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Motivation

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Title: The Large Area Lyman Alpha Survey Author: rhoads Last modified by: san Created Date: 3/1/2001 7:51:35 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Motivation


1
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 of UDF sources.
  • Spectral identification of every 4ltzlt7 object to
    I(AB)27
  • Efficiently identifies spectroscopically
    interesting sources that might not merit a slit
    without the grism information
  • high equivalent width lines
  • Real z gt 6 LBGs among the very red, faint stuff.

2
GRism ACS Program for Extragalactic Science
(GRAPES)
Deepest Unbiased Spectroscopy yet. I(AB) lt
27 (UDF)
  • Team S. Malhotra, A. Cimatti, S. Cristiani, E.
    Daddi, H. Ferguson, J. Gardner, C. Gronwall, Z.
    Haiman, A. Koekemoer, A. Pasquali, N. Panagia,
    L. Petro, N. Pirzkal,
  • J. Rhoads, M. Stiavelli, S. di Serego Aligheri,
    Z. Tsvetanov
  • J. Vernet, J. Walsh, R. Windhorst, H.J. Yan

3
ACS Grism Characteristics(G800L WFC)
  • Dispersion 40Å/pixel, Resolution 80Å (point
    source scales with image size).
  • Wavelength calibration is accurate 10Å or
    ?z0.001
  • Wavelength coverage 550 nm to 1050 nm at
    zero response 600 to 930 nm at half max.

4
Advantages of HST/ACS combination
  • Low sky background from space
  • Red sensitivity of the ACS
  • High redshift galaxies are compact, HST PSF helps
  • Contiguous wavelength/redshift coverage, unlike
    ground based instruments.

5
Science Goals
  • Probe reionization era by determining luminosity
    functions of lyman-? emitters, lyman-break
    galaxies at z4-7 and low-luminosity AGNs.
  • Study star-formation and galaxy assembly at 1ltzlt2
    by identifying star-forming galaxies with strong
    emission lines and old populations with strong
    4000Å break and any combination of the two.
  • Supernovae spectra, M-dwarfs, your science.

6
The Epoch of Reionization
  • The detection of Gunn-Peterson trough(s) in z 6
    quasars show the late stages of H reionization
    (Becker et al. 2001, Fan et al. 2002.)
  • WMAP results indicate substantial reionization at
    z15
  • Was the universe reionized twice (Cen 2002)?

7
Epoch of Galaxy formation?
  • Early stages of galaxy formation are presumably
    ongoing at z6.
  • Our current samples at this redshift are small A
    half dozen zgt5 galaxies, 6 at zgt6, quasars at the
    very brightest end of luminosity function.
  • We would like to determine the epoch and pace of
    reionization as well as the luminosity function
    of sources (galaxies/AGNs) responsible for the
    photons.

8
Testing Reionization with Lyman-a emitters
  • Low luminosity Lyman-a sources should not be
    visible before reionization
  • Lyman alpha photons resonantly scatter in a
    neutral universe.
  • This means they should not be apparent as compact
    sources, I.e., we expect a sharp drop in the
    Lyman alpha source counts at reionization.
  • (Miralda-Escude 1998 Miralda-Escude Rees 1998
  • Haiman Spaans 1999 Loeb Rybicki 1999)
  • Higher luminosity sources (e.g. quasars) create a
    local ionized bubble allowing the Lyman-a photons
    to escape.

9
Resonant Scattering Before Reionization
Neutral IGM

Continuum Photons
H II
region

To

Young starburst

Observer
Lyman a photons

10
Constraining Reionization
  • We still see expected number/luminosity of Lyman
    alpha emitters in our z5.7 sample.Thus, the
    reionization redshift is z gt 5.7.
  • (Rhoads Malhotra 2001, ApJ Lett 563, L5)
  • extended to z(reionization) gt 6.6?
  • (Hu et al. 2002, Kodaira et al. 2003, Lilly et
    al. 2003, Cuby et al. 2003, Rhoads et al. 2003)

11
HII Regions in z gt 5 Lyman a Samples
  • An HII region must be gt 1.2 Mpc (non-comoving) to
    reduce the line center optical depth to t lt 1.
  • This requires a minimum value of (Li t fesc).
  • We can constrain all of these quantities in LALA
    using the observed line luminosities and
    equivalent width distribution.
  • We find that Li t fesc is lt 30 of threshold for
    the z5.7 sources, i.e. the sources are too faint
    to create a large enough HII region.
  • The limit for the Hu et al source is similar,
    thanks to its lower physical luminosity.

12
The Lyman a Test, First Order Concerns t 2 lt
t 8
  • Our threshold HII region size was based on t0 1
    at emitted line center. Lines have finite width,
    and t lt t0 in the red wing.
  • The Hu et al source could be embedded in a fully
    neutral IGM and still get 10 to 20 of its Lyman
    a flux out (Haiman 2002).

13
Testing Reionization
  • Statistical test remains The observed number of
    Lyman a emitters above a fixed threshold will
    show a dramatic drop at reionization.
  • Equivalent width test Also the equivalent
    width of the Lyman-a line will also drop at
    reionization.
  • At present 5/6 sources at zgt6 have rest
    equivalent width of the Lyman-? line lt50 Å,
    whereas at z4.5 median equivalent width is 200 Å
    (Malhotra Rhoads 2002). So the line may well be
    attenuated by the damping wings of the neutral
    gas. The sixth source has EWgt85 Å (Rhoads et al.
    2003)

14
The Lyman a Test, First Order Concerns Evolution
  • The Lyman a test is based on number counts as a
    function of redshift.
  • Strong evolution could cause trouble. In
    particular, a decrease in n(z) could mimic a
    neutral IGM.
  • However, the intrinsic n(z) is more likely to
    increase than decrease at reionization
  • Star formation in small halos is suppressed at
    reionization
  • Lyman a galaxies appear to be primitive objects
    (Malhotra Rhoads 2002) and should be a larger
    fraction of galaxies at high z.
  • Lyman break galaxies offer a control sample, if
    we can go deep enough to find them.

15
Ultradeep Field Grism Expectations Lyman Break
Galaxies
  • Extrapolating from shallower grism data, we
    estimate that Lyman break galaxies can be
    reliably identified to I(AB) 26.9 for breaks
    near the throughput peak.
  • Effective redshift limit around 6.7 (to have some
    useful wavelength coverage redward of break).
  • Compare limit at redshift lt 6.0 for i, z
    two-filter detections.
  • Predicted Counts shortly.

16
Ultradeep Field Grism ExpectationsLyman a
Galaxies
  • Isolated emission lines near peak sensitivity
    would be detected to
  • 8x10-18 erg/cm2/s for compact galaxies
  • 6x10-18 erg/cm2/s for point sources
  • Lyman-a galaxy density 1 per sq. arcminute per
    unit z above flux 2x10-17 erg/cm2/s (z4.5,
    Rhoads et al 2000).
  • A very steep luminosity function observed? expect
    many objects.

17
Ultradeep Field Grism ExpectationsLyman-a
Galaxies
  • Number-flux relations for Lyman a galaxies from
    the LALA survey. Scaled to redshift z5.7.
  • Black z4.5 data Green z5.7 data.
  • Red line N f-3

18
Expected Numbers of zgt6 Lyman-? emitters
  • Adapted from Stiavelli et al. 2003. Upper limits
    from Hu et al. and detection from the Large Area
    Lyman Alpha (LALA) survey.
  • Grapes should see 3-30 zgt6 Lyman-? emitters.

LALA
19
Ultradeep Field Grism ExpectationsHigh Redshift
Galaxy Counts
4.5ltzlt5.5 5.5ltzlt6.7
Lyman-break galaxies 10 10
Lyman-? 60-400 3-30
AGNs 0.6-4
20
Ultradeep Field Grism Expectations Foreground (z
1) Galaxies
  • Most galaxies with a well detected emission line
    or 4000Å break will yield a redshift.
  • Two lines ? redshift
  • One line ? synergy with photo-z (grism redshift
    is more precise but may be less accurate) and
    with ground based followup (more wavelength
    coverage)
  • Star formation history from emission lines at
    0ltzlt1.8
  • Field ellipticals over a similar redshift range.

21
Ultradeep Field Grism Expectations Faint Quasars?
  • We have detected a couple of promising high
    redshift quasar candidates in our deepest cycle
    11 parallel grism data.
  • Many AGN lines ? broad redshift coverage
  • Morphology spectroscopy (variability) ?
    reliable identifications, completeness.
  • Caveat modest sample size

22
APPLES (ACS Pure Parallel Lyman-? Emission Survey)
23
APPLES First-Look Lyman Break Galaxies
24
APPLES First-Look Emission Line Objects
25
Synergy with Ground Based Spectra
  • Grapes will help ground based spectroscopy in at
    least two ways
  • Instant redshifts for 300 to 500 objects
    potential savings of time.
  • Identification of which faint objects are worth a
    slitlet.
  • Conversely, ground based data yield more flexible
    wavelength coverage and higher resolution,
    offering physical information unavailable with
    the grism.

26
Spectrum Overlap and Roll Angles
  • Overlap is potentially a problem in slitless
    spectroscopy.
  • Extrapolation from shallower grism fields and
    simulated GRAPES data both imply 20
    contamination in any roll angle.
  • Multiple roll angles will resolve source
    confusion due to overlap for almost all sources.

27
Science and Data Products
  • Primary Data Product Reduced, extracted spectra
    to go in the public domain.
  • Science products
  • Spectral identification of galaxies between
    4ltzlt7.
  • Continuous redshift coverage gt Clean studies of
    galaxy evolution.
  • Galaxies with old stellar populations, HII region
    lines or both identified at z1.
  • M-dwarfs, Supernovae

28
Comparing the Two Reionization Tests
Gunn-Peterson Lyman a
Threshold neutral fraction in uniform IGM 10-4 0.1
In nonuniform IGM 10-2 gt 0.1
Source luminosity Very bright Faint
Redshift coverage Continuous Discrete from ground continuous above atmosphere.
29
Lyman a Galaxies at High Redshift
  • Density About 1 per sq. arcminute per unit z
    above flux 2 10-17 erg/cm2/s (z4.5, Rhoads et
    al 2000).
  • Typical equivalent widths very large (Malhotra
    Rhoads 2002)
  • Extreme youth coupled with low metallicity and/or
    top-heavy IMF.
  • Extension to z gt 5.5 easier than for Lyman break
    No need for broadband data at ? gtgt (1z) 1215 Å,
    thus an optical detector suffices even at z 7.

30
ACS Grism Simulations
  • Lyman Alpha emitter Flux 3e-17 erg/cm2/s, rest
    frame EW100Å.
  • Lyman break galaxy I(AB) 25.

31
Now for 0ur on-core
  • The ACS Pure Parallel Lyman-a Emission Survey,
  • APPLES
  • Approved for 175 parallel orbits in HST cycle 11.
  • Team J. Rhoads, S. Malhotra, C. Gronwall, Z.
    Tsvetanov, J. Walsh, Z. Haiman, A. Cimatti, S.
    Cristiani, E. Daddi, A. Pasquali, N. Pirzkal, S.
    di Serego Aligheri, J. Vernet
  • A slitless spectroscopic search to
  • Find 1000 Lyman a galaxies at 4ltzlt7
  • Study their evolution
  • Determine the mean and scatter in zreionization.
  • Study star formation at lower redshifts with H
    and O lines.

32
Ultradeep Field Grism ExpectationsRedshifts
  • We estimate that 10 of sources detected in our
    deepest APPLES field ( 10 ksec of F814W) will
    yield redshifts in the corresponding 27 ksec
    grism exposure.
  • Extrapolating crudely implies 300 to 500
    redshifts might be obtained in an ACS Ultradeep
    grism exposure of 80 orbits.
  • More detailed extrapolation should be done for
    each class of object.

33
Reionization Tests
  • Gunn-Peterson Trough
  • Requires a highly luminous background source.
  • Sensitive to optical depths t 5.
  • Proximity effect needs to be considered (at least
    for steady sources).
  • Lyman-a Galaxy Counts
  • Requires low-luminosity sources.
  • Sensitive to line center optical depths of 104.

34
Reionization movie Nick Gnedin
35
The Lyman a Test, Second Order Concerns
  • Galactic winds?
  • Infall?
  • Bright neighbors?
  • Quick estimates suggest that none are plausible
    loopholes (work in progress).
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