We report the discovery of a large-scale structure of Lyman alpha emitters
(LAEs) at z=4.86 based on wide-field imaging with the prime-focus camera
(Suprime-Cam) on the Subaru telescope. We observed a 25' x 45' area of the
Subaru Deep Field in a narrow band (NB, lambdaC=7126 A and FWHM=73 A) together
with R and i'. We isolate from these data 43 LAE candidates down to NB=25.5 mag
using color criteria. Follow-up spectroscopy of five candidates suggests the
contamination by low-z objects to be ~ 20%. We find that the LAE candidates are
clustered in an elongated region on the sky of 20 Mpc in width and 50 Mpc in
length at z=4.86, which is comparable in size to present-day large-scale
structures (we adopt H0=70 km/s/Mpc, Omega0=0.3, lambda0=0.7). This elongated
region includes a circular region of 12 Mpc radius of higher surface
overdensity (delta=2), which may be the progenitor of a cluster of galaxies.
Assuming this circular region to be a sphere with a spatial overdensity of 2,
we compare our observation with predictions by Cold Dark Matter models. We find
that an Omega0=0.3 flat model with sigma8=0.9 predicts the number of such
spheres consistent with the observed number (one sphere in our survey volume)
if the bias parameter of LAEs is b \simeq 6. This value suggests that the
typical mass of dark haloes hosting LAEs at z \simeq 5 is of the order of 10^12
Msolar. Such a large mass poses an interesting question about the nature of
LAEs.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, uses emulateapj5.sty, ApJL, accepte