356 research outputs found
Evolution of Lyman Alpha Galaxies: Stellar Populations at z ~ 0.3
We present the results of a stellar population analysis of 30 Lyman alpha
emitting galaxies (LAEs) at z ~ 0.3, previously discovered with the Galaxy
Evolution Explorer (GALEX). With a few exceptions, we can accurately fit model
spectral energy distributions to these objects, representing the first time
this has been done for a large sample of LAEs at z < 3, a gap of ~ 8 Gyr in the
history of the Universe. From the 26/30 LAEs which we can fit, we find an age
and stellar mass range of 200 Myr - 10 Gyr and 10^9 - 10^11 Msol, respectively.
These objects thus appear to be significantly older and more massive than LAEs
at high-redshift. We also find that these LAEs show a mild trend towards higher
metallicity than those at high redshift, as well as a tighter range of dust
attenuation and interstellar medium geometry. These results suggest that
low-redshift LAEs have evolved significantly from those at high redshift.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Replaced with
accepted version. Eight pages, four figures, in emulateapj forma
Herschel Extreme Lensing Line Observations: Dynamics of two strongly lensed star forming galaxies near redshift z = 2
We report on two regularly rotating galaxies at redshift z=2, using high
resolution spectra of the bright [CII] 158 micron emission line from the HIFI
instrument on the Herschel Space Observatory. Both SDSS090122.37+181432.3
("S0901") and SDSS J120602.09+514229.5 ("the Clone") are strongly lensed and
show the double-horned line profile that is typical of rotating gas disks.
Using a parametric disk model to fit the emission line profiles, we find that
S0901 has a rotation speed v sin(i) = 120 +/- 7 km/s and gas velocity
dispersion sigma < 23 km/s. The best fitting model for the Clone is a
rotationally supported disk having v sin(i) = 79 +/- 11 km/s and sigma < 4km/s.
However the Clone is also consistent with a family of dispersion-dominated
models having sigma = 92 +/- 20 km/s. Our results showcase the potential of the
[CII] line as a kinematic probe of high redshift galaxy dynamics: [CII] is
bright; accessible to heterodyne receivers with exquisite velocity resolution;
and traces dense star-forming interstellar gas. Future [CII] line observations
with ALMA would offer the further advantage of spatial resolution, allowing a
clearer separation between rotation and velocity dispersion.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures; in press at The Astrophysical Journa
Galactic winds and stellar populations in Lyman emitting galaxies at z ~ 3.1
We present a sample of 33 spectroscopically confirmed z ~ 3.1
Ly-emitting galaxies (LAEs) in the Cosmological Evolution Survey
(COSMOS) field. This paper details the narrow-band survey we conducted to
detect the LAE sample, the optical spectroscopy we performed to confirm the
nature of these LAEs, and a new near-infrared spectroscopic detection of the [O
III] 5007 \AA\ line in one of these LAEs. This detection is in addition to two
[O III] detections in two z ~ 3.1 LAEs we have reported on previously (McLinden
et al 2011). The bulk of the paper then presents detailed constraints on the
physical characteristics of the entire LAE sample from spectral energy
distribution (SED) fitting. These characteristics include mass, age,
star-formation history, dust content, and metallicity. We also detail an
approach to account for nebular emission lines in the SED fitting process -
wherein our models predict the strength of the [O III] line in an LAE spectrum.
We are able to study the success of this prediction because we can compare the
model predictions to our actual near-infrared observations both in galaxies
that have [O III] detections and those that yielded non-detections. We find a
median stellar mass of 6.9 10 M and a median star
formation rate weighted stellar population age of 4.5 10 yr. In
addition to SED fitting, we quantify the velocity offset between the [O III]
and Ly lines in the galaxy with the new [O III] detection, finding that
the Ly line is shifted 52 km s redwards of the [O III] line,
which defines the systemic velocity of the galaxy.Comment: 38 pages, 27 figures, 4 tables, Accepted for publication in MNRA
Ly-alpha emitting galaxies at redshift z~4.5 in the LALA Cetus field
We present a large sample of Ly-alpha emitting galaxies spectroscopically
confirmed at z~4.5, based on IMACS spectroscopic observations of candidate LAEs
in the LALA Cetus field. We identify 110 z~4.5 LAEs based on single line
detections with no continuum emission blueward of the line. The Ly-alpha
confirmation rate varies from <50% to 76% for candidates selected in different
narrowband filters at slightly different redshifts. We find a drop in the LAE
density at redshift 4.50+-0.03 from redshift 4.39-4.47 by a factor of 66%,
which could be a large scale void in the distribution of star-forming galaxies
(~18Mpc along the line of sight and ~80Mpc across). The sample includes many
objects with equivalent widths >200A. These large EW candidates are
spectroscopically confirmed at the same rate as candidates with more modest
EWs. A composite spectrum of all 110 confirmed LAEs shows the characteristic
asymmetry of the Ly-alpha line. It also places new and stringent upper limits
on the CIV 1549/Ly-alpha and HeII 1640/Ly-alpha line ratios, providing a new
upper limit on the fraction of active galactic nuclei in Ly-alpha selected
galaxy samples, and on the contribution of Pop III populations. Finally, we
calculate the Ly-alpha luminosity function for our z~4.5 sample, which is
consistent with those at other redshifts, showing that there is no evolution in
Ly-alpha luminosity function from z~3.1-6.6.Comment: 30 pages, 10 figures, ApJ submitte
The Dynamical Masses, Densities, and Star Formation Scaling Relations of Lyman Alpha Galaxies
We present the first dynamical mass measurements for Lyman alpha galaxies at
high redshift, based on velocity dispersion measurements from rest-frame
optical emission lines and size measurements from HST imaging, for a sample of
nine galaxies drawn from four surveys. These measurements enable us to study
the nature of Lyman alpha galaxies in the context of galaxy scaling relations.
The resulting dynamical masses range from 1e9 to 1e10 solar masses. We also fit
stellar population models to our sample, and use them to plot the Lyman alpha
sample on a stellar mass vs. line width relation. Overall, the Lyman alpha
galaxies follow well the scaling relation established by observing star forming
galaxies at lower redshift (and without regard for Lyman alpha emission),
though in 1/3 of the Lyman alpha galaxies, lower-mass fits are also acceptable.
In all cases, the dynamical masses agree with established stellarmass-linewidth
relation. Using the dynamical masses as an upper limit on gas mass, we show
that Lyman alpha galaxies resemble starbursts (rather than "normal" galaxies)
in the relation between gas mass surface density and star formation activity,
in spite of relatively modest star formation rates. Finally, we examine the
mass densities of these galaxies, and show that their future evolution likely
requires dissipational ("wet") merging. In short, we find that Lyman alpha
galaxies are low mass cousins of larger starbursts.Comment: Submitted to The Astrophysical Journal. 23 pp including three figures
and four table
Effects of Dust Geometry in Lyman Alpha Galaxies at z = 4.4
Equivalent widths (EWs) observed in high-redshift Lyman alpha galaxies could
be stronger than the EW intrinsic to the stellar population if dust is present
residing in clumps in the inter-stellar medium (ISM). In this scenario,
continuum photons could be extinguished while the Lyman alpha photons would be
resonantly scattered by the clumps, eventually escaping the galaxy. We
investigate this radiative transfer scenario with a new sample of six Lyman
alpha galaxy candidates in the GOODS CDF-S, selected at z = 4.4 with
ground-based narrow-band imaging obtained at CTIO. Grism spectra from the HST
PEARS survey confirm that three objects are at z = 4.4, and that another object
contains an active galactic nuclei (AGN). If we assume the other five (non-AGN)
objects are at z = 4.4, they have rest-frame EWs from 47 -- 190 A. We present
results of stellar population studies of these objects, constraining their
rest-frame UV with HST and their rest-frame optical with Spitzer. Out of the
four objects which we analyzed, three objects were best-fit to contain stellar
populations with ages on the order of 1 Myr and stellar masses from 3 - 10 x
10^8 solar masses, with dust in the amount of A_1200 = 0.9 - 1.8 residing in a
quasi-homogeneous distribution. However, one object (with a rest EW ~ 150 A)
was best fit by an 800 Myr, 6.6 x 10^9 solar mass stellar population with a
smaller amount of dust (A_1200 = 0.4) attenuating the continuum only. In this
object, the EW was enhanced ~ 50% due to this dust. This suggests that large EW
Lyman alpha galaxies are a diverse population. Preferential extinction of the
continuum in a clumpy ISM deserves further investigation as a possible cause of
the overabundance of large-EW objects that have been seen in narrow-band
surveys in recent years.Comment: Submitted to the Astrophysical Journal. 35 pages, 7 figures and 4
table
The Luminosity Function of Lyman alpha Emitters at Redshift z=7.7
Lyman alpha (Lya) emission lines should be attenuated in a neutral
intergalactic medium (IGM). Therefore the visibility of Lya emitters at high
redshifts can serve as a valuable probe of reionization at about the 50% level.
We present an imaging search for z=7.7 Lya emitting galaxies using an
ultra-narrowband filter (filter width= 9A) on the NEWFIRM imager at the Kitt
Peak National Observatory. We found four candidate Lya emitters in a survey
volume of 1.4 x 10^4 Mpc^3, with a line flux brighter than 6x10^-18 erg/cm^2/s
(5 sigma in 2" aperture). We also performed a detailed Monte-Carlo simulation
incorporating the instrumental effects to estimate the expected number of Lya
emitters in our survey, and found that we should expect to detect one Lya
emitter, assuming a non-evolving Lya luminosity function (LF) between z=6.5 and
z=7.7. Even if one of the present candidates is spectroscopically confirmed as
a z~8 Lya emitter, it would indicate that there is no significant evolution of
the Lya LF from z=3.1 to z~8. While firm conclusions would need both
spectroscopic confirmations and larger surveys to boost the number counts of
galaxies, we successfully demonstrate the feasibility of sensitive
near-infrared (1.06 um) narrow-band searches using custom filters designed to
avoid the OH emission lines that make up most of the sky background.Comment: Published in ApJ, 3 figure
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