI
The XMM-Newton serendipitous survey. V. The Second XMM-Newton serendipitous source catalogue
M. G. Watson,A. C. Schröder,D. Fyfe,Clive G. Page,Georg Lamer,Silvia Mateos,John P. Pye,Masaaki Sakano,Stuart Rosen,J. Ballet,Xavier Barcons,Didier Barret,Th. Boller,Hermann Brunner,Marcella Brusa,A. Caccianiga,Francisco J. Carrera,María Teresa Ceballos,R. Della Ceca,M. Denby,G. Denkinson,S. Dupuy,Sean Farrell,Federico Fraschetti,Michael Freyberg,P. Guillout,Valeri Hambaryan,Tommaso Maccacaro,B. Mathiesen,Richard G. McMahon,Laurent Michel,Christian Motch,J. P. Osborne,M. J. Page,M. W. Pakull,Wolfgang Pietsch,R. D. Saxton,Axel Schwope,P. Severgnini,M. Simpson,G. Sironi,G. Sironi,G. C. Stewart,Ian M. Stewart,Ian M. Stewart,A. M. Stobbart,Jonathan Tedds,R. S. Warwick,N. A. Webb,Richard G. West,Diana M Worrall,W. Yuan +51 more
TL;DR: The 2XMM catalogue as mentioned in this paper is the largest ever made at X-ray wavelengths, containing 246 897 detections drawn from 3491 public XMM-Newton observations over a 7-year interval, which relate to 191 870 unique sources.
Journal ArticleDOI
A short γ-ray burst apparently associated with an elliptical galaxy at redshift z = 0.225
Neil Gehrels,Craig L. Sarazin,P. T. O'Brien,Bing Zhang,L. M. Barbier,Scott Barthelmy,A. J. Blustin,David N. Burrows,J. K. Cannizzo,J. K. Cannizzo,Jay Cummings,Jay Cummings,Michael R. Goad,Stephen T. Holland,Stephen T. Holland,Cheryl Hurkett,J. A. Kennea,Andrew J. Levan,C. B. Markwardt,C. B. Markwardt,Keith O. Mason,Peter Mészáros,M. J. Page,David Palmer,Evert Rol,T. Sakamoto,T. Sakamoto,Richard Willingale,Lorella Angelini,Lorella Angelini,Andrew P. Beardmore,Patricia T. Boyd,Patricia T. Boyd,A. A. Breeveld,Sergio Campana,M. M. Chester,Guido Chincarini,Guido Chincarini,L. R. Cominsky,Giancarlo Cusumano,M. de Pasquale,Edward E. Fenimore,Paolo Giommi,Caryl Gronwall,Dirk Grupe,Joanne E. Hill,D. Hinshaw,Jens Hjorth,D. Hullinger,D. Hullinger,Kevin Hurley,Sylvio Klose,Shiho Kobayashi,Chryssa Kouveliotou,Hans A. Krimm,Hans A. Krimm,Vanessa Mangano,F. E. Marshall,Katherine E. McGowan,A. Moretti,Richard Mushotzky,Kazuhiro Nakazawa,Jay P. Norris,John A. Nousek,J. P. Osborne,K. L. Page,A. M. Parsons,Sandeep K. Patel,M. Perri,T. S. Poole,P. Romano,P. W. A. Roming,Stuart Rosen,G. Sato,Patricia Schady,Alan P. Smale,Jesper Sollerman,R. L. C. Starling,Martin Still,Martin Still,Masaya Suzuki,Gianpiero Tagliaferri,Tadayuki Takahashi,Makoto Tashiro,Jack Tueller,Alan A. Wells,Nicholas E. White,Ralph A. M. J. Wijers +87 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported the detection of the X-ray afterglow from the short burst GRB 050509B and its location on the sky is near a luminous, non-star-forming elliptical galaxy at a redshift of 0.225.
Journal ArticleDOI
An extremely luminous X-ray outburst at the birth of a supernova
Alicia M. Soderberg,Alicia M. Soderberg,Edo Berger,Edo Berger,K. L. Page,Patricia Schady,Jerod T. Parrent,David Pooley,Xiang-Yu Wang,Eran O. Ofek,A. Cucchiara,A. Rau,Eli Waxman,Joshua D. Simon,Douglas C.-J. Bock,Peter Milne,M. J. Page,J. C. Barentine,Scott Barthelmy,A. P. Beardmore,Michael Bietenholz,Peter J. Brown,Adam Burrows,David N. Burrows,G. Byrngelson,Stephen Bradley Cenko,Poonam Chandra,Jay Cummings,D. B. Fox,Avishay Gal-Yam,Neil Gehrels,Stefan Immler,Mansi M. Kasliwal,Albert K. H. Kong,Hans A. Krimm,Hans A. Krimm,Shrinivas R. Kulkarni,Thomas J. Maccarone,Peter Mészáros,Ehud Nakar,P. T. O'Brien,Roderik Overzier,M. de Pasquale,Judith Racusin,Nanda Rea,Donald G. York +45 more
TL;DR: This work reports the serendipitous discovery of a supernova at the time of the explosion, marked by an extremely luminous X-ray outburst, and attributes the outburst to the ‘break-out’ of the supernova shock wave from the progenitor star, and shows that the inferred rate of such events agrees with that of all core-collapse supernovae.