We present spectroscopic confirmation of two new massive galaxy protoclusters
at z=2.24±0.02, BOSS1244 and BOSS1542, traced by groups of Coherently
Strong Lyα Absorption (CoSLA) systems imprinted in the absorption
spectra of a number of quasars from the SDSS III and identified as
overdensities of narrowband-selected Hα emitters (HAEs). Using MMT/MMIRS
and LBT/LUCI near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy, we confirm 46 and 36 HAEs in the
BOSS1244 and BOSS1542 fields, respectively. BOSS1244 displays a South-West (SW)
component at z=2.230±0.002 and another North-East (NE) component at
z=2.246±0.001 with the line-of-sight velocity dispersions of 405±202 km
s−1 and 377±99 km s−1, respectively. Interestingly, we find that
the SW region of BOSS1244 contains two substructures in redshift space, likely
merging to form a larger system. In contrast, BOSS1542 exhibits an extended
filamentary structure with a low velocity dispersion of 247±32 km s−1
at z=2.241±0.001, providing a direct confirmation of a large-scale cosmic
web in the early Universe. The galaxy overdensities δg​ on the
scale of 15 cMpc are 22.9±4.9, 10.9±2.5, and 20.5±3.9 for the
BOSS1244 SW, BOSS1244 NE, and BOSS1542 filament, respectively. They are the
most overdense galaxy protoclusters (δg​>20) discovered to date at
z>2. These systems are expected to become virialized at z∼0 with a total
mass of MSW​=(1.59±0.20)×1015M⊙​, MNE​=(0.83±0.11)×1015M⊙​ and Mfilament​=(1.42±0.18)×1015M⊙​, respectively. Together with
BOSS1441 described in Cai et al. (2017a), these extremely massive overdensities
at z=2−3 exhibit different morphologies, indicating that they are in
different assembly stages in the formation of early galaxy clusters.Comment: 28 pages, 13 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ. The
complete Abstract is presented in the manuscrip