High redshift ULIRGs and the formation of massive galaxies
Scott Chapman
Dalhousie University
Studying ultraluminous galaxies (ULIRGs) at early times (z>2) provides
insight into the formative phases of massive galaxies around us
today. While the field has now become a relatively mature science,
there remain various aspects that are still mired in uncertainty,
and new facilities offer possibilities for great leaps forward in our
understanding.
I will provide an overview of this exciting field, and present new avenues
of research into high-redshift ULIRGs which are significantly pushing
our understanding of the population. These include Herschel-HerMES, the
South Pole Telescope (SPT), our recently completed IRAM-PdBI survey of
CO gas in 50 high-z SMGs (Bothwell,Chapman,Smail et al. 2011), and the
CDFS-LESS survey with the 870um camera, LABOCA, and its followup studies.
Date: | Tuesday, 1 November 2011 |
Time: | 16:00 |
Where: | McGill University |
| Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103) |
Contact: | Robert Rutledge |
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