Ultraviolet luminosity density of the universe during the epoch of reionization
Published 2015 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Ultraviolet luminosity density of the universe during the epoch of reionization
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
Nature Communications
Volume 6, Issue 1, Pages -
Publisher
Springer Nature
Online
2015-09-08
DOI
10.1038/ncomms8945
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- The contribution of faint galaxy wings to source-subtracted near-infrared background fluctuations
- (2015) R. L. Donnerstein MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
- THE MOST LUMINOUSz∼ 9-10 GALAXY CANDIDATES YET FOUND: THE LUMINOSITY FUNCTION, COSMIC STAR-FORMATION RATE, AND THE FIRST MASS DENSITY ESTIMATE AT 500 Myr
- (2014) P. A. Oesch et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- On the origin of near-infrared extragalactic background light anisotropy
- (2014) M. Zemcov et al. SCIENCE
- DIFFUSE GALACTIC LIGHT IN THE FIELD OF THE TRANSLUCENT HIGH GALACTIC LATITUDE CLOUD MBM32
- (2013) N. Ienaka et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- CROSS-CORRELATING COSMIC INFRARED AND X-RAY BACKGROUND FLUCTUATIONS: EVIDENCE OF SIGNIFICANT BLACK HOLE POPULATIONS AMONG THE CIB SOURCES
- (2013) N. Cappelluti et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- NEW CONSTRAINTS ON COSMIC REIONIZATION FROM THE 2012 HUBBLE ULTRA DEEP FIELD CAMPAIGN
- (2013) Brant E. Robertson et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- CANDELS MULTI-WAVELENGTH CATALOGS: SOURCE DETECTION AND PHOTOMETRY IN THE GOODS-SOUTH FIELD
- (2013) Yicheng Guo et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES
- The contribution of high-redshift galaxies to the near-infrared background
- (2013) Bin Yue et al. MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
- A new multifield determination of the galaxy luminosity function at z = 7–9 incorporating the 2012 Hubble Ultra-Deep Field imaging
- (2013) R. J. McLure et al. MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
- Measurement of the extragalactic background light imprint on the spectra of the brightest blazars observed with H.E.S.S.
- (2012) et al. ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
- THE COSMIC NEAR INFRARED BACKGROUND. III. FLUCTUATIONS, REIONIZATION, AND THE EFFECTS OF MINIMUM MASS AND SELF-REGULATION
- (2012) Elizabeth R. Fernandez et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- NEW MEASUREMENTS OF THE COSMIC INFRARED BACKGROUND FLUCTUATIONS IN DEEPSPITZER/IRAC SURVEY DATA AND THEIR COSMOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS
- (2012) A. Kashlinsky et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- RECONSTRUCTING THE NEAR-INFRARED BACKGROUND FLUCTUATIONS FROM KNOWN GALAXY POPULATIONS USING MULTIBAND MEASUREMENTS OF LUMINOSITY FUNCTIONS
- (2012) Kari Helgason et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- THE NEAR-INFRARED BACKGROUND INTENSITY AND ANISOTROPIES DURING THE EPOCH OF REIONIZATION
- (2012) Asantha Cooray et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- STAR FORMATION IN THE EARLY UNIVERSE: BEYOND THE TIP OF THE ICEBERG
- (2012) N. R. Tanvir et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- CLASH: THREE STRONGLY LENSED IMAGES OF A CANDIDATEz≈ 11 GALAXY
- (2012) Dan Coe et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- Near-infrared background anisotropies from diffuse intrahalo light of galaxies
- (2012) Asantha Cooray et al. NATURE
- A magnified young galaxy from about 500 million years after the Big Bang
- (2012) Wei Zheng et al. NATURE
- THE SPECTRUM OF THE DIFFUSE GALACTIC LIGHT: THE MILKY WAY IN SCATTERED LIGHT
- (2011) Timothy D. Brandt et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- AKARIOBSERVATION OF THE FLUCTUATION OF THE NEAR-INFRARED BACKGROUND
- (2011) T. Matsumoto et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- CONNECTING THE GAMMA RAY BURST RATE AND THE COSMIC STAR FORMATION HISTORY: IMPLICATIONS FOR REIONIZATION AND GALAXY EVOLUTION
- (2011) Brant E. Robertson et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- THEHUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPEWIDE FIELD CAMERA 3 EARLY RELEASE SCIENCE DATA: PANCHROMATIC FAINT OBJECT COUNTS FOR 0.2-2 μm WAVELENGTH
- (2011) Rogier A. Windhorst et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES
- CANDELS: THE COSMIC ASSEMBLY NEAR-INFRARED DEEP EXTRAGALACTIC LEGACY SURVEY
- (2011) Norman A. Grogin et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES
- CANDELS: THE COSMIC ASSEMBLY NEAR-INFRARED DEEP EXTRAGALACTIC LEGACY SURVEY—THEHUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPEOBSERVATIONS, IMAGING DATA PRODUCTS, AND MOSAICS
- (2011) Anton M. Koekemoer et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES
- SEVEN-YEARWILKINSON MICROWAVE ANISOTROPY PROBE(WMAP) OBSERVATIONS: COSMOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION
- (2011) E. Komatsu et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES
- Submillimetre galaxies reside in dark matter haloes with masses greater than 3 × 1011 solar masses
- (2011) Alexandre Amblard et al. NATURE
- THE COSMIC NEAR-INFRARED BACKGROUND. II. FLUCTUATIONS
- (2010) Elizabeth R. Fernandez et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- THE EVOLUTION OF THE ULTRAVIOLET LUMINOSITY FUNCTION FROMz∼ 0.75 TOz∼ 2.5 USINGHSTERS WFC3/UVIS OBSERVATIONS
- (2010) P. A. Oesch et al. Astrophysical Journal Letters
- A STEEP FAINT-END SLOPE OF THE UV LUMINOSITY FUNCTION ATz∼ 2-3: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE GLOBAL STELLAR MASS DENSITY AND STAR FORMATION IN LOW-MASS HALOS
- (2009) Naveen A. Reddy et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- THE STAR FORMATION RATE IN THE REIONIZATION ERA AS INDICATED BY GAMMA-RAY BURSTS
- (2009) Matthew D. Kistler et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- COSMIC INFRARED BACKGROUND FLUCTUATIONS IN DEEPSPITZERINFRARED ARRAY CAMERA IMAGES: DATA PROCESSING AND ANALYSIS
- (2009) Richard G. Arendt et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES
- Extragalactic optical-infrared background radiation, its time evolution and the cosmic photon-photon opacity
- (2008) A. Franceschini et al. ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
- Extended Red Emission in High Galactic Latitude Interstellar Clouds
- (2008) Adolf N. Witt et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- Toward a Halo Mass Function for Precision Cosmology: The Limits of Universality
- (2008) Jeremy Tinker et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Add your recorded webinar
Do you already have a recorded webinar? Grow your audience and get more views by easily listing your recording on Peeref.
Upload NowAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started