No Arabic abstract
We report the serendipitous discovery of two objects close in projection with fairly strong emission lines at long wavelength (~9190 A). One (A) seems not to be hosted by any galaxy brighter than V(555)=27.5, or I(814)=26.7 (Vega-based 3-sigma limits in 1.0 arcsec diameter apertures), while the other line is associated with a faint (I(814)~24.4) red galaxy (B) offset by 2.7 arcsec and 7 A spectrally. Both lines are broad (FWHM 700 km/s), extended spatially, and have high equivalent widths (W(A,obs)>1225 A, 95% confidence limit; W(B,obs)~150 A). No secondary spectral features are detected for galaxy A. Blue continuum and the marginal detection of a second weak line in the spectrum of galaxy B is consistent with [OII] (the strong line) and MgII (the weak line) at z=1.466. By association, galaxy A is likely at z=1.464, implying a rest-frame equivalent width of the [OII] emission line in excess of 600 A and a projected separation of 30 kpc for the galaxy pair. Conventional wisdom states that isolated emission lines with rest-frame equivalent widths larger than ~200 A are almost exclusively Lyman-alpha. This moderate-redshift discovery therefore compromises recent claims of high-redshift Lyman-alpha emitters for which other criteria (i.e., line profile, associated continuum decrements) are not reported. We discuss observational tests to distinguish Lyman-alpha emitters at high redshift from foreground systems.
The redshifted spectral line radiation emitted from both atomic fine-structure and molecular rotational transitions in the interstellar medium (ISM) of high-redshift galaxies can be detected in the centimetre, millimetre and submillimetre wavebands. Here we predict the counts of galaxies detectable in an array of molecular and atomic lines. This calculation requires a reasonable knowledge of both the surface density of these galaxies on the sky, and the physical conditions in their ISM. The surface density is constrained using the results of submillimetre-wave continuum surveys. Follow-up OVRO Millimeter Array observations of two of the galaxies detected in the dust continuum have provided direct measurements of CO rotational line emission at redshifts of 2.56 and 2.81. Based on these direct high-redshift observations and on models of the ISM that are constrained by observations of low-redshift ultraluminous infrared galaxies, we predict the surface density of line-emitting galaxies as a function of line flux density and observing frequency. We incorporate the sensitivities and mapping speeds of existing and future millimetre/submillimetre-wave telescopes and spectrographs, and so assess the prospects for blank-field surveys to detect this line emission from gas-rich high-redshift galaxies.
We have obtained high signal:to:noise optical spectroscopy at 5AA resolution of 27 quasars from the APM z$>$4 quasar survey. The spectra have been analyzed to create new samples of high redshift Lyman-limit and damped Lyman-$alpha$ absorbers. These data have been combined with published data sets in a study of the redshift evolution and the column density distribution function for absorbers with $log$N(HI)$ge17.5$, over the redshift range 0.01 $<$ z $<$ 5. The main results are: begin{itemize} item Lyman limit systems: The data are well fit by a power law $N(z) = N_0(1 + z)^{gamma}$ for the number density per unit redshift. For the first time intrinsic evolution is detected in the product of the absorption cross-section and comoving spatial number density for an $Omega = 1$ Universe. We find $gamma = 1.55$ ($gamma = 0.5$ for no evolution) and $N_0 = 0.27$ with $>$99.7% confidence limits for $gamma$ of 0.82 & 2.37. item Damped lya systems: The APM QSOs provide a substantial increase in the redshift path available for damped surveys for $z>3$. Eleven candidate and three confirmed damped Ly$alpha$ absorption systems, have been identified in the APM QSO spectra covering the redshift range $2.8le z le 4.4$ (11 with $z>3.5$). Combining the APM survey confirmed and candidate damped lya absorbers with previous surveys, we find evidence for a turnover at z$sim$3 or a flattening at z$sim$2 in the cosmological mass density of neutral gas, $Omega_g$. end{itemize} The Lyman limit survey results are published in Storrie-Lombardi, et~al., 1994, ApJ, 427, L13. Here we describe the results for the DLA population of absorbers.
Recent results have shown that a substantial fraction of high-redshift Lyman alpha galaxies contain considerable amounts of dust. This implies that Lyman alpha galaxies are not primordial, as has been thought in the past. However, this dust has not been directly detected in emission; rather it has been inferred based on extinction estimates from rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) and optical observations. This can be tricky, as both dust and old stars redden galactic spectra at the wavelengths used to infer dust. Measuring dust emission directly from these galaxies is thus a more accurate way to estimate the total dust mass, giving us real physical information on the stellar populations and interstellar medium (ISM) enrichment. New generation instruments such as the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) and Sub-Millimeter Array (SMA), should be able to detect dust emission from some of these galaxies in the sub-mm. Using measurements of the UV spectral slopes, we derive far-infrared flux predictions for of a sample of 23 z > 4 Lyman alpha galaxies. We find that in only a few hours, we can detect dust emission from 39 +/- 22% of our Lyman alpha galaxies. Comparing these results to those found from a sample of 21 Lyman break galaxies (LBGs), we find that LBGs are on average 60% more likely to be detected than Lyman alpha galaxies, implying that they are more dusty, and thus indicating an evolutionary difference between these objects. These observations will provide better constraints on dust in these galaxies than those derived from their UV and optical fluxes alone. Undeniable proof of dust in these galaxies could explain the larger than expected Lyman alpha equivalent widths seen in many Lyman alpha galaxies today.
With the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE), it is now possible to detect spatially extended Lyman alpha emission from individual faint (M_UV ~ -18) galaxies at redshifts, 3 < z < 6, tracing gas out to circum-galactic scales comparable to the dark matter halo virial radius. To explore the implications of such observations, we present a cosmological radiation hydrodynamics simulation of a single galaxy, chosen to be typical of the Lyman alpha-emitting galaxies detected by MUSE in deep fields. We use this simulation to study the origin and dynamics of the high-redshift circum-galactic medium (CGM). We find that the majority of the mass in the diffuse CGM is comprised of material infalling for the first time towards the halo center, but with the inner CGM also containing a comparable amount of mass that has moved past first-pericentric passage, and is in the process of settling into a rotationally supported configuration. Making the connection to Lyman alpha emission, we find that the observed extended surface brightness profile is due to a combination of three components: scattering of galactic Lyman alpha emission in the CGM, in-situ emission of CGM gas (mostly infalling), and Lyman alpha emission from small satellite galaxies. The weight of these contributions vary with distance from the galaxy such that (1) scattering dominates the inner regions (r < 7 kpc), at surface brightness larger than a few 10^-19 cgs, (2) all components contribute equally around r ~ 10 kpc (or SB ~10^-19), and (3) the contribution of small satellite galaxies takes over at large distances (or SB ~10^-20). Our simulation fails to reproduce the characteristic observed Lyman alpha spectral morphology that is red-shifted with respect to the systemic velocity, with the implication that the simulation is missing an important component of neutral outflowing gas.
We calculate the impact of the intergalactic medium (IGM) on the observed Lyman alpha lines (hereafter Lya) emitted by galaxies in an ionised IGM at z>4. Our model accounts for gas clumping in the IGM and for the fact that high-redshift galaxies reside in overdense regions, which causes the velocity field of the IGM to depart from the Hubble flow. The observed shape of the Lya line varies widely, with dependence on the intrinsic width and systemic velocity of the line, a galaxies star formation rate and the local extra-galactic UV-background. For large star formation rates and levels of the UV-background, absorption in the IGM does not result in a Lya line that is asymmetric as is common among known high-redshift Lya emitters. For models in which the lines do show the observed strong asymmetry, the IGM typically transmits only 10-30% of the Lya flux. The increase in the ionising background that accompanied the completion of reionisation barely increased the IGM transmission, which suggests that LAEs of comparable luminosity should not appear to be significantly dimmer prior to overlap. In this light, we briefly discuss the potential of Lya emitters as a probe into the epoch of reionisation.