Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Current Topics Lyman Break Galaxies Dr Elizabeth Stanway

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Lyman Break Galaxies Dr Elizabeth Stanway
Advertisements

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 2 Current Topics Lyman Break Galaxies Dr Elizabeth Stanway
Current Topics Lyman Break Galaxies Dr Elizabeth Stanway
Probing the End of Reionization with High-redshift Quasars Xiaohui Fan University of Arizona Mar 18, 2005, Shanghai Collaborators: Becker, Gunn, Lupton,
Motivation 40 orbits of UDF observations with the ACS grism Spectra for every source in the field. Good S/N continuum detections to I(AB) ~ 27; about 30%
Elements of observational cosmology Integalactic medium:  in clusters  between clusters.
The Highest-Redshift Quasars and the End of Cosmic Dark Ages Xiaohui Fan Collaborators: Strauss,Schneider,Richards, Hennawi,Gunn,Becker,White,Rix,Pentericci,
Lyman-α Galaxies at High Redshift James E. Rhoads (Space Telescope Science Institute) with Sangeeta Malhotra, Steve Dawson, Arjun Dey, Buell Jannuzi, Emily.
First Stars, Quasars, and the Epoch of Reionization Jordi Miralda Escudé Institut de Ciències de l’Espai (IEEC-CSIC, ICREA), Barcelona. Instituto de Astrofísica.
21cm Lines and Dark Ages Naoshi Sugiyama Department of Physics and Astrophysics Nagoya University Furlanetto & Briggs astro-ph/ , Zaldarriaga et.
ESO Recent Results on Reionization Chris Carilli (NRAO) Dakota/Berkeley,August 2011 CO intensity mapping during reionization: signal in 3 easy steps Recent.
End of Cosmic Dark Ages: Observational Probes of Reionization History Xiaohui Fan University of Arizona New Views Conference, Dec 12, 2005 Collaborators:
ESO Recent Results on Reionization Chris Carilli (NRAO) LANL Cosmology School, July 2011 Review: constraints on IGM during reionization  CMB large scale.
Digging into the past: Galaxies at redshift z=10 Ioana Duţan.
Physical Properties of Spectroscopically-Confirmed z>6 Galaxies By Charles Griffin With special thanks to Dr. Eiichi Egami, and Dr. Benjamin Clément NASA.
Kinematics/Dynamics  Chemistry/dust  Stellar populations  Searches for z ~ 6-7 « Hot » scientific researches at VLT in cosmology Mass Galaxy formation/gas.
9/19/2014 Claus Leitherer: Lyman Continuum Leakage 1 Lyman Continuum Leakage in the Local Universe Claus Sanch Tim Janice Sally Roderik Leitherer Borthakur.
Collaborators: E. Egami, X. Fan, S. Cohen, R. Dave, K. Finlator, N. Kashikawa, M. Mechtley, K. Shimasaku, and R. Windhorst.
Ben Maughan (CfA)Chandra Fellows Symposium 2006 The cluster scaling relations observed by Chandra C. Jones, W. Forman, L. Van Speybroeck.
RESULTS AND ANALYSIS Mass determination Kauffmann et al. determined masses using SDSS spectra (Hdelta & D4000) Comparison with our determination: Relative.
September 6— Starburst 2004 at the Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge Constraints on Lyman continuum flux escaping from galaxies at z~3 using VLT.
Dark Matter and Galaxy Formation Section 4: Semi-Analytic Models of Galaxy Formation Joel R. Primack 2009, eprint arXiv: Presented by: Michael.
Primeval Starbursting Galaxies: Presentation of “Lyman-Break Galaxies” by Mauro Giavalisco Jean P. Walker Rutgers University.
Star formation at high redshift (2 < z < 7) Methods for deriving star formation rates UV continuum = ionizing photons (dust obscuration?) Ly  = ionizing.
Simulations of Reionization- Epoch Galaxies Romeel Davé (Arizona) Kristian Finlator, Ben D. Oppenheimer.
SFR and COSMOS Bahram Mobasher + the COSMOS Team.
The Near Infrared Background Excess and Star Formation in the HUDF Rodger Thompson Steward Observatory University of Arizona.
Dusty star formation at high redshift Chris Willott, HIA/NRC 1. Introductory cosmology 2. Obscured galaxy formation: the view with current facilities,
Galaxies at High Redshift and Reionization Bunker, A., Stanway, E., Ellis, R., Lacy, M., McMahon, R., Eyles, L., Stark D., Chiu, K. 2009, ASP Conference.
The Properties of LBGs at z>5 Matt Lehnert (MPE) Malcolm Bremer (Bristol) Aprajita Verma (MPE) Natascha Förster Schreiber (MPE) and Laura Douglas (Bristol)
Inflation, Expansion, Acceleration Two observed properties of the Universe, homogeneity and isotropy, constitute the Cosmological Principle Manifest in.
Jerusalem 2004 Hans-Walter Rix - MPIA The Evolution of the High-z Galaxy Populations.
New Insight Into the Dust Content of Galaxies Based on the Analysis of the Optical Attenuation Curve.
Massive galaxies at z > 1.5 By Hans Buist Supervisor Scott Trager Date22nd of june 2007.
130 cMpc ~ 1 o z~ = 7.3 Lidz et al ‘Inverse’ views of evolution of large scale structure during reionization Neutral intergalactic medium via HI.
Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 4 Current Topics Lyman Break Galaxies Dr Elizabeth Stanway
The Evolution of Quasars and Massive Black Holes “Quasar Hosts and the Black Hole-Spheroid Connection”: Dunlop 2004 “The Evolution of Quasars”: Osmer 2004.
3.SED Fitting Method Figure3. A plot between IRAC ch2 magnitudes (4.5  m) against derived stellar masses indicating the relation of the stellar mass and.
Conference “Summary” Alice Shapley (Princeton). Overview Multitude of new observational, multi-wavelength results on massive galaxies from z~0 to z>5:
Andrea Ferrara SISSA/International School for Advanced Studies, Trieste Cosmic Dawn and IGM Reionization.
Our Evolving Universe1 Vital Statistics of the Universe Today… l l Observational evidence for the Big Bang l l Vital statistics of the Universe   Hubble’s.
The Extremely Red Objects in the CLASH Fields The Extremely Red Galaxies in CLASH Fields Xinwen Shu (CEA, Saclay and USTC) CLASH 2013 Team meeting – September.
The coordinated growth of stars, haloes and large-scale structure since z=1 Michael Balogh Department of Physics and Astronomy University of Waterloo.
The Detectability of Lyα Emission from Galaxies during the Epoch of Reionization Dijkstra, Mesinger, Wyithe. JC Alex Fry.
“Nature and Descendants of Sub-mm and Lyman-break Galaxies in Lambda-CDM” Juan Esteban González Collaborators: Cedric Lacey, Carlton Baugh, Carlos Frenk,
Scaling Relations in HI Selected Star-Forming Galaxies Gerhardt R. Meurer The Johns Hopkins University Gerhardt R. Meurer The Johns Hopkins University.
Complete Ionisation of the Neutral Gas in the Hosts of High Redshift AGN As Traced Through HI and MgII Absorption.
The European Extremely Large Telescope Studying the first galaxies at z>7 Ross McLure Institute for Astronomy, Edinburgh University.
Finding z  6.5 galaxies with HST’s WFC3 and their implication on reionization Mark Richardson.
Simulations of Lyα emission: fluorescence, cooling, galaxies Jordi Miralda Escudé ICREA University of Barcelona, Catalonia Berkeley, Collaborators:
From Avi Loeb reionization. Quest to the Highest Redshift.
Mark Dijkstra, PSU, June 2010 Seeing Through the Trough: Detecting Lyman Alpha from Early Generations of Galaxies ‘ Mark Dijkstra (ITC, Harvard) based.
A Steep Faint-End Slope of the UV LF at z~2-3: Implications for the Missing Stellar Problem C. Steidel ( Caltech ) Naveen Reddy (Hubble Fellow, NOAO) Galaxies.
NICMOS IMAGES OF THE UDF Rodger I. Thompson Steward Observatory University of Arizona.
Lecture 8 Optical depth.
Star Formation in Damped Lyman alpha Systems Art Wolfe Collaborators: J.X. Prochaska, J. C. Howk, E.Gawiser, and K. Nagamine.
Big Bang f(HI) ~ 0 f(HI) ~ 1 f(HI) ~ History of Baryons (mostly hydrogen) Redshift Recombination Reionization z = 1000 (0.4Myr) z = 0 (13.6Gyr) z.
The Formation and Evolution of Galaxies Michael Balogh University of Waterloo.
Radiative Transfer Simulations The Proximity Effect of LBGs: Antonella Maselli, OAArcetri, Firenze, Italy Collaborators: A.Ferrara, M. Bruscoli, S. Marri.
KASI Galaxy Evolution Journal Club A Massive Protocluster of Galaxies at a Redshift of z ~ P. L. Capak et al. 2011, Nature, in press (arXive: )
Quasar Surveys -- From Sloan to SNAP
The distant Universe and something about gravitational waves.
Star Formation History of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field Rodger Thompson Steward Observatory University of Arizona.
Epoch of Reionization  Cosmic Reionization: Neutral IGM ionized by the first luminous objects at 6 < z < 15 Evidence: CMB polarization (Komatsu+2009)
High Redshift QUASAR Spectra as Probe of Reionization of IGM.
A Survey of Starburst Galaxies An effort to help understand the starburst phenomenon and its importance to galaxy evolution Megan Sosey & Duilia deMello.
Nobunari Kashikawa (National Astronomical Observatory of Japan)
Probing Reionization with Lyman Alpha Emitters Pratika Dayal
Constraints on Star Forming Galaxies at z>6.5
Black Holes in the Deepest Extragalactic X-ray Surveys
Presentation transcript:

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Current Topics Lyman Break Galaxies Dr Elizabeth Stanway

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Topic Summary Star Forming Galaxies and the Lyman- Line Lyman Break Galaxies at z<4 Lyman Break Galaxies at z>4 Lyman Break Galaxies at z>7 Reionisation, SFH and Luminosity Functions

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 LBGs at z>7 Bunker et al (2009), see also Bouwens+ Oesch+ Castellano+ Wilkins+ etc, etc (About 20 papers in Sep-Dec 2009) z-drop candidates at z~7

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Size Evolution to z>7 Galaxies at z=7 continue to get smaller This scales as size (1+z) ± 0.17, consistent with constant comoving sizes Most z=7 candidates very compact (Oesch et al 2010)

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 The Rest UV spectral Slope AGN have spectra described by a power law, L i.e L In the rest-frame ultraviolet, star forming galaxies also show power- law spectra The slope of the power law depends on the temperature of the emitting source This power law slope can be measured using broadband photometry z YJH Magnitude gives the flux in J and H => f J and f H Know the central wavelengths of J and H => J and H L J /L H = f J /f H ( J z=7 galaxy

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Rest-UV Spectral Slope AGN have -1 at all redshifts Zero-age, star forming galaxies with normal stellar populations have -2 Dust or age will make this slope redder (i.e. shallower) Within the LBG population the spectral slope is seen to evolve with z => age evolution? Dust evolution? Bouwens et al (2010)

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Rest-UV slope at z = At z~7, candidate galaxies are very blue, particularly faint galaxies < -3 is very hard to explain with any normal (Population II) stellar population Bouwens et al (2010)

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Rest-UV slope at z = Pop III stars are defined as having very low or zero metallicity With no metals, they have fewer ways to emit radiation (i.e. cool down) They can become hotter, and more massive (supported by radiation pressure) Hotter galaxies have bluer spectral slopes Bouwens et al (2010) < -3 slopes may indicate that z=7 galaxies have very low metallicity

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Ensemble Properties of LBGs At z=2-4, you can study individual galaxies in detail At z=5-6, and more so at z>7, this becomes much harder Studying an individual galaxy only tells you about its immediate environment By looking about the ensemble properties of galaxies you can study the universe as a whole => observational cosmology By using a common selection method (LBGs), you are comparing like-for-like across cosmic time => Insights into galaxy formation, the star formation histoy of the Universe and Reionisation

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Luminosity Functions z~4 z~5 z~6 The number counts of galaxies changes as a function of luminosity This is described by a Schecter function N(L) dA (L/L*) e -(L/L*) dA At low-z this parameterises the galaxy mass distribution The function has three important parameters: –Characteristic luminosity, L* or M* (~26.5 at z=6) –Faint end slope, –Normalisation, * (Bouwens et al, 2007)

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Number counts are affected by incompleteness and contamination There is degeneracy in the parameter fitting => The exact values at high z are still uncertain, but… –The typical magnitude of the population is decreasing at high z => younger, smaller galaxies –The faint end slope appears steeper at high z => more faint galaxies compared to bright galaxies –At any given luminosity there are fewer z~6 galaxies than z~3 galaxies (Bouwens et al, 2007) Luminosity Functions z~4 z~5 z~6 z~3

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 LF Results at z >7 At z>7 there are fewer galaxies and we dont probe the faint end slope The Luminosity function is continuing to evolve - there are fewer Lyman Break galaxies as you move to higher redshifts, but the fraction that are faint increases Bouwens et al (2010)

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Luminosity Function Implications At earlier times, star formation in the Universe is increasingly dominated by small, hard to detect galaxies The fraction missed by a magnitude limited survey is increasing The more massive galaxies we see at z=3 are increasingly rare at higher z - star formation is occuring in less massive, less mature regions (i.e. lower metallicity? less dusty?) A Schecter function still describes the distribution reasonably well out to z=6 - star formation may still be tracing the mass distribution despite the short-lived starbursts Models for hierarchical merging suggest that the typical luminosity is evolving to follow the typical galaxy mass at a given redshift

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Cosmic Evolution of Star Formation Propertyz=1-3z=5-6z>7 Age~200 Myr~50 MyrMay be younger Massfew x M ~10 9 M No data Metallicity Z ~0.2 Z May be very low - Pop III Size (half light radius) kpc~1kpc scales as comoving ~0.5 kpc M*-21.1z=5 : z=5 : ? Faint end Slope-1.6may be steeperNo data DustE(B-V)~0.2Probably less dustyNo data Star Formation Rate ~30 M /yr

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 The Star Formation History of the Universe LBGs are star forming galaxies If there was other star formation at the same z it would be detected UNLESS it is extincted So LBGs can be used to measure the star formation history of the universe modulo dust extinction

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 The Star Formation History of the Universe This was first done using LBGs in the mid-1990s using Lyman Break Galaxies at z=3-4 by Piero Madau As a result, the Star Formation History of the Universe is usually shown on a diagram known as the Madau Plot Early work showed that star formation peaked around z=1, but it was unclear what happened at higher redshifts (Steidel et al 1999)

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 The SFH out to z=6 GOODS extended this work to z=6 (for bright galaxies) The Star Formation Rate Density out to z=6 shows steep evolution, particularly when only bright galaxies are considered

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Uncertainties in the Madau Plot To get to star formation rate density you need: Number of objects per unit volume Star formation rate per object You have: Number of galaxies (Complete sample? Contamination?) Rest-UV flux (after dust extinction) Redshift selection function (Survey and model dependent) Uncertainties: How much UV flux has been absorbed by dust? How much is emitted by galaxies below your selection limit? How do star formation rate and rest-UV flux relate?

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 The Star Formation History of the Universe (Bouwens et al, 2007) The LF has a steep faint end slope at high- z The fainter you integrate down the Luminosity Function, the more flux youll see Even to faint magnitudes the SFRD is still dropping at high redshift

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 The Star Formation History of the Universe Significant uncertainty in star formation density General consensus: The SFRD is either steady beyond z=2 or declining slowly It declines rapidly beyond z=6 Metallicity, age and duty cycle are all important parameters Verma et al, 2007

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 But is this a complete picture? Until recently most models predicted SF peaking much earlier LBGs are selected to be rest-UV bright How complete is the picture of the z=3 universe they paint? Do they even map out all the star formation? What about UV-dark or dusty material? (Springel & Hernquist, 2003) Many Models predict SFR should peak at z>6

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Sub-mm and Dust-obscured Galaxies Rest-UV flux is reprocessed and reemitted in the far-infrared by dust At z~2, 25% of the far-infrared luminosity in the universe is seen in IR-detected DOGs Luminous sub-mm galaxies are rare but can have SFRs of 100s of M /yr Numbers of SMGs are known to peak at z=2-3 (the epoch of galaxy mergers) At these redshifts, dust obscured galaxies might contribute 50% or more of the cosmic SFRD

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Including Obscured Galaxies in the Madau Plot Newer SFH models include feedback from QSOs and gas Models tend not to consider dust obscuration Predict SFH peaking at z=3-4 Possible that SMGs could contribute to this picture, particularly at z=1-3 Nagamine et al (2009)

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Reionisation Lyman break galaxies are star-forming so directly measure the star formation properties of the universe At z=7 they are starting to probe a transition known as reionisation when the galaxy went from largely neutral to largely ionised

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Reionisation and the End of the Dark Ages After the Big Bang, the universe cooled and recombined – leaving a neutral universe. At this time, all rest-frame UV light is absorbed by neutral hydrogen the Cosmic Dark Ages The IGM in the local universe is highly ionised So when and how did the universe reionise? What ended the Dark Ages? The WMAP satellite studied the optical depth to the CMB data which suggests that z reion ~9-12 The failure of the LAE Luminosity Function to evolve implies z reion >6 However, the observation of a Gunn-Peterson trough in the spectra of SDSS z=6 QSOS implies z reion ~6.2 (or at least a large neutral fraction) Could z~6 starbursts contribute to reionisation?

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Reionisation - Evidence from WMAP The CMB has been streaming through the Universe since Recombination The mean free path of CMB photons will depend on the distance the radiation travels through a neutral vs ionised medium WMAP has measured the CMB power spectrum, constraining cosmological properties One of these,, is the optical depth of CMB photons to reionisation After five years of data, the best fitting value suggests z reion =10.8 ± 1.4

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Reionisation - Evidence from SDSS Damping of the spectrum due to Lyman-alpha forest lines rapidly increases with increasing redshift This can be seen in the spectra of distant QSOs seen in the SDSS Beyond z=6.4 large regions of the spectrum are seen with zero flux These are known as Gunn- Peterson troughs and indicate that the universe is at least partly neutral beyond z=6

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Reionisation - Evidence from LAEs Gunn-Peterson absorption (i.e. due to neutral gas) has broad damping wings Therefore if theres neutral gas surrounding a Lyman- alpha emitter, the line can be suppressed, even though its longwards of 1216*(1+z) A In a neutral universe you expect to see a smaller number of Lyman-alpha emitters detected

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Reionisation - Evidence from LAEs Gunn-Peterson absorption (i.e. due to neutral gas) has broad damping wings Therefore if theres neutral gas surrounding a Lyman- alpha emitter, the line can be suppressed, even though its longwards of 1216*(1+z) A In a neutral universe you expect to see a smaller number of Lyman-alpha emitters detected There is some evidence for this at z=6.6 Lya Luminosity Function (Lya LF) Ouchi+ in prep ~30% Pure lum. evolution Pure num. evolution

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Reionisation - Evidence from LBGs The neutral IGM is ionised by UV-flux The dominant source of UV-flux in the universe is star formation The effect of UV-flux on the universe depends on –Clumpy IGM –Escape of UV-photons –Temperature of IGM –Cosmology Can determine a critical Star Formation Density that will ionise the Universe given some values for these parameters By integrating the LBG LF we measure the total UV flux and can compare it with this critical values

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Reionisation - Evidence from LBGs Can calculate the ionised fraction of the universe due to contribution of LBG galaxies given certain assumptions For reasonable assumptions about a warm IGM, it is possible to fit the data (within errors) and ionise the universe with z=7 LBGs BUT LBGs are scarcer at higher redshifts - is this a problem at z~10? Oesch et al 2010 Current best fit =

Current Topics: Lyman Break Galaxies - Lecture 5 Lecture Summary With increasing redshift see: –Decreasing metallicity –Decreasing dust extinction –Decreasing age –Decreasing mass Very blue rest-UV spectra are hinting at changes in the nature of star formation LBGs at every redshift are used to characterise evolution in star formation density and the mechanisms and environment for star formation This could be critical for understanding the star formation history of the Universe and Reionisation