25 research outputs found
Keck/Palomar Cosmic Web Imagers (KCWI/PCWI) Reveal an Enormous Ly Nebula in an Extremely Overdense QSO Pair Field at
Enormous Ly nebulae (ELANe) represent the extrema of Ly
nebulosities. They have detected extents of kpc in Ly and
Ly luminosities erg s. The ELAN population is an
ideal laboratory to study the interactions between galaxies and the
intergalactic/circumgalactic medium (IGM/CGM) given their brightness and sizes.
The current sample size of ELANe is still very small, and the few
ELANe discovered to date are all associated with local overdensities of active
galactic nuclei (AGNs). Inspired by these results, we have initiated a survey
of ELANe associated with QSO pairs using the Palomar and Keck Cosmic Web
Imagers (PCWI/KCWI). In this letter, we present our first result: the discovery
of ELAN0101+0201 associated with a QSO pair at . Our PCWI discovery
data shows that, above a 2- surface brightness of
\sbunit, the end-to-end size of ELAN0101+0201 is kpc. We have
conducted follow-up observations using KCWI, resolving multiple Ly
emitting sources within the rectangular field-of-view of
projected kpc, and obtaining their emission line profiles at high
signal-to-noise ratios. Combining both KCWI and PCWI, our observations confirm
that ELAN0101+0201 resides in an extremely overdense environment. Our
observations further support that a large amount of cool (K) gas
could exist in massive halos (MM) at .
Future observations on a larger sample of similar systems will provide
statistics of how cool gas is distributed in massive overdensities at
high-redshift and strongly constrain the evolution of the intracluster medium
(ICM).Comment: Submitted to Astrophysical Journal Letter, 9 pages, 4 figures,
Comments Welcom
Cosmic web imager
We are developing the Cosmic Web Imager (CWI) to detect and map emission from the intergalactic medium (IGM). CWI will observe the strong, redshift UV resonance lines of Lyα 1216, CIV 1550, and OVI 1033 over 3600-9000 Å to trace IGM at 1 < z < 7. CWI is an integral-field spectrograph designed for the Hale Telescope at Palomar Observatory. CWI combines in a novel way three mature and extensively used instrumental techniques. The Integral Field Unit (IFU) provides a wide 2D field of view of 60 × 40 arcsec2 for observing extended emission over a large region. The spectrograph using Volume-Phase Holographic gratings have high peak diffraction efficiency and are tunable for covering a large bandpass with a single grating. A low read noise CCD combined with source/background shiftand-nod allowing control of systematics and Poisson-imited sky subtraction to observe the low surface brightness universe. With a resolution of R=10,000 CWI is sensitive to limiting surface brightness ranging from 25 - 27.5 mag/arcsec2 (10 min - 8 hours integration). Recent high resolution simulations predict Lyα Fluorescence from IGM at 100 - 1000 LU1. CWI with sensitivity of ~200 LU improves the current observational effort by an order of magnitude and enables us to explore wide range of overdensity (δ ~ 30 - 104) testing the standard model of structure formation in the universe. CWI also serves as the counter part to the balloon borne integral-field spectrograph Faint Intergalactic medium Redshifted Emission Balloon (FIREBALL) currently being built and planned to be launched in Summer 2007. FIREBALL will observe Lyα Fluorescence from IGM at z = 0.7. CWI combined with FIREBALL will enable us to observe the evolution of IGM and the low surface brightness universe
Spatially Resolved Stellar Spectroscopy of the Ultra-diffuse Galaxy Dragonfly 44. III. Evidence for an Unexpected Star-Formation History
We use the Keck Cosmic Web Imager integral-field unit spectrograph to: 1)
measure the global stellar population parameters for the ultra-diffuse galaxy
(UDG) Dragonfly 44 (DF44) to much higher precision than previously possible for
any UDG, and 2) for the first time measure spatially-resolved stellar
population parameters of a UDG. We find that DF44 falls below the
mass--metallicity relation established by canonical dwarf galaxies both in and
beyond the Local Group. We measure a flat radial age gradient ( log Gyr kpc) and a flat-to-positive
metallicity gradient ( dex
kpc), which are inconsistent with the gradients measured in similarly
pressure-supported dwarf galaxies. We also measure a flat-to-negative [Mg/Fe]
gradient ( dex kpc) such
that the central kpc of DF44 has stellar population parameters comparable
to metal-poor globular clusters. Overall, DF44 does not have internal
properties similar to other dwarf galaxies and is inconsistent with it having
been puffed up through a prolonged, bursty star-formation history, as suggested
by some simulations. Rather, the evidence indicates that DF44 experienced an
intense epoch of "inside-out" star formation and then quenched early and
catastrophically, such that star-formation was cut off more quickly than in
canonical dwarf galaxies.Comment: Accepted to Ap
Still at Odds with Conventional Galaxy Evolution: The Star Formation History of Ultra-Diffuse Galaxy Dragonfly 44
We study the star formation history (SFH) of the ultra-diffuse galaxy (UDG)
Dragonfly 44 (DF44) based on the simultaneous fit to near-ultraviolet to
near-infrared photometry and high signal-to-noise optical spectroscopy. In
fitting the observations we adopt an advanced physical model with a flexible
SFH, and we discuss the results in the context of the degeneracies between
stellar population parameters. Through reconstructing the mass-assembly history
with a prior for extended star formation (akin to methods in the literature) we
find that DF44 formed 90 per cent of its stellar mass by ( Gyr ago). In comparison, using a prior that prefers concentrated star
formation (as informed by previous studies of DF44's stellar populations)
suggests that DF44 formed as early as ( Gyr ago).
Regardless of whether DF44 is old or very old, the SFHs imply early star
formation and rapid quenching. This result, together with DF44's large size and
evidence that it is on its first infall into the Coma cluster, challenges UDG
formation scenarios from simulations that treat all UDGs as contiguous with the
canonical dwarf population. While our results cannot confirm any particular
formation scenario, we can conclude from this that DF44 experienced a rare
quenching event.Comment: 25 pages, 15 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
FIREBALL: the Faint Intergalactic medium Redshifted Emission Balloon: overview and first science flight results
FIREBALL (the Faint Intergalactic Redshifted Emission Balloon) is a balloon-borne 1m telescope coupled to an ultraviolet fiber-fed spectrograph. FIREBALL is designed to study the faint and diffuse emission of the intergalactic medium, until now detected primarily in absorption. FIREBALL is a path finding mission to test new technology and make new constraints on the temperature and density of this gas. We report on the first successful science flight of FIREBALL, in June 2009, which proved every aspect of the complex instrument performance, and provided the strongest measurements and constraints on IGM emission available from any instrument
The Dark Matter Distributions in Low-mass Disk Galaxies. II. The Inner Density Profiles
Dark-matter-only simulations predict that dark matter halos have steep, cuspy inner density profiles, while observations of dwarf galaxies find a range of inner slopes that are often much shallower. There is debate whether this discrepancy can be explained by baryonic feedback or if it may require modified dark matter models. In Paper I of this series, we obtained high-resolution integral field Hα observations for 26 dwarf galaxies with M* = 10^(8.1)−10^(9.7) M_⊙. We derived rotation curves from our observations, which we use here to construct mass models. We model the total mass distribution as the sum of a generalized Navarro–Frenk–White (NFW) dark matter halo and the stellar and gaseous components. Our analysis of the slope of the dark matter density profile focuses on the inner 300–800 pc, chosen based on the resolution of our data and the region resolved by modern hydrodynamical simulations. The inner slope measured using ionized and molecular gas tracers is consistent, and it is additionally robust to the choice of stellar mass-to-light ratio. We find a range of dark matter profiles, including both cored and cuspy slopes, with an average of ρ}_(DM ~ r^(-0.74 ± 0.07), shallower than the NFW profile, but steeper than those typically observed for lower-mass galaxies with M* ~ 10^(7.5) M_⊙. Simulations that reproduce the observed slopes in those lower-mass galaxies also produce slopes that are too shallow for galaxies in our mass range. We therefore conclude that supernova feedback models do not yet provide a fully satisfactory explanation for the observed trend in dark matter slopes
Intergalactic Medium Emission Observations with the Cosmic Web Imager. I. The Circum-QSO Medium of QSO 1549+19, and Evidence for a Filamentary Gas Inflow
The Palomar Cosmic Web Imager (PCWI), an integral field spectrograph designed to detect and map low surface brightness emission, has obtained imaging spectroscopic maps of Lyα from the circum-QSO medium (CQM) of QSO HS1549+19 at redshift z=2.843. Extensive extended emission is detected from the CQM, consistent with fluorescent and pumped Lyα produced by the ionizing and Lyα continuum of the QSO. Many features present in PCWI spectral images match those detected in narrow-band images. Filamentary structures with narrow line profiles are detected in several cases as long as 250-400 kpc. One of these is centered at a velocity redshifted with respect to the systemic velocity, and displays a spatially collimated and
kinematically cold line profile increasing in velocity width approaching the QSO. This suggests that the filament gas is infalling onto the QSO, perhaps in a cold accretion flow. Because of the strong ionizing flux, the neutral column density is low, typically N(HI) ~ 10^(12)−10^(15) cm^(−2), and the line center optical depth is also low (typically τ_0 <10), insufficient to display well-separated
double peak emission characteristic of higher line optical depths. With a simple ionization and cloud model we can very roughly estimate the total gas mass (log M_(gas) = 12.5 ± 0.5) and the total (log M_(tot) = 13.3± 0.5). We can also calculate a kinematic mass from the total line profile (2×10^(13)M_☉), which agrees with the mass estimated from the gas emission. The intensity-binned
spectrum of the CQM shows a progression in kinematic properties consistent with heirarchical structure formation
Intergalactic Medium Emission Observations with the Cosmic Web Imager. II. Discovery of Extended, Kinematically-Linked Emission around SSA22 Lyα Blob 2
The intergalactic medium (IGM) is the dominant reservoir of baryons, delineates the large scale structure of the universe at low to moderate overdensities, and provides gas from which galaxies form and evolve. Simulations of a Cold Dark Matter (CDM) dominated universe predict that the
IGM is distributed in a cosmic web of filaments, and that galaxies should form along and at the intersections of these filaments (Bond, Kofman, & Pogosyan 1994; Miralda-Escude et al. 1996). While observations of QSO absorption lines and the large-scale distribution of galaxies have
confirmed the CDM paradigm, the cosmic web of IGM has never been confirmed by direct imaging. Here we report our observation of the Lyα blob-2 (LAB2) in SSA22, with the Cosmic Web Imager. This is an integral field spectrograph optimized for low surface brightness, extended emission. With 22 hours of total on- and off-source exposure, CWI has revealed that LAB2 has extended Lyα emission which is organized into azimuthal zones consistent with filaments. We perform numerous tests with simulations and the data to secure the robustness of this result, which relies on data with modest signal-to-noise ratio. We have developed a
smoothing algorithm that permits visualization of data cube slices along image or spectral-image planes. With both raw and smoothed data cubes we demonstrate that the filaments are kinematically associated with LAB2 and display double-peaked profiles characteristic of optically thick Lyα emission. The flux is 10-20 times brighter than expected for the average emission from the IGM but is consistent with boosted fluorescence from a buried QSO or gravitation cooling radiation. Using simple emission models we infer a baryon mass in the filaments of at least 1−4 × 10^(11)M_☉, and the dark halo mass is at least 2 × 10^(12)M_☉. The spatial-kinematic morphology is more consistent with inflow from the cosmic web than outflow from LAB2, although an outflow feature maybe present at one azimuth. LAB2 and the surrounding gas have significant and coaligned angular momentum, strengthening the case for their association