ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

We present $U_{336}V_{606}J_{125}H_{160}$ follow-up $HST$ observations of 16 $zsim3$ candidate LyC emitters in the HS1549+1919 field. With these data, we obtain high spatial-resolution photometric redshifts of all sub-arcsecond components of the LyC candidates in order to eliminate foreground contamination and identify robust candidates for leaking LyC emission. Of the 16 candidates, we find one object with a robust LyC detection that is not due to foreground contamination. This object (MD5) resolves into two components; we refer to the LyC-emitting component as MD5b. MD5b has an observed 1500AA to 900AA flux-density ratio of $(F_{UV}/F_{LyC})_{obs}=4.0pm2.0$, compatible with predictions from stellar population synthesis models. Assuming minimal IGM absorption, this ratio corresponds to a relative (absolute) escape fraction of $f_{esc,rel}^{MD5b}=75-100$% ($f_{esc,abs}^{MD5b}=14-19$%). The stellar population fit to MD5b indicates an age of $lesssim50$Myr, which is in the youngest 10% of the $HST$ sample and the youngest third of typical $zsim3$ Lyman break galaxies, and may be a contributing factor to its LyC detection. We obtain a revised, contamination-free estimate for the comoving specific ionizing emissivity at $z=2.85$, indicating (with large uncertainties) that star-forming galaxies provide roughly the same contribution as QSOs to the ionizing background at this redshift. Our results show that foreground contamination prevents ground-based LyC studies from obtaining a full understanding of LyC emission from $zsim3$ star-forming galaxies. Future progress in direct LyC searches is contingent upon the elimination of foreground contaminants through high spatial-resolution observations, and upon acquisition of sufficiently deep LyC imaging to probe ionizing radiation in high-redshift galaxies.
116 - Monica L. Turner 2014
We use quasar absorption lines to study the physical conditions in the circumgalactic medium of redshift $zapprox 2.3$ star-forming galaxies taken from the Keck Baryonic Structure Survey (KBSS). In Turner et al. 2014 we used the pixel optical depth t echnique to show that absorption by HI and the metal ions OVI, NV, CIV, CIII and SiIV is strongly enhanced within $|Delta v|lesssim170$ km/s and projected distances $|d|lesssim180$ proper kpc from sightlines to the background quasars. Here we demonstrate that the OVI absorption is also strongly enhanced at fixed HI, CIV, and SiIV optical depths, and that this enhancement extends out to $sim350$ km/s. At fixed HI the increase in the median OVI optical depth near galaxies is 0.3-0.7 dex and is detected at 2--3-$sigma$ confidence for all seven HI bins that have $log_{10}tau_{rm HI}ge-1.5$. We use ionization models to show that the observed strength of OVI as a function of HI is consistent with enriched, photoionized gas for pixels with $tau_{rm HI}gtrsim10$. However, for pixels with $tau_{rm HI} lesssim 1$ this would lead to implausibly high metallicities at low densities if the gas were photoionized by the background radiation. This indicates that the galaxies are surrounded by gas that is sufficiently hot to be collisionally ionized ($T > 10^5,$K) and that a substantial fraction of the hot gas has a metallicity $gtrsim 10^{-1}$ of solar. Given the high metallicity and large velocity extent (out to $sim1.5times v_{rm circ}$) of this gas, we conclude that we have detected hot, metal enriched outflows arising from star-forming galaxies.
(Abridged) We study metal absorption around 854 $zapprox$2.4 star-forming galaxies taken from the Keck Baryonic Structure Survey (KBSS). The galaxies examined in this work lie in the fields of 15 hyper-luminous background QSOs, with galaxy impact par ameters ranging from 35 proper kpc (pkpc) to 2 proper Mpc (pMpc). Using the pixel optical depth technique, we present the first galaxy-centred 2-D maps of the median absorption by OVI, NV, CIV, CIII, and SIV, as well as updated results for HI. At small galactocentric radii we detect a strong enhancement of the absorption relative to randomly located regions that extend out to at least 180 pkpc in the transverse direction, and $pm$240 km/s along the line-of-sight (LOS, ~1 pMpc in the case of pure Hubble flow) for all ions except NV. For CIV (and HI) we detect a significant enhancement of the absorption signal out to 2 pMpc in the transverse direction, corresponding to the maximum impact parameter in our sample. After normalising the median absorption profiles to account for variations in line strengths and detection limits, in the transverse direction we find no evidence for a sharp drop-off in metals distinct from that of HI. We argue instead that non-detection of some metal line species in the extended circumgalactic medium is consistent with differences in the detection sensitivity. We also present measurements of covering fractions and equivalent widths as a function of projected galaxy distance. Limiting the sample to the 340 galaxies with redshifts measured from nebular emission lines does not decrease the extent of the enhancement along the LOS compared to that in the transverse direction. This rules out redshift errors as the source of the observed redshift-space anisotropy and thus implies that we have detected the signature of gas peculiar velocities from infall, outflows, or virial motions for HI, OVI, CIV, CIII, and CIV.
A large sample of spectroscopically confirmed galaxies at 1.4<z<3.7, with complementary imaging in the near- and mid-IR from the ground and from Hubble and Spitzer, is used to infer the average star formation histories (SFHs) of typical galaxies from z~7 to 2. For a subset of 302 galaxies at 1.5<z<2.6, we perform a comparison of star formation rates (SFRs) determined from SED modeling (SFRs[SED]) and those calculated from deep Keck UV and Spitzer/MIPS 24 micron imaging (SFRs[IR+UV]). Exponentially declining SFHs yield SFRs[SED] that are 5-10x lower on average than SFRs[IR+UV], indicating that declining SFHs may not be accurate for typical galaxies at z>2. The SFRs of z~2-3 galaxies are directly proportional to their stellar masses M*, with unity slope---a result that is confirmed with Spitzer/IRAC stacks of 1179 UV-faint (R>25.5) galaxies---for M*>5e8 Msun and SFRs >2 Msun/yr. We interpret this result in the context of several systematic biases that can affect determinations of the SFR-M* relation. The average specific SFRs at z~2-3 are similar within a factor of two to those measured at z>4, implying an average SFH where SFRs increase with time. A consequence of these rising SFHs is that (a) a substantial fraction of UV-bright z~2-3 galaxies had faint sub-L* progenitors at z>4; and (b) gas masses must increase with time from z=7 to 2, over which time the net cold gas accretion rate---as inferred from the specific SFR and the Kennicutt-Schmidt relation---is ~2-3x larger than the SFR . However, if we evolve to higher redshift the SFHs and masses of the halos that are expected to host L* galaxies at z~2, we find that <10% of the baryons accreted onto typical halos at z>4 actually contribute to star formation at those epochs. These results highlight the relative inefficiency of star formation even at early cosmic times when galaxies were first assembling. [Abridged]
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا