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What Powers the Lyman a Blob

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Paul Francis, Australian National University. Povilas Palunas, Las Campanas ... infrared to total infrared flux (using Chary & Elbaz 2001), puts all of these in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What Powers the Lyman a Blob


1
What Powers the Lyman a Blob?
  • James W. Colbert, Spitzer Science Center
  • Harry I. Teplitz, SSC
  • Claudia Scarlata, SSC
  • Paul Francis, Australian National University
  • Povilas Palunas, Las Campanas Observatory
  • Gerard Williger, University of Louisville
  • Bruce E. Woodgate, Goddard Space Flight Center

2
What Power The Lyman a Blob
  • James W. Colbert, Spitzer Science Center
  • Harry I. Teplitz, SSC
  • Claudia Scarlata, SSC
  • Paul Francis, Australian National University
  • Povilas Palunas, Las Campanas Observatory
  • Gerard Williger, University of Louisville
  • Bruce E. Woodgate, Goddard Space Flight Center

3
Lyman Alpha Blobs
  • Extended, radio-quiet Lya emission
  • First identified by Steidel et al. 2000
  • Lya Blobs seem to only be found in high redshift
    regions of significant galaxy over-density.
  • Immense in both size and luminosity.
  • 50-150 kpc
  • 1044 ergs s-1

4

The z2.38 Lyman Alpha Filament
  • The 80 80 60 co-moving Mpc volume mapped by
    Lyman alpha emitters shows a tentative filament
    and void configuration. Also commonly referred to
    as the Francis Cluster.
  • Comparable to some of the largest structures seen
    in the local Universe (i.e. the Great Wall,
    Geller Huchra 1989).
  • Three emitters are Lyman alpha blobs
  • In Spitzer cycle 1 we took IRAC and MIPS 24µm
    imaging of the central region.

5
Lya Blobs are High Redshift ULIRGs
  • We strongly detect the 3 Lya blobs in the MIPS 24
    µm image 0.25-0.6 mJy.
  • Even conservative conversions from the
    mid-infrared to total infrared flux (using Chary
    Elbaz 2001), puts all of these in the class of
    ULIRGs (gt 1012 L?).
  • Other Lya blob IR detections
  • One 24 µm Lya blob in the NOAO Deep Wide-Field
    Survey (0.86 mJy Dey et al. 2005).
  • 8 detected in sub-mm
  • One of filament blobs (B7 Beleen et al. 2008)
  • 6 in SSA22 field (Geach et al. 2005), 1 in 53w002
    field (Smail et al. 2003)

6
Lya/IR Relation?
  • 10 identified Lya Blobs with 24um or submm
    detections
  • Weak evidence for connection
  • L Lya /LBol
  • 0.05-0.2

7
Lya Blob SEDs
  • Power source remains ambiguous
  • No clear 1.6 µm bump
  • No clearly rising spectrum
  • Likely composite sources
  • B5 Not a blob but a lower redshift interloper

8
HST Blob Images
SSA22 blob 1 J2143-4423 B1
Francis et al. 2001, ApJ, 554, 1001
Chapman et al. 2004, ApJ, 606, 85
9
Powered by Mergers?
  • Blob B6 is associated with 2 MIPS 24µm sources
    (1 mJy total).
  • A pair of Hyper Luminous Galaxies in the process
    of merger?
  • Mergers may play a critical role in production of
    giant Lya clouds.

10
B6 Blob
11
B7 Blob
12
SSA22 Blob 1 MIPS 24 µm
Despite strong detection at 850µm 17mJy, not
visible in original shallow MIPS 24µm. lt 0.3
mJy So we followed up with deep, multi-hour MIPS
observation
Still no Detection lt 0.04 mJy (3 s)
Submm Contours from Chapman et al. 2004
13
Ratio of 850 to 24 µm for the Blobs
  • Potentially powerful diagnostic for
    distinguishing cold (star-forming) from warm
    (AGN) ULIRGS.
  • Works much better the higher one goes in
    redshift.
  • Generally, 850/24um line ratio looks cool.

SSA22 Blob 1 is off the chart Likely due to
large spatial extent as already suggested for
high-resolution submm non-detection. Must be
quite spread out, as MIPS FWHM is 6.
14
Spitzer Mid-IR Spectroscopy
  • The presence of PAHs is a clear star formation
    indicator that can not be masked by the presence
    of dust.

We targeted 5 of the blob ULIRGs with IRS
LL1(20-35?m) with int. times of 1.3-9 hours in
order to detect redshifted 7.7?m PAH (GO 30600).
One additional IRS spectrum (SST24) was obtained
from the archive.
B1
B7
B6
15
  • NGC 7714 shown for comparison.
  • The scaling is arbitrary, although the spectra
    have been presented roughly in order of strength
    of the PAH feature.
  • The SST24 J1434110331733 (Dey et al. 2005)
    spectrum has been shifted from z2.7 to z2.4.
  • The yellow percentages are lower limits to PAH
    contribution to 7-9um mid-infrared flux.

PAH
64 41 33 24 lt9 lt7
16
Ly? Blobs Contain Significant PAHs
  • 4 of the 6 ULIRGs contain measurable PAH
    features.
  • Without detection of the rest 5?m continuum
    (observed 16?m), estimates of exact line flux are
    highly uncertain. Removing a simple continuum
    across rest 7-9?m produces a line-to-continuum
    lower limit.
  • Applying a similar wavelength-limited fit to the
    starburst NGC 7714 indicates gt60 PAH
    contribution to mid-IR. One further complication
    is the possible presence of 9.7?m (33?m)
    silicate absorption, which would push PAH fluxes
    lower.
  • The LABs appear to cover a spread from SF to
    AGN-dominated.

17
Conclusions
  • A large percentage of Blobs, particularly the
    brighter ones, detected in mid-IR/submm.
  • SEDs including IRAC seem to indicate at least
    some AGN component likely, BUT
  • Submm-to-mid IR ratios indicate cool, star
    forming galaxies, although only significant at
    higher (zgt3) redshifts.
  • A majority of the mid-IR detected Blobs show
    significant PAH features.
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