Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
2
Exploring the High-z Frontier — Galaxies at z 6 and beyond Haojing Yan (Carnegie Observatories) CCAPP/OSU Seminar April 8, 2008
3
Outline UV Luminosity Function of Galaxies at z 6 — a very steep faint-end slope Stellar Masses of Galaxies at z 6 — some high-mass, “old” galaxies already in place Implications for (HI) Reionization — dwarf galaxies did it! Unanswered Questions at z 6 — evolution of LF at the bright-end? Searching for Galaxies at z > 7-8
4
Part I LF of Galaxies at z 6 (5.5 z 6.5)
5
Reionization might have ended at z 6 (Fan et al. 2006, AJ, 132,117) ~ 1% is sufficient to create a complete GP-trough Practically, H still nearly fully ionized at z 6
6
Searching Techniques Lyman-Break Galaxy (LGB) “Dropout” Ly Emitter (LAE)
7
Surface Density Expectation Assuming non-evolving M* (- 21.23) & faint-end slope (-1.6) from z= Using the z=5.60 galaxy in the HDF-N (Weymann et al. 1999) to fix the normalization Comparing to Simulation of Weinberg et al. (2002) Yan et al. 2002, ApJ, 580, 725
8
Simple Prediction Seems to Work Well Consistent with all observations up to 2003, including new results from the HST/ACS Different groups emphasized different aspects: Yan et al. (2003) Bouwens et al. (2003) Bunker et al. (2004) Dickinson et al. (2004)
9
Source(s) of Reionization Yan & Windhorst 2004, ApJ, 600, L1 Critical value from Madau, Haardt & Rees 1999 Contribution from reionizing sources Galaxies can account for the necessary reionizing photons, if the LF has a steep faint-end slope; dwarf galaxies are important contributors. Galaxies can account for the necessary reionizing photons, if the LF has a steep faint-end slope; dwarf galaxies are important contributors.
10
To z<30 mag, 108 i-dropouts found in the HUDF (Yan & Windhorst 2004, ApJ, 612, L93; YW04) Note: ~ 1.5 mag deeper than Bunker et al. (2004; MNRAS, 355, 374)
11
Our HUDF z 6 candidate sample supports a very steep UV LF faint-end slope: α = -1.8 to -1.9 Dwarf galaxies can provide sufficient (re)ionizing photons at z 6 YW04 Constrain to the UV LF at z 6
12
Recent Result Confirms the Steep Faint-end Slope (Bouwens et al. 2006) 506 i-drops: UDF, UDF-Pars, GOODS But compare to YW04: M* = -21.03, * = 4.6x10 -4 /Mpc 3 4.6x10 -3 M sun /yr/Mpc 3 1.1x10 -2 M sun /yr/Mpc 3 SFR is still uncertain by 2x “Lilly-Madau Diagram”
13
Luminosity Function of z 6 LAE LAE : ~ 1/4 of the entire galaxy population (based on results at z~3), but still very important — easier to identify; current redshift record holder is the LAE at z=6.96 (Iye et al. 2006) LAE as probe of the reionization epoch : neutral IGM — Lya line suppressed — LAE number drop (e.g., Marilada-Escude 1998; Malhotra & Rhoads 2001) LAE at z 6 are usually selected at two narrow windows at z=5.7 & 6.5 in order to avoid strong night-sky lines
14
Evolution of LAE LF from z=5.7 t0 6.5 Malhotra & Rhoads (2004): no evolution seen; IGM ionized up to z=6.5 Haiman & Cen (2005): not necessarily; local HII bubble permits escape of Lya photons and the suppression is not as large; up to 25%
15
Better Statistics from Subaru Deep Field Shimasaku et al. (2006)Kashikawa et al. (2006) Kashikawa et al. (2006): strong evolution from z=5.7 to z=6.5 ! Significant fraction of HI at z=6.5 ?? WMAP z reion ~ 11.4?
16
Part II Stellar Masses of Galaxies at z 6
17
Stellar Mass Assembly History in Early Universe Stellar mass density & SFR density: = ∫ SFR dt Need measurements at rest-frame optical (and beyond) to reduce biases caused by dust extinction and short-lived stars when converting light to mass Study at high-z made possible by Spitzer IRAC GOODS Spitzer Legacy Program has played an important role
18
3.6 μ m4.5 μ m 5.6 μ m8.0 μ m z =5.83 galaxy IRAC Sees z ~ 6 Galaxies in HUDF
19
z=5.83 z=5.9 z p ~5.9 Three i-drops in HUDF securely detected by IRAC Yan et al. 2005, ApJ, 634, 109
20
Some high-mass (a few x 10 10 M sun ) galaxies were already in place by z 6 (age of Universe < 1.0 Gyr) A few hundred Myr old (formed at z>>6) Number density consistent with CDM simulation from Nagamine et al. (2004) Some Major Conclusions from SED Fitting See also Eyles et al. (2005)
21
CDFS, 3.6 μ mHDFN, 3.6 μ m Extending to Entire GOODS (Yan et al. 2006, ApJ, 651, 24) IRAC-detected i-dropouts
22
CDFS, 3.6 μ m HDFN, 3.6 μ m IRAC-invisible i-dropouts
23
Difficulty: no photometric info between z’ and IRAC 3.6 μ m Have to take a different, simplified approach (z’-3.6 μ m) color age for a given SFH M/L for a given SFH at this age stellar mass; repeat for all SFH in the set, and take min, max, median
24
Stellar Mass Estimates Summarized IRAC-detected Sample M rep : 0.09 ~ 7.0x10 10 M sun (median 9.5x10 9 M sun ) T rep : 50 ~ 400 Myr (median 290 Myr) IRAC-invisible Sample, using 3.6 m upper limit Upper-limit of M max (median 4.9x10 9 M sun )
25
IRAC-invisible sample stackRandom stack 3.6 μ m 3.6 μ m mag = 27.44 median z’ mag = 27.00 M min = 1.5x10 8 M rep = 2.0x10 8 M sun M max = 5.9x10 9 Stacking of IRAC-invisible i-dropouts
26
Models courtesy of K. Nagamine; based on simulations of Nagamine et al. (2004) and Night et al. (2006) Implications (I): compare to simulation ΛCDM models seem to be capable of producing such high-mass galaxies by z 6
27
Implications (II): Global Stellar Mass Density Lower limit at z ~ 6: (1.0, 1.6, 6.5) x 10 6 M sun Mpc -3
28
Implications (III): Source of Reionization Critical SFR based on Madau et al. (1999) Progenitors of all IRAC- detected z 6 galaxies formed simultaneously with the same e-SFH: SFR e -t/ The progenitors of high-mass galaxies alone CANNOT provide sufficient ionizing photons to sustain the reionization Dwarf (low-mass, low- luminosity) galaxies, which could be more numerous, must have played an important role
29
Part III Bright-end of LF at z 6
30
L* & Bright-end of LBG LF Bouwens et al. (2006): L*(z=6) = 0.6L*(z=3) Effect of large-scale structure ( “cosmic variance”)??
31
Need Degree-sized Surveys to Minimize Impact of “Cosmic Variance” at Bright-end (Millennium Simulation slice at z=5.7)
32
D1(2h-4d) (overlap SWIRE) D2 (10h+2d) (w/COSMOS) D3 D4 16.5’x10’ GOODS- Size Area Bright i-drops in 4-deg 2 CFHTLS Yan et al. (in prep)
33
Magellan High-z LAE Survey Yan, McCarthy & Windhorst
34
Survey Highlights Narrow-band imaging in 917nm & 971nm OH- free windows to search for LAE at z ≈ 6.5 & 7.0 Four IMACS f/2 fields (~ 0.9 deg 2 ); reducing cosmic variance with limited telescope time Survey depth (5- ) AB=25.0 mag (2.45 10 -17 erg/s/cm 2 for pure-line sources; 7-8 10 -18 erg/s/cm 2 for continuum-detected sources) Aiming at bright-end of the luminosity function
35
6.46 — 6.62 6.91 — 7.07 ~ 400 Mpc 3 /arcmin 2 (Before upgrading, SITe CCDs) o(917nm)p(971nm) Survey Design: Filters
36
Survey Design: Fields Use fields that have public, deep continuum images in multi-bands (especially in z’-band) Accessibility from Las Campanas CFHTLS Deep D1, D2 & D4 spreading out in RA
37
Survey Status 1-night in Feb. 2007 + 2-night in Mar. 2008, 1 IMACS pointing in COSMOS field (CFHTLS- D2), 20hr in o(917nm) 3-night in Jul. 2007, 1 IMACS pointing in CFHTLS-D4, 20 hr in o(917nm) Achieved desired depth
38
COSMOS CFHTLS-D4 1.48 o 1o1o 1o1o
39
5- source counts CFHTLSD4NW, 20hr in o
40
3 candidates invisible in continuum o=23.88 o=24.39 o=25.49? (Now seeking time do spectroscopic identification)
41
Kashikawa et al. 2006 (in Subaru Deep Field) Rapid Evolution from z=5.7 to 6.6 or not?
42
Part IV Searching for Galaxies at z > 7-8 and beyond
43
Deep Space-based IR Imaging for LBG Bouwens & Illingworth (2006); Bouwens et al. (2008)
44
Space-based IR Imaging around Lensing Clusters for LBG Bradley et al. (2008) Abell 1689
45
Direct Slit-Spectroscopy around Lensing Clusters for LAE Stark et al. (2007)
46
Another Line of Thought There might be a much more luminous population at z>7; surface density as high as 0.01-0.05/arcmin 2 From Yan et al. (2006)
47
Wide-field near-IR Survey with WIRCam at CFHT PIs. Lihwai Lin & Luc Simard
48
CFHT WIRCam J, 26 hrs Candidates to be observed by NICMOS in Cy-16 soon (PI. Yan)
49
LBT Can Play an Important Role in the Study of the High-z Universe
50
MODS: efficient identification & detailed study of large samples of LBG candidates from z = 3 to 6 LBC: large-field surveys along many sight-lines to overcome the bias caused by “cosmic variance”; deep Y-band imaging to look for z 7 galaxies LUCIFER: identification of the luminous z>7 candidates found in the on-going wide-field IR surveys
51
Summary UV Luminosity Function of Galaxies at z 6 — a very steep faint-end slope Stellar Masses of Galaxies at z 6 — some high-mass, “old” galaxies already in place Implications for (HI) Reionization — dwarf galaxies did it! Unanswered Questions at z 6: Bright-end of LF (LBG/LAE) — degree-sized surveys needed to reduce “cosmic variance” Searching for Galaxies at z > 7-8 — there might be a luminous population, detectable at ~24.5mag
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.