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Efstathiou, Andreas
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Preferred name
Efstathiou, Andreas
Translated Name
Ευσταθίου, Ανδρέας
Position
Rector, Professor
Main Affiliation
School
Scopus Author ID
7005273826
Google Scholar ID
WxhQowAAAAJ
3 results
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
- PublicationGalaxy evolution studies with the SPace IR telescope for cosmology and astrophysics (SPICA): The power of IR spectroscopy(Cambridge University Press, 2017-11-16)
; ;L. Spinoglio ;A. Alonso-Herrero ;L. Armus ;M. Baes ;J. Bernard-Salas ;S. Bianchi ;M. Bocchio ;A. Bolatto ;C. Bradford ;J. Braine ;F. J. Carrera ;L. Ciesla ;D. L. Clements ;H. Dannerbauer ;Y. Doi ;E. Egami ;J. A. Fernández-Ontiveros ;A. Ferrara ;J. Fischer ;A. Franceschini ;S. Gallerani ;M. Giard ;E. González-Alfonso ;C. Gruppioni ;P. Guillard ;E. Hatziminaoglou ;M. Imanishi ;D. Ishihara ;N. Isobe ;H. Kaneda ;M. Kawada ;K. Kohno ;J. Kwon ;S. Madden ;M. A. Malkan ;S. Marassi ;H. Matsuhara ;M. Matsuura ;G. Miniutti ;K. Nagamine ;T. Nagao ;F. Najarro ;T. Nakagawa ;T. Onaka ;S. Oyabu ;A. Pallottini ;L. Piro ;F. Pozzi ;G. Rodighiero ;P. Roelfsema ;I. Sakon ;P. Santini ;D. Schaerer ;R. Schneider ;D. Scott ;S. Serjeant ;H. Shibai ;J.-D. T. Smith ;E. Sobacchi ;E. Sturm ;T. Suzuki ;L. Vallini ;F. van der Tak ;C. Vignali ;T. Yamada ;T. WadaL. WangIR spectroscopy in the range 12–230 μm with the SPace IR telescope for Cosmology and Astrophysics (SPICA) will reveal the physical processes governing the formation and evolution of galaxies and black holes through cosmic time, bridging the gap between the James Webb Space Telescope and the upcoming Extremely Large Telescopes at shorter wavelengths and the Atacama Large Millimeter Array at longer wavelengths. The SPICA, with its 2.5-m telescope actively cooled to below 8 K, will obtain the first spectroscopic determination, in the mid-IR rest-frame, of both the star-formation rate and black hole accretion rate histories of galaxies, reaching lookback times of 12 Gyr, for large statistically significant samples. Densities, temperatures, radiation fields, and gas-phase metallicities will be measured in dust-obscured galaxies and active galactic nuclei, sampling a large range in mass and luminosity, from faint local dwarf galaxies to luminous quasars in the distant Universe. Active galactic nuclei and starburst feedback and feeding mechanisms in distant galaxies will be uncovered through detailed measurements of molecular and atomic line profiles. The SPICA’s large-area deep spectrophotometric surveys will provide mid-IR spectra and continuum fluxes for unbiased samples of tens of thousands of galaxies, out to redshifts of z ∼ 6. - PublicationFeedback and Feeding in the Context of Galaxy Evolution with SPICA : Direct Characterisation of Molecular Outflows and Inflows(Cambridge University Press, 2017)
; ;E. González-Alfonso ;L. Armus ;F. J. Carrera ;V. Charmandaris ;E. Egami ;J. A. Fernández-Ontiveros ;J. Fischer ;G. L. Granato ;C. Gruppioni ;E. Hatziminaoglou ;M. Imanishi ;N. Isobe ;H. Kaneda ;D. Koziel-Wierzbowska ;M. A. Malkan ;J. Martín-Pintado ;S. Mateos ;H. Matsuhara ;G. Miniutti ;T. Nakagawa ;F. Pozzi ;F. Rico-Villas ;G. Rodighiero ;P. Roelfsema ;L. Spinoglio ;H. W. W. Spoon ;E. Sturm ;F. van der Tak ;C. VignaliL. WangA far-infrared observatory such as the SPace Infrared telescope for Cosmology and Astrophysics, with its unprecedented spectroscopic sensitivity, would unveil the role of feedback in galaxy evolution during the last ∼10 Gyr of the Universe (z = 1.5–2), through the use of far- and mid-infrared molecular and ionic fine structure lines that trace outflowing and infalling gas. Outflowing gas is identified in the far-infrared through P-Cygni line shapes and absorption blueshifted wings in molecular lines with high dipolar moments, and through emission line wings of fine-structure lines of ionised gas. We quantify the detectability of galaxy-scale massive molecular and ionised outflows as a function of redshift in AGN-dominated, starburst-dominated, and main-sequence galaxies, explore the detectability of metal-rich inflows in the local Universe, and describe the most significant synergies with other current and future observatories that will measure feedback in galaxies via complementary tracers at other wavelengths. - PublicationTracing the Evolution of Dust Obscured Star Formation and Accretion Back to the Reionisation Epoch with SPICA(Cambridge University Press, 2017-11-16)
; ;C. Gruppioni ;L. Ciesla ;E. Hatziminaoglou ;F. Pozzi ;G. Rodighiero ;P. Santini ;L. Armus ;M. Baes ;J. Braine ;V. Charmandaris ;D.L. Clements ;N. Christopher ;H. Dannerbauer ;E. Egami ;J.A. Fernández-Ontiveros ;F. Fontanot ;A. Franceschini ;E. González-Alfonso ;M. Griffin ;H. Kaneda ;L. Marchetti ;P. Monaco ;T. Nakagawa ;T. Onaka ;A. Papadopoulos ;C. Pearson ;I. Pérez-Fournon ;P. Peréz-González ;P. Roelfsema ;D. Scott ;S. Serjeant ;L. Spinoglio ;M. Vaccari ;F. van der Tak ;C. Vignali ;L. WangT. WadaOur current knowledge of star formation and accretion luminosity at high redshift (z > 3–4), as well as the possible connections between them, relies mostly on observations in the rest-frame ultraviolet, which are strongly affected by dust obscuration. Due to the lack of sensitivity of past and current infrared instrumentation, so far it has not been possible to get a glimpse into the early phases of the dust-obscured Universe. Among the next generation of infrared observatories, SPICA, observing in the 12–350 µm range, will be the only facility that can enable us to trace the evolution of the obscured star-formation rate and black-hole accretion rate densities over cosmic time, from the peak of their activity back to the reionisation epoch (i.e., 3 < z ≲ 6–7), where its predecessors had severe limitations. Here, we discuss the potential of photometric surveys performed with the SPICA mid-infrared instrument, enabled by the very low level of impact of dust 1 obscuration in a band centred at 34 µm. These unique unbiased photometric surveys that SPICA will perform will fully characterise the evolution of AGNs and star-forming galaxies after reionisation.