325 research outputs found
The Discovery of Two Lyman Emitters Beyond Redshift 6 in the Subaru Deep Field
We have performed a deep optical imaging survey using a narrowband filter
() centered at 9196 \AA ~ together with and
broadband filters covering an 814 arcmin area of the Subaru Deep
Field. We obtained a sample of 73 strong -excess objects based on the
following two color criteria; and . We then obtained optical spectroscopy of nine objects in our
-excess sample, and identified at least two Ly emitters
at and , each of which shows the
characteristic sharp cutoff together with the continuum depression at
wavelengths shortward of the line peak. The latter object is more distant than
HCM-6A at and thus this is the most distant known object found so far.
These new data allow us to estimate the first meaningful lower limit of the
star formation rate density beyond redshift 6; yr Mpc. Since it is expected that the actual
density is higher by a factor of several than this value, our new observation
reveals that a moderately high level of star formation activity already
occurred at 6.6.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures. PASJ (Letters), 55, vol.2, in pres
SpecPro: An Interactive IDL Program for Viewing and Analyzing Astronomical Spectra
We present an interactive IDL program for viewing and analyzing astronomical
spectra in the context of modern imaging surveys. SpecPro's interactive design
lets the user simultaneously view spectroscopic, photometric, and imaging data,
allowing for rapid object classification and redshift determination. The
spectroscopic redshift can be determined with automated cross-correlation
against a variety of spectral templates or by overlaying common emission and
absorption features on the 1-D and 2-D spectra. Stamp images as well as the
spectral energy distribution (SED) of a source can be displayed with the
interface, with the positions of prominent photometric features indicated on
the SED plot. Results can be saved to file from within the interface. In this
paper we discuss key program features and provide an overview of the required
data formats.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Publications of the Astronomical
Society of the Pacific (PASP) journal. Website: specpro.caltech.ed
Luminosity dependent clustering of star-forming BzK galaxies at redshift 2
We use the BzK color selection proposed by Daddi et al. (2004) to obtain a
sample of 1092 faint star-forming galaxies (hereafter sBzKs) from 180 arcmin^2
in the Subaru Deep Field. This sample represents star-forming galaxies at 1.4 <
z < 2.5 down to K(AB)=23.2, which roughly corresponds to a stellar-mass limit
of ~ 1 x 10^{10} Msun. We measure the angular correlation function (ACF) of
these sBzKs to be w(theta) = (0.58 +- 0.13) x theta["]^{-0.8} and translate the
amplitude into the correlation length assuming a reasonable redshift
distribution. The resulting value, r0 = 3.2^{+0.6}_{-0.7} h^{-1} Mpc, suggests
that our sBzKs reside in haloes with a typical mass of 2.8 x 10^{11} Msun.
Combining this halo mass estimate with those for brighter samples of Kong et
al. (2006), we find that the mass of dark haloes largely increases with K
brightness, a measure of the stellar mass. Comparison with other galaxy
populations suggests that faint sBzKs (K(AB)<23.2) and Lyman Break Galaxies at
z ~ 2 are similar populations hosted by relatively low-mass haloes, while
bright sBzKs (K(AB)<21) reside in haloes comparable to or more massive than
those of Distant Red Galaxies and Extremely Red Objects. Using the extended
Press-Schechter formalism, we predict that present-day descendants of haloes
hosting sBzKs span a wide mass range depending on K brightness, from lower than
that of the Milky Way up to those of richest clusters.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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
Spectroscopy of i-Dropout Galaxies with an NB921-Band Depression in the Subaru Deep Field
We report new spectroscopy of two star-forming galaxies with strong Ly_alpha
emission at z=6.03 and z=6.04 in the Subaru Deep Field. These two objects are
originally selected as i'-dropouts (i'-z' > 1.5) showing an interesting
photometric property, the ``NB921 depression''. The NB921-band (centered at
9196A) magnitude is significantly depressed with respect to the z'-band
magnitude. The optical spectra of these two objects exhibit asymmetric
emission-lines at lambda_obs ~ 8540A and ~ 8560A, suggesting that these objects
are Ly_alpha emitters at z~6. The rest-frame equivalent widths of the Ly_alpha
emission of the two objects are 94A and 236A; the latter one is the Ly_alpha
emitter with the largest Ly_alpha equivalent width at z > 6 ever
spectroscopically confirmed. The spectroscopically measured Ly_alpha fluxes of
these two objects are consistent with the interpretation that the NB921
depression is caused by the contribution of the strong Ly_alpha emission to the
z'-band flux. Most of the NB921-depressed i'-dropout objects are thought to be
strong Ly_alpha emitters at 6.0 < z < 6.5; Galactic L and T dwarfs and
NB921-dropout galaxies at z > 6.6 do not dominate the NB921-depressed
i'-dropout sample. Thus the NB921-depression method is very useful for finding
high-z Ly_alpha emitters with a large Ly_alpha equivalent width over a large
redshift range, 6.0 < z < 6.5. Although the broadband-selected sample at z ~ 3
contains only a small fraction of objects with a Ly_alpha equivalent width
larger than 100A, the i'-dropout sample of the Subaru Deep Field contains a
much larger fraction of such strong Ly_alpha emitters. This may imply a strong
evolution of the Ly_alpha equivalent width from z > 6 to z ~ 3.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, to appear in The Astrophysical Journa
Luminosity versus Phase-Space-Density Relation of Galaxies Revisited
We reexamined the correlation between the B-T magnitude and the phase-space-density parameter w = (D-2(25) v(o))(-1) of galaxies for the Virgo, the Coma, the Fornax, and the Perseus clusters in an effort to better understand the physical underpinning of the fundamental plane. A tight correlation (B-T = a log w + b) common to different morphological types of galaxies (E, S0, S) was found for the Virgo and the Coma clusters, with a = 1.87 +/- 0.10 and 1.33 +/- 0.11, respectively. An investigation using only E galaxies was made for the four clusters. The results indicated that the empirical linear relation might be common among the Coma, the Fornax, and the Perseus clusters, with the Virgo Cluster showing deviation. This relation, which is another way to project the fundamental plane, has an expression insensitive to the morphology and may be suitable for treating galaxies of different morphological types collectively.ArticleThe Astrophysical Journal. 531:665-675 (2000)journal articl
A Subaru Weak Lensing Survey I: Cluster Candidates and Spectroscopic Verification
We present the results of an ongoing weak lensing survey conducted with the
Subaru telescope whose initial goal is to locate and study the distribution of
shear-selected structures or halos. Using a Suprime-cam imaging survey spanning
21.82 square degree, we present a catalog of 100 candidate halos located from
lensing convergence maps. Our sample is reliably drawn from that subset of our
survey area, (totaling 16.72 square degree) uncontaminated by bright stars and
edge effects and limited at a convergence signal to noise ratio of 3.69. To
validate the sample detailed spectroscopic measures have been made for 26
candidates using the Subaru multi-object spectrograph, FOCAS. All are confirmed
as clusters of galaxies but two arise as the superposition of multiple clusters
viewed along the line of sight. Including data available in the literature and
an ongoing Keck spectroscopic campaign, a total of 41 halos now have reliable
redshifts. For one of our survey fields, the XMM LSS (Pierre et al. 2004)
field, we compare our lensing-selected halo catalog with its X-ray equivalent.
Of 15 halos detected in the XMM-LSS field, 10 match with published X-ray
selected clusters and a further 2 are newly-detected and spectroscopically
confirmed in this work. Although three halos have not yet been confirmed, the
high success rate within the XMM-LSS field (12/15) confirms that weak lensing
provides a reliable method for constructing cluster catalogs, irrespective of
the nature of the constituent galaxies or the intracluster medium.Comment: To appear in ApJ, High resolution preprint available at
http://anela.mtk.nao.ac.jp/suprime33/papers/p1.ps.g
Subaru Suprime-Cam Weak Lensing Survey over 33 deg^2
Under the currently popular CDM model, mass plays the major role in evolution of large scale structure of the universe. In order to examine the paradigm based on observations, it ould be ideal to use purely mass selected object catalog. Weak lensing surveys enable a blind search of cluster scale objects, and thus could provide such catalogs. We are working on a weak lensing survey using Subaru Prime Focus Camera (Suprime-Cam). In this note, we introduce our survey strategy, and the status as well as the performance of Suprime-Cam as a weak lensing surveyor
Newcomers Meet the Intracluster Medium in the Coma Cluster
A main topic at this meeting is how galaxies are affected when they enter for
the first time the cluster environment from the outskirts. Most of the times we
are forced to infer the environmental effects indirectly, relying on systematic
variations of galaxy properties with environment, but there aren't many
examples of direct observations able to unveil ongoing transformations taking
place, and the corresponding mechanism producing it. We present a case in which
it is possible to identify the cluster environment, and in particular the
intracluster medium and the recent infall history of galaxies onto the cluster,
as the cause for a recent, abrupt change in the evolutionary history of
galaxies.Comment: 5 pages, 1 postscript figure -- to appear in "Outskirts of Galaxy
Clusters: intense life in the suburbs", IAU Colloquium N. 195, 2004, ed. A
Diaferi
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