2 research outputs found
Subaru Studies of the Cosmic Dawn
An overview on the current status of the census of the early universe
population is given. Observational surveys of high redshift objects provide
direct opportunities to study the early epoch of the Universe. The target
population included are Lyman Alpha Emitters (LAE), Lyman Break Galaxies (LBG),
gravitationally lensed galaxies, quasars and gamma-ray bursts (GRB). The basic
properties of these objects and the methods used to study them are reviewed.
The present paper highlights the fact that the Subaru Telescope group made
significant contributions in this field of science to elucidate the epoch of
the cosmic dawn and to improve the understanding of how and when infant
galaxies evolve into mature ones.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in the Proceedings of
the Japan Academy, Series
Observations of the High Redshift Universe
(Abridged) In these lectures aimed for non-specialists, I review progress in
understanding how galaxies form and evolve. Both the star formation history and
assembly of stellar mass can be empirically traced from redshifts z~6 to the
present, but how the various distant populations inter-relate and how stellar
assembly is regulated by feedback and environmental processes remains unclear.
I also discuss how these studies are being extended to locate and characterize
the earlier sources beyond z~6. Did early star-forming galaxies contribute
significantly to the reionization process and over what period did this occur?
Neither theory nor observations are well-developed in this frontier topic but
the first results presented here provide important guidance on how we will use
more powerful future facilities.Comment: To appear in `First Light in Universe', Saas-Fee Advanced Course 36,
Swiss Soc. Astrophys. Astron. in press. 115 pages, 64 figures (see
http://www.astro.caltech.edu/~rse/saas-fee.pdf for hi-res figs.) For lecture
ppt files see
http://obswww.unige.ch/saas-fee/preannouncement/course_pres/overview_f.htm