380 research outputs found
Deep VLT spectroscopy of the z=2.49 Radio Galaxy MRC 2104-242: Evidence for a metallicity gradient in its extended emission line region
We present spectroscopic observations of the rest-frame UV line emission
around radio galaxy MRC 2104-242 at z=2.49, obtained with FORS1 on VLT Antu.
The morphology of the halo is dominated by two spatially resolved regions. Lya
is extended by >12 arcsec along the radio axis, CIV and HeII are extended by ~8
arcsec. The overall spectrum is typical for that of high redshift radio
galaxies. The most striking spatial variation is that NV is present in the
spectrum of the region associated with the center of the galaxy hosting the
radio source, the northern region, while absent in the southern region.
Assuming that the gas is photoionized by a hidden quasar, the difference in NV
emission can be explained by a metallicity gradient within the halo. This is
consistent with a scenario in which the gas is associated with a massive
cooling flow or originates from the debris of the merging of two or more
galaxies.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A Letter
Witnessing the formation of a brightest cluster galaxy at z>2
We present deep observations taken with the HST Advanced Camera for Surveys
of the central massive galaxy in a forming cluster at z=2.2. The galaxy hosting
the powerful radio source MRC 1138-262 is associated with one of the most
extensive merger systems known in the early universe. Our HST/ACS image shows
many star-forming galaxies merging within a ~200 kpc region that emits both
diffuse line emission and continuum in the rest-frame UV. Because this galaxy
lives in an overdense environment, it represents a rare view of a brightest
cluster galaxy in formation at z>2 which may serve as a testbed for predictions
of massive cluster galaxy formation.Comment: Contribution to the proceedings of "The Fate of Gas in Galaxies",
Dwingeloo, July 2006, with 2 colour figures. To appear in New Astronomy
Reviews, Vol. 51 (2007), eds. Morganti, Oosterloo, Villar-Martin & van Gorko
Feedback in the local LBG Analog Haro 11 as probed by far-UV and X-ray observations
We have re-analyzed FUSE data and obtained new Chandra observations of Haro
11, a local (D_L=88 Mpc) UV luminous galaxy. Haro 11 has a similar far-UV
luminosity (10^10.3 L_\odot), UV surface brightness (10^9.4 L_\odot kpc^-2),
SFR, and metallicity to that observed in Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs). We show
that Haro 11 has extended, soft thermal (kT~0.68 keV) X-ray emission with a
luminosity and size which scales with the physical properties (e.g. SFR,
stellar mass) of the host galaxy. An enhanced alpha/Fe, ratio of ~4 relative to
solar abundance suggests significant supernovae enrichment. These results are
consistent with the X-ray emission being produced in a shock between a
supernovae driven outflow and the ambient material. The FUV spectra show strong
absorption lines similar to those observed in LBG spectra. A blueshifted
absorption component is identified as a wind outflowing at ~200-280 km/s.
OVI\lambda\lambda1032,1038 emission, the dominant cooling mechanism for coronal
gas at T~10^5.5 K is also observed. If associated with the outflow, the
luminosity of the OVI emission suggests that <20% of the total mechanical
energy from the supernovae and solar winds is being radiated away. This implies
that radiative cooling through OVI is not significantly inhibiting the growth
of the outflowing gas. In contradiction to the findings of Bergvall et al 2006,
we find no convincing evidence of Lyman continuum leakage in Haro 11. We
conclude that the wind has not created a `tunnel' allowing the escape of a
significant fraction of Lyman continuum photons and place a limit on the escape
fraction of f_{esc}<2%. Overall, both Haro 11 and a previously observed LBG
analogue VV 114, provide an invaluable insight into the X-ray and FUV
properties of high redshift LBGs.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 40 pages, 17 figure
HST morphologies of local Lyman break galaxy analogs I: Evidence for starbursts triggered by merging
Heckman et al. (2005) used the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) UV imaging
survey to show that there exists a rare population of nearby compact
UV-luminous galaxies (UVLGs) that closely resembles high redshift Lyman break
galaxies (LBGs). We present HST images in the UV, optical, and Ha, and
resimulate them at the depth and resolution of the GOODS/UDF fields to show
that the morphologies of UVLGs are also similar to those of LBGs. Our sample of
8 LBG analogs thus provides detailed insight into the connection between star
formation and LBG morphology. Faint tidal features or companions can be seen in
all of the rest-frame optical images, suggesting that the starbursts are the
result of a merger or interaction. The UV/optical light is dominated by
unresolved (~100-300 pc) super starburst regions (SSBs). A detailed comparison
with the galaxies Haro 11 and VV 114 at z=0.02 indicates that the SSBs
themselves consist of diffuse stars and (super) star clusters. The structural
features revealed by the new HST images occur on very small physical scales and
are thus not detectable in images of high redshift LBGs, except in a few cases
where they are magnified by gravitational lensing. We propose, therefore, that
LBGs are mergers of gas-rich, relatively low-mass (~10^10 Msun) systems, and
that the mergers trigger the formation of SSBs. If galaxies at high redshifts
are dominated by SSBs, then the faint end slope of the luminosity function is
predicted to have slope alpha~2. Our results are the most direct confirmation
to date of models that predict that the main mode of star formation in the
early universe was highly collisional.Comment: 32 pages, 15 figures. ApJ In pres
A galaxy populations study of a radio-selected protocluster at z~3.1
We present a population study of several types of galaxies within the
protocluster surrounding the radio galaxy MRC0316-257 at z~3.1. In addition to
the known population of Ly_alpha emitters (LAEs) and [OIII] emitters, we use
colour selection techniques to identify protocluster candidates that are Lyman
break galaxies (LBG) and Balmer break galaxies (BBGs). The radio galaxy field
contains an excess of LBG candidates, with a surface density 1.6\pm0.3 times
larger than found for comparable blank fields. This surface overdensity
corresponds to an LBG volume overdensity of ~8\pm4. The BBG photometric
redshift distribution peaks at the protocluster's redshift, but we detect no
significant surface overdensity of BBG. This is not surprising because a volume
overdensity similar to the LBGs would have resulted in a surface density of
~1.2 that found in the blank field. This could not have been detected in our
sample. Masses and star formation rates of the candidate protocluster galaxies
are determined using SED fitting. These properties are not significantly
different from those of field galaxies. The galaxies with the highest masses
and star formation rates are located near the radio galaxy, indicating that the
protocluster environment influences galaxy evolution at z~3. We conclude that
the protocluster around MRC0316-257 is still in the early stages of formation.Comment: 19 pages, 20 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Overdensities of Y-dropout Galaxies from the Brightest-of-Reionizing Galaxies Survey: A Candidate Protocluster at Redshift z~8
Theoretical and numerical modeling of dark-matter halo assembly predicts that
the most luminous galaxies at high redshift are surrounded by overdensities of
fainter companions. We test this prediction with HST observations acquired by
our Brightest of Reionizing Galaxies (BoRG) survey, which identified four very
bright z~8 candidates as Y-dropout sources in four of the 23 non-contiguous
WFC3 fields observed. We extend here the search for Y-dropouts to fainter
luminosities (M_* galaxies with M_AB\sim-20), with detections at >5sigma
confidence (compared to >8sigma confidence adopted earlier) identifying 17 new
candidates. We demonstrate that there is a correlation between number counts of
faint and bright Y-dropouts at >99.84% confidence. Field BoRG58, which contains
the best bright z\sim8 candidate (M_AB=-21.3), has the most significant
overdensity of faint Y-dropouts. Four new sources are located within 70arcsec
(corresponding to 3.1 comoving Mpc at z=8) from the previously known brighter
z\sim8 candidate. The overdensity of Y-dropouts in this field has a physical
origin to high confidence (p>99.975%), independent of completeness and
contamination rate of the Y-dropout selection. We modeled the overdensity by
means of cosmological simulations and estimate that the principal dark matter
halo has mass M_h\sim(4-7)x10^11Msun (\sim5sigma density peak) and is
surrounded by several M_h\sim10^11Msun halos which could host the fainter
dropouts. In this scenario, we predict that all halos will eventually merge
into a M_h>2x10^14Msun galaxy cluster by z=0. Follow-up observations with
ground and space based telescopes are required to secure the z\sim8 nature of
the overdensity, discover new members, and measure their precise redshift.Comment: Minor revision: ApJ accepted [17 pages (emulateapj style), 7 figures,
2 tables
A massive proto-cluster of galaxies at a redshift of z {\approx} 5.3
Massive clusters of galaxies have been found as early as 3.9 Billion years
(z=1.62) after the Big Bang containing stars that formed at even earlier
epochs. Cosmological simulations using the current cold dark matter paradigm
predict these systems should descend from "proto-clusters" - early
over-densities of massive galaxies that merge hierarchically to form a cluster.
These proto-cluster regions themselves are built-up hierarchically and so are
expected to contain extremely massive galaxies which can be observed as
luminous quasars and starbursts. However, observational evidence for this
scenario is sparse due to the fact that high-redshift proto-clusters are rare
and difficult to observe. Here we report a proto-cluster region 1 billion years
(z=5.3) after the Big Bang. This cluster of massive galaxies extends over >13
Mega-parsecs, contains a luminous quasar as well as a system rich in molecular
gas. These massive galaxies place a lower limit of >4x10^11 solar masses of
dark and luminous matter in this region consistent with that expected from
cosmological simulations for the earliest galaxy clusters.Comment: Accepted to Nature, 16 Pages, 6 figure
The host galaxy of the z=2.4 radio-loud AGN MRC 0406-244 as seen by HST
We present multicolour Hubble Space Telescope images of the powerful z=2.4
radio galaxy MRC 0406-244 and model its complex morphology with several
components including a host galaxy, a point source, and extended nebular and
continuum emission. We suggest that the main progenitor of this radio galaxy
was a normal, albeit massive (M ~10^{11} solar masses), star-forming galaxy.
The optical stellar disc of the host galaxy is smooth and well described by a
S\'ersic profile, which argues against a recent major merger, however there is
also a point-source component which may be the remnant of a minor merger. The
half-light radius of the optical disc is constrained to lie in the range 3.5 to
8.2kpc, which is of similar size to coeval star forming galaxies.
Biconical shells of nebular emission and UV-bright continuum extend out from
the host galaxy along the radio jet axis, which is also the minor axis of the
host galaxy. The origin of the continuum emission is uncertain, but it is most
likely to be young stars or dust-scattered light from the AGN, and it is
possible that stars are forming from this material at a rate of
200^{+1420}_{-110} solar masses per year.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
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