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A Lyman-alpha blob in the GOODS South field: evidence for cold accretion onto a dark matter halo

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 Added by Kim Nilsson
 Publication date 2005
  fields Physics
and research's language is English
 Authors Kim Nilsson




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We report on the discovery of a z = 3.16 Lyman-alpha emitting blob in the GOODS South field. The blob has a total Ly-alpha luminosity of ~ 10^(43) erg s^(-1) and a diameter larger than 60 kpc. The available multi-wavelength data in the GOODS field consists of 13 bands from X-rays (Chandra) to infrared (Spitzer). Unlike other discovered Ly-alpha blobs, this blob shows no obvious continuum counter-part in any of the broad-bands. In particular, no optical counter-parts are found in the deep HST/ACS imaging available. For previously published blobs, AGN (Active Galactic Nuclei) or superwind models have been found to provide the best match with the data. We here argue that the most probable origin of the extended Ly-alpha emission from the blob in the GOODS South field is cold accretion onto a dark matter halo.



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Lyman-$alpha$ blobs (LABs) are spatially extended nebulae of emission in the Ly$alpha$ line of hydrogen, seen at high redshifts$^{1,2}$, and most commonly found in the dense environment of star-forming galaxies$^{3,4}$. The origin of Ly$alpha$ emission in the LABs is still unclear and under debate$^{5}$. Proposed powering sources generally fall into two categories: (1) photoionization, galactic super-winds/outflows, resonant scattering of Ly$alpha$ photons from starbursts or active galactic nuclei (AGNs)$^{6,7,8,9,10}$ and (2) cooling radiation from cold streams of gas accreting onto galaxies$^{12}$. Here we analyze the gas kinematics within a LAB providing rare observational evidence for infalling gas. This is consistent with the release of gravitational accretion energy as cold streams radiate Ly$alpha$ photons. It also provides direct evidence for possible cold streams feeding the central galaxies. The infalling gas is not important by mass but hints at more than one mechanism to explain the origin of the extended Ly$alpha$ emission around young galaxies. It is also possible that the infalling gas may represent material falling back to the galaxy from where it originated, forming a galactic fountain.
429 - Kim K. Nilsson 2007
Context: Ly-alpha-emitters have proven to be excellent probes of faint, star-forming galaxies in the high redshift universe. However, although the sample of known emitters is increasingly growing, their nature (e.g. stellar masses, ages, metallicities, star-formation rates) is still poorly constrained. Aims: We aim to study the nature of Ly-alpha-emitters, to find the properties of a typical Ly-alpha-emitting galaxy and to compare these properties with the properties of other galaxies at similar redshift, in particular Lyman-break galaxies. Methods: We have performed narrow-band imaging at the VLT, focused on Ly-alpha at redshift z ~ 3.15, in the GOODS-S field. We have identified a sample of Ly-alpha-emitting candidates, and we have studied their Spectral Energy Distributions (SEDs). Results: We find that the emitters are best fit by an SED with low metallicity (Z/Z_sun = 0.005), low dust extinction (A_V ~ 0.32) and medium stellar masses of approximately 10^9 M_sun. The age is not very well constrained. One object out of 24 appears to be a high redshift Ly-alpha-emitting dusty starburst galaxy. We find filamentary structure as traced by the Ly-alpha-emitters at the 4 sigma level. The rest-frame UV SED of these galaxies is very similar to that of Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) and comply with the selection criteria for U-band drop-outs, except they are intrinsically fainter than the current limit for LBGs. Conclusion: Ly-alpha-emitters are excellent probes of galaxies in the distant universe, and represent a class of star-forming, dust and AGN free, medium mass objects.
116 - Kentaro Nagamine 2005
We present the results of a numerical study of a galactic wind model and its implications on the properties of damped Lyman-alpha absorbers (DLAs) using cosmological hydrodynamic simulations. We vary both the wind strength and the internal parameters of the the wind model in a series of cosmological SPH simulations that include radiative cooling and heating by a UV background, star formation, and feedback from supernovae and galactic winds. To test our simulations, we examine the DLA `rate-of-incidence as a function of halo mass, galaxy apparent magnitude, and impact parameter. We find that the statistical distribution of DLAs does not depend on the exact values of internal numerical parameters that control the decoupling of hydrodynamic forces when the gas is ejected from starforming regions. The DLA rate-of-incidence in our simulations at z=3 is dominated by the faint galaxies with apparent magnitude R_AB < 25.5. However, interestingly in a `strong wind run, the differential distribution of DLA sight-lines is peaked at Mhalo = 10^{12} Msun/h (R_AB~27), and the mean DLA halo mass is Mmean=10^{12.4} Msun/h (R_AB ~ 26). These mass-scales are much larger than those if we ignore winds, because galactic wind feedback suppresses the DLA cross section in low-mass halos and increases the relative contribution to the DLA incidence from more massive halos. The DLAs in our simulations are more compact than the present-day disk galaxies, and the impact parameter distribution is very narrow unless we limit the search for the host galaxy to only bright LBGs. The comoving number density of DLAs is higher than that of LBGs down to R_AB=30 mag if the physical radius of each DLA is smaller than 5 kpc/h_70. We discuss conflicts between current simulations and observations, and potential problems with simulations based on the CDM model.
We present UV and optical observations from the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope and Keck of a z= 0.27395 Lyman limit system (LLS) seen in absorption against the QSO PG1630+377. We detect H I absorption with log N(HI)=17.06pm0.05 as well as Mg II, C III, Si III, and O VI in this system. The column densities are readily explained if this is a multi-phase system, with the intermediate and low ions arising in a very low metallicity ([Mg/ H] =-1.71 pm 0.06) photoionized gas. We identify via Keck spectroscopy and Large Binocular Telescope imaging a 0.3 L_* star-forming galaxy projected 37 kpc from the QSO at nearly identical redshift (z=0.27406, Delta v = -26 kms) with near solar metallicity ([O/ H]=-0.20 pm 0.15). The presence of very low metallicity gas in the proximity of a near-solar metallicity, sub-L_* galaxy strongly suggests that the LLS probes gas infalling onto the galaxy. A search of the literature reveals that such low metallicity LLSs are not uncommon. We found that 50% (4/8) of the well-studied z < 1 LLSs have metallicities similar to the present system and show sub-L_* galaxies with rho < 100 kpc in those fields where redshifts have been surveyed. We argue that the properties of these primitive LLSs and their host galaxies are consistent with those of cold mode accretion streams seen in galaxy simulations.
In an effort to search for Ly$alpha$ emission from circum- and intergalactic gas on scales of hundreds of kpc around $zsim3$ quasars, and thus characterise the physical properties of the gas in emission, we have initiated an extensive fast-survey with the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE): Quasar Snapshot Observations with MUse: Search for Extended Ultraviolet eMission (QSO MUSEUM). In this work, we report the discovery of an enormous Ly$alpha$ nebula (ELAN) around the quasar SDSS~J102009.99+104002.7 at $z=3.164$, which we followed-up with deeper MUSE observations. This ELAN spans $sim297$ projected kpc, has an average Ly$alpha$ surface brightness ${rm SB}_{rm Lyalpha}sim 6.04times10^{-18}$ erg s$^{-1}$ cm$^{-2}$ arcsec$^{-2}$ (within the $2sigma$ isophote), and is associated with an additional four, previously unknown embedded sources: two Ly$alpha$ emitters and two faint active galactic nuclei (one Type-1 and one Type-2 quasar). By mapping at high significance the line-of-sight velocity in the entirety of the observed structure, we unveiled a large-scale coherent rotation-like pattern spanning $sim300$ km s$^{-1}$ with a velocity dispersion of $<270$ km s$^{-1}$, which we interpret as a signature of the inspiraling accretion of substructures within the quasars host halo. Future multiwavelength data will complement our MUSE observations, and are definitely needed to fully characterise such a complex system. None the less, our observations reveal the potential of new sensitive integral-field spectrographs to characterise the dynamical state of diffuse gas on large scales in the young Universe, and thereby witness the assembly of galaxies.
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