2,679 research outputs found
Number Density of Bright Lyman-Break Galaxies at z~6 in the Subaru Deep Field
We report on the bright Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs) selected in a 767
arcmin^2 area of the Subaru Deep Field. The selection is made in the i-zR vs
zB-zR plane, where zB and zR are new bandpasses with a central wavelength of
8842A and 9841A, respectively. This set of bandpasses enables us to separate
well z~6 LBGs from foreground galaxies and Galactic cool stars. We detect 12
LBG candidates down to zR=25.4, and calculate the normalization of the
rest-frame far-ultraviolet (FUV: 1400A) luminosity function at MFUV = -21.6 to
be \phi(-21.6) = (2.6+/-0.7) x 10^{-5} mag^{-1} Mpc^{-3}. This must be the most
reliable measurement ever obtained of the number density of bright z~6 LBGs,
because it is more robust against both contamination and cosmic variance than
previous values. The FUV luminosity density contributed from LBGs brighter than
MFUV = -21.3 is (2.8+/-0.8) x 10^{24} ergs/s/Hz/Mpc^3, which is equivalent to a
star formation rate density of (3.5+/-1.0) x 10^{-4} Msun/yr/Mpc^3. Combining
our measurement with those at z<6 in the literature, we find that the FUV
luminosity density of bright galaxies increases by an order of magnitude from
z~6 to z~3 and then drops by 10^3 from z~3 to the present epoch, while the
evolution of the total luminosity density is much milder. The evolutionary
behavior of bright LBGs resembles that of luminous dusty star-forming galaxies
and bright QSOs. The redshift of z~3 appears to be a remarkable era in the
cosmic history when massive galaxies were being intensively formed.Comment: 12 pages, accepted for PASJ, a high resolution version is available
at http://hikari.astron.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~shima/z6LBGs
The Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Survey (SXDS) -VII. Clustering Segregation with Ultraviolet and Optical Luminosities of Lyman-Break Galaxies at z~3
We investigate clustering properties of Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs) at z~3
based on deep multi-waveband imaging data from optical to near-infrared
wavelengths in the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field. The LBGs are selected by U-V
and V-z' colors in one contiguous area of 561 arcmin^2 down to z'=25.5. We
study the dependence of the clustering strength on rest-frame UV and optical
magnitudes, which can be indicators of star formation rate and stellar mass,
respectively. The correlation length is found to be a strong function of both
UV and optical magnitudes with brighter galaxies being more clustered than
faint ones in both cases. Furthermore, the correlation length is dependent on a
combination of UV and optical magnitudes in the sense that galaxies bright in
optical magnitude have large correlation lengths irrespective of UV magnitude,
while galaxies faint in optical magnitude have correlation lengths decreasing
with decreasing UV brightness. These results suggest that galaxies with large
stellar masses always belong to massive halos in which they can have various
star formation rates, while galaxies with small stellar masses reside in less
massive halos only if they have low star formation rates. There appears to be
an upper limit to the stellar mass and the star formation rate which is
determined by the mass of hosting dark halos.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Subaru Deep Survey VI. A Census of Lyman Break Galaxies at z=4 and 5 in the Subaru Deep Fields: Clustering Properties
We investigate the clustering properties of 2,600 Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs)
at z=3.5-5.2 in two large blank fields, the Subaru Deep Field and the
Subaru/XMM Deep Field (600arcmin^2 each). The angular correlation functions of
these LBGs show a clear clustering at both z~4 and 5. The correlation lengths
are r_0= 4.1^{+0.2}_{-0.2} and 5.9^{+1.3}_{-1.7} h_{100}^{-1} Mpc (r_0=
5.1^{+1.0}_{-1.1} and 5.9^{+1.3}_{-1.7} h_{100}^{-1} Mpc) for all the detected
LBGs (for L>L* LBGs) at z~4 and 5, respectively. These correlation lengths
correspond to galaxy-dark matter biases of b_g= 2.9^{+0.1}_{-0.1} and
4.6^{+0.9}_{-1.2} (b_g=3.5^{+0.6}_{-0.7} and 4.6^{+0.9}_{-1.2}), for all the
detected LBGs (for L>L^* LBGs) at z~4 and 5, respectively. These results,
combined with estimates for z~3 LBGs in the literature, show that the
correlation length of L>L^* LBGs is almost constant, ~5 h_{100}^{-1} Mpc, over
z~3-5, while the bias monotonically increases with redshift at z>3. We also
find that for LBGs at z~4 the clustering amplitude increases with UV-continuum
luminosity and with the amount of dust extinction. We estimate the mass of dark
halos hosting various kinds of high-z galaxies including LBGs with the analytic
model given by Sheth & Tormen (1999). We find that the typical mass of dark
halos hosting L>L^* LBGs is about 1x10^{12} h_{70}^{-1}Msol over z~3-5, which
is comparable to that of the Milky Way Galaxy. A single dark halo with ~10^{12}
h_{70}^{-1} Msol is found to host 0.1-0.3 LBG on average but host about four
K-band selected galaxies.Comment: 33 pages, 12 figures, ApJ in press. Paper with high resolution
figures is available at
http://hikari.astron.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~ouchi/work/astroph/SDS_V_VI/SDS_VI.pdf
(PDF) (The abstract was reduced by the revision.
Critical dynamics of phase transition driven by dichotomous Markov noise
An Ising spin system under the critical temperature driven by a dichotomous
Markov noise (magnetic field) with a finite correlation time is studied both
numerically and theoretically. The order parameter exhibits a transition
between two kinds of qualitatively different dynamics, symmetry-restoring and
symmetry-breaking motions, as the noise intensity is changed.
There exist regions called channels where the order parameter stays for a
long time slightly above its critical noise intensity. Developing a
phenomenological analysis of the dynamics, we investigate the distribution of
the passage time through the channels and the power spectrum of the order
parameter evolution. The results based on the phenomenological analysis turn
out to be in quite good agreement with those of the numerical simulation.Comment: 27 pages, 12 figure
Search for z~7 Ly-alpha emitters with Suprime-Cam at the Subaru Telescope
We report a search for z=7 Ly-alpha emitters (LAEs) using a custom-made
Narrow-Band filter, centered at 9755 Angstroms, with the instrument Suprime-Cam
installed at the Subaru telescope. We observed two different fields and
obtained two sample of 7 Ly-alpha emitters of which 4 are robust in each field.
We are covering the luminosity range of 9.10^{42} - 2.10^{43} erg/s in comoving
volumes of ~ 4.10^{5} and 4.3.10^{5} Mpc^{3}. From this result, we derived
possible z~7 Ly-alpha luminosity functions for the full samples and for a
subsample of 4 objects in each field. We do not observe, in each case, any
strong evolution between the z=6.5 and z~7 Ly-alpha luminosity functions.
Spectroscopic confirmation for these candidate samples is required to establish
a definitive measure of the luminosity function at z~7.Comment: accepted for publication in Ap
Large-scale Filamentary Structure around the Protocluster at Redshift z=3.1
We report the discovery of a large-scale coherent filamentary structure of
Lyman alpha emitters in a redshift space at z=3.1. We carried out spectroscopic
observations to map the three dimensional structure of the belt-like feature of
the Lyman alpha emitters discovered by our previous narrow-band imaging
observations centered on the protocluster at z=3.1. The feature was found to
consist of at least three physical filaments connecting with each other. The
result is in qualitative agreement with the prediction of the 'biased'
galaxy-formation theories that galaxies preferentially formed in large-scale
filamentary or sheet-like mass overdensities in the early Universe. We also
found that the two known giant Lyman alpha emission-line nebulae showing high
star-formation activities are located near the intersection of these filaments,
which presumably evolves into a massive cluster of galaxies in the local
Universe. This may suggest that massive galaxy formation occurs at the
characteristic place in the surrounding large-scale structure at high redshift.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Definitive Identification of the Transition between Small- to Large-Scale Clustering for Lyman Break Galaxies
We report angular correlation function (ACF) of Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs)
with unprecedented statistical quality on the basis of 16,920 LBGs at z=4
detected in the 1 deg^2 sky of the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field. The ACF
significantly departs from a power law, and shows an excess on small scale.
Particularly, the ACF of LBGs with i'<27.5 have a clear break between the small
and large-scale regimes at the angular separation of ~7'' whose projected
length corresponds to the virial radius of dark halos with a mass of 10^11-12
Mo, indicating multiple LBGs residing in a single dark halo. Both on small
(2''<theta<3'') and large (40''<theta<400'') scales, clustering amplitudes
monotonically increase with luminosity for the magnitude range of i'=24.5-27.5,
and the small-scale clustering shows a stronger luminosity dependence than the
large-scale clustering. The small-scale bias reaches b~10-50, and the outskirts
of small-scale excess extend to a larger angular separation for brighter LBGs.
The ACF and number density of LBGs can be explained by the cold dark matter
model.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL. 5 pages, 4 figures. The text and
Figures 2-4 have been revised. There is no major change which affects to the
main discussion shown in the original preprint. This paper with high
resolution figures is available at
http://www-int.stsci.edu/~ouchi/work/astroph/sxds_z4LBG/ouchi_highres.pdf
(PDF
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