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Maarten Baes

Bio: Maarten Baes is an academic researcher from Ghent University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Galaxy & Star formation. The author has an hindex of 91, co-authored 598 publications receiving 30543 citations. Previous affiliations of Maarten Baes include Ghent University Hospital & European Southern Observatory.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Virgo Consortium's EAGLE project as discussed by the authors is a suite of hydrodynamical simulations that follow the formation of galaxies and black holes in representative volumes, where thermal energy is injected into the gas, allowing winds to develop without predetermined speed or mass loading factors.
Abstract: We introduce the Virgo Consortium's EAGLE project, a suite of hydrodynamical simulations that follow the formation of galaxies and black holes in representative volumes. We discuss the limitations of such simulations in light of their finite resolution and poorly constrained subgrid physics, and how these affect their predictive power. One major improvement is our treatment of feedback from massive stars and AGN in which thermal energy is injected into the gas without the need to turn off cooling or hydrodynamical forces, allowing winds to develop without predetermined speed or mass loading factors. Because the feedback efficiencies cannot be predicted from first principles, we calibrate them to the z~0 galaxy stellar mass function and the amplitude of the galaxy-central black hole mass relation, also taking galaxy sizes into account. The observed galaxy mass function is reproduced to ≲0.2 dex over the full mass range, 108

2,828 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Stephen Anthony Eales1, Loretta Dunne2, David L. Clements3, Asantha Cooray4, G. de Zotti5, G. de Zotti6, Simon Dye1, Rob Ivison7, Matt J. Jarvis8, Guilaine Lagache9, Guilaine Lagache10, Steve Maddox2, Mattia Negrello11, Steve Serjeant11, Mark Thompson8, E. van Kampen12, Alexandre Amblard4, Paola Andreani12, Maarten Baes13, Alexandre Beelen9, Alexandre Beelen10, George J. Bendo3, Dominic J. Benford14, Dominic J. Benford12, Frank Bertoldi15, Frank Bertoldi13, James J. Bock16, D. G. Bonfield8, Alessandro Boselli17, C. Bridge9, V. Buat17, Denis Burgarella17, Raymond G. Carlberg18, Antonio Cava, Pierre Chanial3, S. Charlot19, N. Christopher20, Peter Coles1, Luca Cortese1, Aliakbar Dariush1, E. da Cunha21, Gavin Dalton22, Gavin Dalton20, Luigi Danese23, Helmut Dannerbauer23, Simon P. Driver, James Dunlop7, Lulu Fan18, Duncan Farrah18, David T. Frayer16, Carlos S. Frenk24, James E. Geach24, Jonathan P. Gardner14, Haley Louise Gomez1, J. González-Nuevo18, Eduardo Gonzalez-Solares25, Matthew Joseph Griffin1, Martin J. Hardcastle8, Evanthia Hatziminaoglou12, D. Herranz26, David H. Hughes, Edo Ibar7, Woong-Seob Jeong27, Cedric G. Lacey24, Andrea Lapi28, Andy Lawrence7, Myung Gyoon Lee29, Lerothodi Leonard Leeuw28, Jochen Liske12, M. López-Caniego23, Th. Müller23, Kirpal Nandra3, P. Panuzzo30, Andreas Papageorgiou1, G. Patanchon30, John A. Peacock7, C. P. Pearson22, Steven Phillipps, Michael Pohlen1, Cristina Popescu31, Steve Rawlings20, E. E. Rigby2, M. Rigopoulou20, Aaron S. G. Robotham32, Giulia Rodighiero5, Anne E. Sansom31, Benjamin L. Schulz, Douglas Scott33, D. J. B. Smith2, B. Sibthorpe7, Ian Smail24, Jamie Stevens8, William J. Sutherland34, Tsutomu T. Takeuchi35, Jonathan Tedds36, P. Temi37, Richard J. Tuffs23, Markos Trichas3, Mattia Vaccari5, Ivan Valtchanov38, P. van der Werf39, Aprajita Verma20, J. Vieria39, Catherine Vlahakis39, Glenn J. White11, Glenn J. White22 
TL;DR: The Herschel ATLAS project as discussed by the authors is the largest open-time key project that will be carried out on the Herschel Space Observatory, and it will survey 570 deg2 of the extragalactic sky, 4 times larger than all the other Herschel extragala surveys combined, in five far-infrared and submillimeter bands.
Abstract: The Herschel ATLAS is the largest open-time key project that will be carried out on the Herschel Space Observatory. It will survey 570 deg2 of the extragalactic sky, 4 times larger than all the other Herschel extragalactic surveys combined, in five far-infrared and submillimeter bands. We describe the survey, the complementary multiwavelength data sets that will be combined with the Herschel data, and the six major science programs we are undertaking. Using new models based on a previous submillimeter survey of galaxies, we present predictions of the properties of the ATLAS sources in other wave bands.

610 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Stephen Anthony Eales, Loretta Dunne, D. L. Clements, Asantha Cooray, G. de Zotti, Simon Dye, Rob Ivison, Matt J. Jarvis, Guilaine Lagache, S. J. Maddox, Mattia Negrello, Steve Serjeant, Maggie A. Thompson, E. van Kampen, Alexandre Amblard, P. Andreani, Maarten Baes, Alexandre Beelen, George J. Bendo, Dominic J. Benford, Frank Bertoldi, James J. Bock, D. G. Bonfield, A. Boselli, C. Bridge, V. Buat, Denis Burgarella, Raymond G. Carlberg, Antonio Cava, P. Chanial, Stéphane Charlot, N. Christopher, Peter Coles, Luca Cortese, Aliakbar Dariush, E. da Cunha, Gavin Dalton, Luigi Danese, Helmut Dannerbauer, Simon P. Driver, James Dunlop, Lulu Fan, Duncan Farrah, David T. Frayer, Carlos S. Frenk, James E. Geach, Jonathan P. Gardner, Haley Louise Gomez, J. González-Nuevo, Eduardo Gonzalez-Solares, Matthew Joseph Griffin, Martin J. Hardcastle, Evanthia Hatziminaoglou, D. Herranz, David H. Hughes, Edo Ibar, Woong-Seob Jeong, Cedric G. Lacey, Andrea Lapi, Myung Gyoon Lee, Lerothodi Leonard Leeuw, Jochen Liske, M. López-Caniego, Th. Müller, K. Nandra, P. Panuzzo, Andreas Papageorgiou, G. Patanchon, John A. Peacock, C. P. Pearson, Steven Phillipps, Michael Pohlen, Cristina Popescu, Steve Rawlings, E. E. Rigby, M. Rigopoulou, Giulia Rodighiero, Anne E. Sansom, Benjamin L. Schulz, Douglas Scott, D. J. B. Smith, B. Sibthorpe, Ian Smail, Jamie Stevens, William J. Sutherland, Tsutomu T. Takeuchi, Jonathan Tedds, P. Temi, Richard J. Tuffs, Markos Trichas, Mattia Vaccari, Ivan Valtchanov, P. van der Werf, Aprajita Verma, J. Vieria, Catherine Vlahakis, Glenn J. White 
TL;DR: The Herschel ATLAS project as mentioned in this paper is the largest open-time key project that will be carried out on the Herschel Space Observatory, and it will survey 510 square degrees of the extragalactic sky, four times larger than all the other Herschel surveys combined, in five far-infrared and sub-millimetre bands.
Abstract: The Herschel ATLAS is the largest open-time key project that will be carried out on the Herschel Space Observatory. It will survey 510 square degrees of the extragalactic sky, four times larger than all the other Herschel surveys combined, in five far-infrared and submillimetre bands. We describe the survey, the complementary multi-wavelength datasets that will be combined with the Herschel data, and the six major science programmes we are undertaking. Using new models based on a previous submillimetre survey of galaxies, we present predictions of the properties of the ATLAS sources in other wavebands.

579 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the behavior of the gas-to-dust mass ratio (G/D) of local Universe galaxies over a wide metallicity range and investigated several explanations for the observed relation and scatter.
Abstract: Aims. The goal of this paper is to analyse the behaviour of the gas-to-dust mass ratio (G/D) of local Universe galaxies over a wide metallicity range. We especially focus on the low-metallicity part of the G/D vs metallicity relation and investigate several explanations for the observed relation and scatter.Methods. We assembled a total of 126 galaxies, covering a 2 dex metallicity range and with 30% of the sample with 12 + log(O/H)≤ 8.0. We homogeneously determined the dust masses with a semi-empirical dust model including submm constraints. The atomic and molecular gas masses have been compiled from the literature. We used two XCO scenarios to estimate the molecular gas mass: the Galactic conversion factor, XCO,MW, and a XCO that depends on the metallicity XCO,Z (∝Z-2). We modelled the observed trend of the G/D with metallicity using two simple power laws (slope of –1 and free) and a broken power law. Correlations with morphological type, stellar masses, star formation rates, and specific star formation rates are also discussed. We then compared the observed evolution of the G/D with predictions from several chemical evolution models and explored different physical explanations for the observed scatter in the G/D values.Results. We find that out of the five tested galactic parameters, metallicity is the main physical property of the galaxy driving the observed G/D. The G/D versus metallicity relation cannot be represented by a single power law with a slope of –1 over the whole metallicity range. The observed trend is steeper for metallicities lower than ~8.0. A large scatter is observed in the G/D values for a given metallicity: in metallicity bins of ~0.1 dex, the dispersion around the mean value is ~0.37 dex. On average, the broken power law reproduces the observed G/D best compared to the two power laws (slope of –1 or free) and provides estimates of the G/D that are accurate to a factor of 1.6. The good agreement of observed values of the G/D and its scatter with respect to metallicity with the predicted values of the three tested chemical evolution models allows us to infer that the scatter in the relation is intrinsic to galactic properties, reflecting the different star formation histories, dust destruction efficiencies, dust grain size distributions, and chemical compositions across the sample. Conclusions. Our results show that the chemical evolution of low-metallicity galaxies, traced by their G/D, strongly depends on their local internal conditions and individual histories. The large scatter in the observed G/D at a given metallicity reflects the impact of various processes occurring during the evolution of a galaxy. Despite the numerous degeneracies affecting them, disentangling these various processes is now the next step.

543 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A relational database storing a large number of properties of haloes and galaxies and their merger trees, including stellar masses, star formation rates, metallicities, photometric measurements and mock gri images is made available for general use.

409 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The emcee algorithm as mentioned in this paper is a Python implementation of the affine-invariant ensemble sampler for Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) proposed by Goodman & Weare (2010).
Abstract: We introduce a stable, well tested Python implementation of the affine-invariant ensemble sampler for Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) proposed by Goodman & Weare (2010). The code is open source and has already been used in several published projects in the astrophysics literature. The algorithm behind emcee has several advantages over traditional MCMC sampling methods and it has excellent performance as measured by the autocorrelation time (or function calls per independent sample). One major advantage of the algorithm is that it requires hand-tuning of only 1 or 2 parameters compared to ~N2 for a traditional algorithm in an N-dimensional parameter space. In this document, we describe the algorithm and the details of our implementation. Exploiting the parallelism of the ensemble method, emcee permits any user to take advantage of multiple CPU cores without extra effort. The code is available online at http://dan.iel.fm/emcee under the GNU General Public License v2.

8,805 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Peter A. R. Ade1, Nabila Aghanim2, C. Armitage-Caplan3, Monique Arnaud4  +324 moreInstitutions (70)
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the first cosmological results based on Planck measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature and lensing-potential power spectra, which are extremely well described by the standard spatially-flat six-parameter ΛCDM cosmology with a power-law spectrum of adiabatic scalar perturbations.
Abstract: This paper presents the first cosmological results based on Planck measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature and lensing-potential power spectra. We find that the Planck spectra at high multipoles (l ≳ 40) are extremely well described by the standard spatially-flat six-parameter ΛCDM cosmology with a power-law spectrum of adiabatic scalar perturbations. Within the context of this cosmology, the Planck data determine the cosmological parameters to high precision: the angular size of the sound horizon at recombination, the physical densities of baryons and cold dark matter, and the scalar spectral index are estimated to be θ∗ = (1.04147 ± 0.00062) × 10-2, Ωbh2 = 0.02205 ± 0.00028, Ωch2 = 0.1199 ± 0.0027, and ns = 0.9603 ± 0.0073, respectively(note that in this abstract we quote 68% errors on measured parameters and 95% upper limits on other parameters). For this cosmology, we find a low value of the Hubble constant, H0 = (67.3 ± 1.2) km s-1 Mpc-1, and a high value of the matter density parameter, Ωm = 0.315 ± 0.017. These values are in tension with recent direct measurements of H0 and the magnitude-redshift relation for Type Ia supernovae, but are in excellent agreement with geometrical constraints from baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) surveys. Including curvature, we find that the Universe is consistent with spatial flatness to percent level precision using Planck CMB data alone. We use high-resolution CMB data together with Planck to provide greater control on extragalactic foreground components in an investigation of extensions to the six-parameter ΛCDM model. We present selected results from a large grid of cosmological models, using a range of additional astrophysical data sets in addition to Planck and high-resolution CMB data. None of these models are favoured over the standard six-parameter ΛCDM cosmology. The deviation of the scalar spectral index from unity isinsensitive to the addition of tensor modes and to changes in the matter content of the Universe. We find an upper limit of r0.002< 0.11 on the tensor-to-scalar ratio. There is no evidence for additional neutrino-like relativistic particles beyond the three families of neutrinos in the standard model. Using BAO and CMB data, we find Neff = 3.30 ± 0.27 for the effective number of relativistic degrees of freedom, and an upper limit of 0.23 eV for the sum of neutrino masses. Our results are in excellent agreement with big bang nucleosynthesis and the standard value of Neff = 3.046. We find no evidence for dynamical dark energy; using BAO and CMB data, the dark energy equation of state parameter is constrained to be w = -1.13-0.10+0.13. We also use the Planck data to set limits on a possible variation of the fine-structure constant, dark matter annihilation and primordial magnetic fields. Despite the success of the six-parameter ΛCDM model in describing the Planck data at high multipoles, we note that this cosmology does not provide a good fit to the temperature power spectrum at low multipoles. The unusual shape of the spectrum in the multipole range 20 ≲ l ≲ 40 was seen previously in the WMAP data and is a real feature of the primordial CMB anisotropies. The poor fit to the spectrum at low multipoles is not of decisive significance, but is an “anomaly” in an otherwise self-consistent analysis of the Planck temperature data.

7,060 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the first results based on Planck measurements of the CMB temperature and lensing-potential power spectra, which are extremely well described by the standard spatially-flat six-parameter LCDM cosmology.
Abstract: We present the first results based on Planck measurements of the CMB temperature and lensing-potential power spectra. The Planck spectra at high multipoles are extremely well described by the standard spatially-flat six-parameter LCDM cosmology. In this model Planck data determine the cosmological parameters to high precision. We find a low value of the Hubble constant, H0=67.3+/-1.2 km/s/Mpc and a high value of the matter density parameter, Omega_m=0.315+/-0.017 (+/-1 sigma errors) in excellent agreement with constraints from baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) surveys. Including curvature, we find that the Universe is consistent with spatial flatness to percent-level precision using Planck CMB data alone. We present results from an analysis of extensions to the standard cosmology, using astrophysical data sets in addition to Planck and high-resolution CMB data. None of these models are favoured significantly over standard LCDM. The deviation of the scalar spectral index from unity is insensitive to the addition of tensor modes and to changes in the matter content of the Universe. We find a 95% upper limit of r<0.11 on the tensor-to-scalar ratio. There is no evidence for additional neutrino-like relativistic particles. Using BAO and CMB data, we find N_eff=3.30+/-0.27 for the effective number of relativistic degrees of freedom, and an upper limit of 0.23 eV for the summed neutrino mass. Our results are in excellent agreement with big bang nucleosynthesis and the standard value of N_eff=3.046. We find no evidence for dynamical dark energy. Despite the success of the standard LCDM model, this cosmology does not provide a good fit to the CMB power spectrum at low multipoles, as noted previously by the WMAP team. While not of decisive significance, this is an anomaly in an otherwise self-consistent analysis of the Planck temperature data.

6,201 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This document introduces a stable, well tested Python implementation of the affine-invariant ensemble sampler for Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) proposed by Goodman & Weare (2010).
Abstract: We introduce a stable, well tested Python implementation of the affine-invariant ensemble sampler for Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) proposed by Goodman & Weare (2010). The code is open source and has already been used in several published projects in the astrophysics literature. The algorithm behind emcee has several advantages over traditional MCMC sampling methods and it has excellent performance as measured by the autocorrelation time (or function calls per independent sample). One major advantage of the algorithm is that it requires hand-tuning of only 1 or 2 parameters compared to $\sim N^2$ for a traditional algorithm in an N-dimensional parameter space. In this document, we describe the algorithm and the details of our implementation and API. Exploiting the parallelism of the ensemble method, emcee permits any user to take advantage of multiple CPU cores without extra effort. The code is available online at this http URL under the MIT License.

5,293 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the range of complementary techniques and theoretical tools that allow astronomers to map the cosmic history of star formation, heavy element production, and reionization of the Universe from the cosmic "dark ages" to the present epoch.
Abstract: Over the past two decades, an avalanche of data from multiwavelength imaging and spectroscopic surveys has revolutionized our view of galaxy formation and evolution. Here we review the range of complementary techniques and theoretical tools that allow astronomers to map the cosmic history of star formation, heavy element production, and reionization of the Universe from the cosmic "dark ages" to the present epoch. A consistent picture is emerging, whereby the star-formation rate density peaked approximately 3.5 Gyr after the Big Bang, at z~1.9, and declined exponentially at later times, with an e-folding timescale of 3.9 Gyr. Half of the stellar mass observed today was formed before a redshift z = 1.3. About 25% formed before the peak of the cosmic star-formation rate density, and another 25% formed after z = 0.7. Less than ~1% of today's stars formed during the epoch of reionization. Under the assumption of a universal initial mass function, the global stellar mass density inferred at any epoch matches reasonably well the time integral of all the preceding star-formation activity. The comoving rates of star formation and central black hole accretion follow a similar rise and fall, offering evidence for co-evolution of black holes and their host galaxies. The rise of the mean metallicity of the Universe to about 0.001 solar by z = 6, one Gyr after the Big Bang, appears to have been accompanied by the production of fewer than ten hydrogen Lyman-continuum photons per baryon, a rather tight budget for cosmological reionization.

3,104 citations