123 research outputs found
OHS: OH-airglow Suppressor for the Subaru Telescope
This paper describes an OH-airglow Suppressor (OHS) for the infrared Nasmyth
focus of the Subaru telescope. OHS has the capability of eliminating 224
airglow-lines in the - and -bands, which are major sources of background
radiation at near-infrared wavelengths up to 2 m. Specifically, it is a
pre-optics system installed between the telescope and an infrared
camera/spectrograph (CISCO). The suppressor reduces sky background emissions to
1/25 and its throughput is 40%. As a result, the S/N gain achieved with OHS is
more than 1 mag compared to the typical spectroscopic approach. The limiting
magnitude measured during a test observing run was found to be = 21.1 mag
( = 210, S/N = 5) in the standard 4000 s exposure
sequence.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in PASJ(2001
Diffuse Extragalactic Background Light versus Deep Galaxy Counts in the Subaru Deep Field: Missing Light in the Universe?
Deep optical and near-infrared galaxy counts are utilized to estimate the
extragalactic background light (EBL) coming from normal galactic light in the
universe. Although the slope of number-magnitude relation of the faintest
counts is flat enough for the count integration to converge, considerable
fraction of EBL from galaxies could still have been missed in deep galaxy
surveys because of various selection effects including the cosmological dimming
of surface brightness of galaxies. Here we give an estimate of EBL from galaxy
counts, in which these selection effects are quantitatively taken into account
for the first time, based on reasonable models of galaxy evolution which are
consistent with all available data of galaxy counts, size, and redshift
distributions. We show that the EBL from galaxies is best resolved into
discrete galaxies in the near-infrared bands (J, K) by using the latest data of
the Subaru Deep Field; more than 80-90% of EBL from galaxies has been resolved
in these bands. Our result indicates that the contribution by missing galaxies
cannot account for the discrepancy between the count integration and recent
tentative detections of diffuse EBL in the K-band (2.2 micron), and there may
be a very diffuse component of EBL which has left no imprints in known galaxy
populations.Comment: ApJ Letters in press. Two new reports on the diffuse EBL at 1.25 and
2.2 microns are added to the reference list and Table
JHK Spectra of the z=2.39 Radio Galaxy 53W002
We present low-resolution, near-IR JHK spectra of the weak z=2.39 radio
galaxy 53W002, obtained with the OH-airglow Suppressor spectrograph (OHS) and
Cooled Infrared Spectrograph and Camera for OHS (CISCO) on the Subaru
Telescope. They cover rest-frame wavelengths of 3400-7200 A, and the emission
lines of [O II]3727, Hb, [O III]4959, 5007, Ha, [N II]6548, 6583 and [S
II]6716, 6731 were detected. Using the Ha/Hb line ratio, we find an extinction
of E(B-V)=0.14. The emission-line ratios are reproduced by a cloud of electron
density n_e=1x10^{3-4}(/cm3) with solar metallicity, ionized by an alpha=-0.7
power-law continuum with ionizing parameter U=1x10^-3. In addition to these
emission lines, we make the first spectroscopic confirmation of the Balmer
discontinuity in a high-z radio galaxy. Together with rest-frame UV photometry
from the literature, we show that at least 1/3 of the present stellar mass was
formed in the current starburst. The stellar mass was estimated to be
(1-1.4)x10^11 M_sol by one-component model fitting, which is smaller than that
of typical z~1 B2/6C radio galaxies. We suggest that 53W002 is currently
assembling a large part of its stellar mass through merger events with the
surrounding sub-galactic clumps, some of which can be identified with the Lya
emitters detected in narrow-band imaging. After a few such events over the next
few Gyr, 53W002 will evolve into a massive elliptical galaxy.Comment: 10 pages, including 11 figures. Accepted for publication in
PASJ(2001). Revised 5/15/200
Infrared Imaging of the Gravitational Lens PG 1115+080 with the Subaru Telescope
We present high spatial resolution images of the gravitational-lens system PG
1115+080 taken with the near-infrared camera (CISCO) on the Subaru telescope.
The FWHM of the combined image is in the -band, yielding spatial
resolution of after a deconvolution procedure. This is a first
detection of an extended emission adjacent to the A1/A2 components, indicating
the presence of a fairly bright emission region with a characteristic angular
radius of 5 mas (40 pc). The near-infrared image of the Einstein ring
was extracted in both the and bands. The color is found to be
significantly redder than that of a synthetic model galaxy with an age of 3
Gyr, the age of the universe at the quasar redshift.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in PASJ(2000
[OII]3727 Emission from the Companion to the Quasar BR 1202-0725 at z=4.7
Results of a narrow-band imaging for the redshifted [OII]3727 emission around
a quasar at z=4.7 obtained with the Subaru telescope and CISCO (a Cassegrain
near infrared camera) are presented. A significant emission line is detected in
the narrow-band H_2 (v=1-0 S(1)) filter at a location 2.4" northwest from the
quasar, where the presence of a companion has been reported in Lyman alpha
emission and the rest-frame UV continuum. We identify this line as [OII]3727
emission and confirm that the source really is a companion at z=4.7. The
[OII]3727 flux from the companion is estimated to be 2.5 x 10^{-17} erg s^{-1}
cm^{-2}. If the companion is a star forming object, the inferred star formation
rate is as high as 45-230 M_{solar} yr^{-1} even without assuming the
extinction correction. This value is higher than those derived from the Lyman
alpha emission or from the UV continuum. Thus, provided that the difference is
caused by dust extinction, the extinction corrected star formation rate is
calculated to be 45 to 2300 M_{solar} yr^{-1} depending on the assuming
extinction curves.Comment: 15 pages including 3 figures. Accepted for publication in PAS
Large Cosmic Variance in the Clustering Properties of Lyman Alpha Emitters at z~5
We reported in a previous paper the discovery of large-scale structure of
Lyman Alpha emitters (LAEs) at z=4.86+-0.03 with a projected size of 20 Mpc x
50 Mpc in narrow-band data of a 25' x 45' area of the Subaru Deep Field
(Omega_0=0.3, lambda_0=0.7, H0=70 km/s/Mpc). However, the surveyed area, which
corresponds to 55 Mpc x 100 Mpc, was not large enough that we can conclude that
we are seeing a typical distribution of z~5 LAEs. In this Letter, we report the
results of follow-up imaging of the same sky area using a new narrow-band
filter (NB704, lambda_c=7046 A and FWHM=100 A) to detect LAEs at z=4.79, i.e.,
LAEs lying closer to us by 39 Mpc on average than the z=4.86 objects. We detect
51 LAEs at z=4.79+-0.04 down to NB704=25.7, and find that their sky
distribution is quite different from the z=4.86 LAEs'. The clustering of z=4.79
LAEs is very weak on any scales and there is no large-scale high- contrast
structure. The shape and the amplitude of the angular correlation function are
thus largely different between the two samples. These results demonstrate a
large cosmic variance in the clustering properties of LAEs on scales of ~ 50
Mpc.Comment: 4 pages (uses emulateapj5.sty), accepted for ApJ
Mid-infrared spectra of late-type stars: Long-term evolution
Recent ground-based mid-infrared spectra of 29 late-type stars, most with
substantial dust shells, are compared to ground-based spectra of these stars
from the 1960s and 1970s and to IRAS-LRS spectra obtained in 1983. The spectra
of about half the stars show no detectable changes, implying that their
distributions of circumstellar material and associated dust grain properties
have changed little over this time interval. However, many of the stars with
strong silicate features showed marked changes. In nearly all cases the
silicate peak has strengthened with respect to the underlying continuum,
although there is one case (VY~CMa) in which the silicate feature has almost
completely disappeared. This suggests that, in general, an oxygen-rich star
experiences long periods of gradual silicate feature strengthening, punctuated
by relatively rare periods when the feature weakens. We discuss various
mechanisms for producing the changes, favoring the slow evolution of the
intrinsic dust properties (i.e., the chemical composition or grain structure).
Although most IRAS spectra agree well with ground-based spectra, there are a
number of cases where they fall well outside the expected range of uncertainty.
In almost all such cases the slopes of the red and blue LRS spectra do not
match in their region of overlap.Comment: Accepted in ApJ, 20 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
Hyper Extremely Red Objects in the Subaru Deep Field: Evidence for Primordial Elliptical Galaxies in the Dusty Starburst Phase
We report observational analyses and theoretical interpretations of unusually
red galaxies in the Subaru Deep Field (SDF). A careful analysis of the SDF data
revealed a population with unusually red near-infrared (NIR) colors of J - K >~
3-4, with higher confidence than the previous SDF result. Their surface number
density drastically increases at K >~ 22 and becomes roughly the same with that
of dusty starburst galaxies detected by submillimeter observations in recent
years. These colors are even redder than the known population of the extremely
red objects (EROs), and too red to explain by passively evolving elliptical
galaxies which are the largest population of EROs. Hence these hyper extremely
red objects (HEROs) should be considered as a distinct population from EROs. We
discuss several possible interpretations of these enigmatic objects, and we
show that these red NIR colors, K-band and sub-mm flux, and surface number
density are quantitatively best explained by primordial elliptical galaxies
reddened by dust, still in the starburst phase of their formation at z ~ 3.Comment: Accepted by ApJ Letter
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