128 research outputs found

    The LyAlpha Line Profiles of Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies: Fast Winds and Lyman Continuum Leakage

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    We present new Hubble Space Telescope Cosmic Origins Spectrograph far-ultraviolet (far-UV) spectroscopy and Keck Echellete optical spectroscopy of 11 ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs), a rare population of local galaxies experiencing massive gas inflows, extreme starbursts, and prominent outflows. We detect H Lyman alpha emission from 8 ULIRGs and the companion to IRAS09583+4714. In contrast to the P Cygni profiles often seen in galaxy spectra, the H Lyman alpha profiles exhibit prominent, blueshifted emission out to Doppler shifts exceeding -1000 km/s in three HII-dominated and two AGN-dominated ULIRGs. To better understand the role of resonance scattering in shaping the H Lyman alpha line profiles, we directly compare them to non-resonant emission lines in optical spectra. We find that the line wings are already present in the intrinsic nebular spectra, and scattering merely enhances the wings relative to the line core. The H Lyman alpha attenuation (as measured in the COS aperture) ranges from that of the far-UV continuum to over 100 times more. A simple radiative transfer model suggests the H Lyman alpha photons escape through cavities which have low column densities of neutral hydrogen and become optically thin to the Lyman continuum in the most advanced mergers. We show that the properties of the highly blueshifted line wings on the H Lyman alpha and optical emission-line profiles are consistent with emission from clumps of gas condensing out of a fast, hot wind. The luminosity of the H Lyman alpha emission increases non-linearly with the ULIRG bolometric luminosity and represents about 0.1 to 1% of the radiative cooling from the hot winds in the HII-dominated ULIRGs.Comment: Submitted to Ap

    The metallicity evolution of low mass galaxies: New constraints at intermediate redshift

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    We present abundance measurements from 26 emission-line selected galaxies at z~0.6-0.7. By reaching stellar masses as low as 10^8 M_{\sun}, these observations provide the first measurement of the intermediate redshift mass-metallicity (MZ) relation below 10^9 M_{\sun} For the portion of our sample above M > 10^9 M_{\sun} (8/26 galaxies), we find good agreement with previous measurements of the intermediate redshift MZ relation. Compared to the local relation, we measure an evolution that corresponds to a 0.12 dex decrease in oxygen abundances at intermediate redshifts. This result confirms the trend that metallicity evolution becomes more significant towards lower stellar masses, in keeping with a downsizing scenario where low mass galaxies evolve onto the local MZ relation at later cosmic times. We show that these galaxies follow the local fundamental metallicity relation, where objects with higher specific (mass-normalized) star formation rates (SFRs) have lower metallicities. Furthermore, we show that the galaxies in our sample lie on an extrapolation of the SFR-M_{*} relation (the star-forming main sequence). Leveraging the MZ relation and star-forming main sequence (and combining our data with higher mass measurements from the literature), we test models that assume an equilibrium between mass inflow, outflow and star formation. We find that outflows are required to describe the data. By comparing different outflow prescriptions, we show that momentum driven winds can describe the MZ relation; however, this model under-predicts the amount of star formation in low mass galaxies. This disagreement may indicate that preventive feedback from gas-heating has been overestimated, or it may signify a more fundamental deviation from the equilibrium assumption.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap

    The Faint-End Slope of the Redshift 5.7 Lyman Alpha Luminosity Function

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    Using new Keck DEIMOS spectroscopy, we examine the origin of the steep number counts of ultra-faint emission-line galaxies recently reported by Dressler et al. (2011). We confirm six Lyman Alpha emitters (LAEs), three of which have significant asymmetric line profiles with prominent wings extending 300-400 km/s redward of the peak emission. With these six LAEs, we revise our previous estimate of the number of faint LAEs in the Dressler et al. survey. Combining these data with the density of bright LAEs in the Cosmic Origins Survey and Subaru Deep Field provides the best constraints to date on the redshift 5.7 LAE luminosity function (LF). Schechter function parameters, phi^* = 4.5 x 10^{-4} Mpc^{-3}, L^* = 9.1 x 10^{42} erg s^{-1}, and alpha= -1.70, are estimated using a maximum likelihood technique with a model for slit losses. To place this result in the context of the UV-selected galaxy population, we investigate how various parameterizations of the Lyman Alpha equivalent width distribution, along with the measured UV-continuum LF, affect shape and normalization of the Lyman Alpha LF. The nominal model, which uses z~6 equivalent widths from the literature, falls short of the observed space density of LAEs at the bright end, possibly indicating a need for higher equivalent widths. This parameterization of the equivalent width distribution implies that as many as 50% of our faintest LAEs should have M_{UV} > -18.0, rendering them undetectable in even the deepest Hubble Space Telescope surveys at this redshift. Hence, ultra-deep emission-line surveys find some of the faintest galaxies ever observed at the end of the reionization epoch. Such faint galaxies likely enrich the intergalactic medium with metals and maintain its ionized state. Observations of these objects provide a glimpse of the building blocks of present-day galaxies at an early time.Comment: Resubmitted to ApJ after addressing referee's comment

    Testing SALT Approximations with Numerical Radiation Transfer Code Part 1: Validity and Applicability

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    Absorption line spectroscopy offers one of the best opportunities to constrain the properties of galactic outflows and the environment of the circumgalactic medium. Extracting physical information from line profiles is difficult, however, for the physics governing the underlying radiation transfer is complicated and depends on many different parameters. Idealized analytical models are necessary to constrain the large parameter spaces efficiently, but are typically plagued by model degeneracy and systematic errors. Comparison tests with idealized numerical radiation transfer codes offer an excellent opportunity to confront both of these issues. In this paper, we present a detailed comparison between SALT, an analytical radiation transfer model for predicting UV spectra of galactic outflows, with the numerical radiation transfer software, RASCAS. Our analysis has lead to upgrades to both models including an improved derivation of SALT and a customizable adaptive mesh refinement routine for RASCAS. We explore how well SALT, when paired with a Monte Carlo fitting procedure, can recover flow parameters from non-turbulent and turbulent flows. When the velocity and density gradients are excluded, we find that flow parameters are well recovered from high resolution (20 km\rm{km} s−1\rm{s}^{-1}) data and moderately well from medium resolution (100 km\rm{km} s−1\rm{s}^{-1}) data without turbulence at a S/N = 10, while derived quantities (e.g., mass outflow rates, column density, etc.) are well recovered at all resolutions. In the turbulent case, biased errors emerge in the recovery of individual parameters, but derived quantities are still well recovered

    Prospects for extending the Mass-Metallicity Relation to low mass at high redshift: a case study at z~1

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    We report J-band MOSFIRE spectroscopy of a low-mass (log(M∗/M⊙)=8.62−0.06+0.10(M_*/M_\odot)=8.62^{+0.10}_{-0.06}) star-forming galaxy at z=0.997z=0.997 showing the detection of [NII] and [SII] alongside a strong Hα\alpha line. We derive a gas-phase metallicity of log(O/H)=7.99−0.23+0.13(\text{O}/\text{H})=7.99^{+0.13}_{-0.23}, placing this object in a region of M∗−ZM_* - Z space that is sparsely populated at this redshift. Furthermore, many existing metallicity measurements in this M∗−zM_* - z regime are derived from only [NII]/Hα\alpha (N2), a diagnostic widely used in high-redshift metallicity studies despite the known strong degeneracy with the ionization parameter and resulting large systematic uncertainty. We demonstrate that even in a regime where [NII] and [SII] are at the detection limit and the measurement uncertainty associated with the [NII]/[SII] ratio is high (S/N~3), the more sophisticated Dopita et al. diagnostic provides an improved constraint compared to N2 by reducing the systematic uncertainty due to the ionization parameter. This approach does not, however, dispel uncertainty associated with stochastic or systematic variations in the nitrogen-to-oxygen abundance ratio. While this approach improves upon N2, future progress in extending metallicity studies into this low-mass regime will require larger samples to allow for stochastic variations, as well as careful consideration of the global trends among dwarf galaxies in all physical parameters, not just metallicity.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
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