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IFU observations of the high- z Universe Constraints on feedback from deep field observations with SAURON and VIMOS Joris Gerssen

IFU observations of the high-z Universe

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Constraints on feedback from deep field observations with SAURON and VIMOS. IFU observations of the high-z Universe. Joris Gerssen. Overview. Until a decade ago only extreme objects were known in the distant universe - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

IFU observations of the high-z UniverseConstraints on feedback from deep field observations with

SAURON and VIMOS

Joris Gerssen

Page 2: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

Overview

• Until a decade ago only extreme objects were known in the distant universe

• Since then photometric redshift surveys and narrow band surveys identified ( at z ~2 to ~4) – Lyman Break Galaxies

– Ly-alpha galaxies

• Observational constraints on galaxy formation and evolution– e.g. morphology, star formation history, luminosty

functions, etc.

Page 3: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

• Among the drivers behind this advancement are– The 10m class telescopes and instruments

– Hubble Space Telescope

– Theoretical understanding of structure formation

• Integral Field Spectropscopy (IFS) is a recent development with great potential to further galaxy evolution studies

Page 4: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

Integral Field Spectroscopy

Data cube: f(x, y, lambda)

- VIMOS- SINFONI- MUSE- SAURON- PMAS- …

Field-of-View few (tens) of arcsec

Spectral resolution: R ~200 to ~2500

Typical properties:

Page 5: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

High-redshift science with IFUs

• (e.g. list of MUSE science drivers)

• Formation and evolution of galaxies:

– High-z Ly- emitters

– Feedback

– Luminosity functions (PPAK, VIRUS)

– Reionization

– ...

Page 6: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

Feedback

• A longstanding problem in galaxy formation is to understand how gas cools to form galaxies

• Discrepancy between observed baryon fraction (~8%) and predicted fraction (> 50% )

• To solve this “cosmic cooling crisis” the cooling of gas needs to be balanced by the injection of energy (SNe/AGN)

Page 7: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

Feedback• Galactic outflows driven by AGN and/or SNe

– Resolve discrepancy between observed and predicted baryon fraction

– Terminate star formation

– Enrich IGM

NGC 6240 (ULIRG)M82 (starburst)

Page 8: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

IFU Deep Field Observations

• Deep SAURON & VIMOS observations of blank sky

• But in practice centered on QSOs/high-z galaxies

– observe extended Ly- halo emission

– serendipitous detections

Page 9: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

SAURON Deep Fields

• The SAURON IFU is optimized for the study of internal kinematics in early type galaxies

• DF observations of: SSA22a, SSA22b, HB89• Redshift range 2.9 - 3.3 (4900 - 5400 Angstrom)• Texp ~10 hours • FoV: 33 x 41 arcsec, R ~ 1500

Page 10: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

SSA22a

SAURON observations: overview

SSA22b HB89 1738+350

Page 11: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

SSA22b (z = 3.09) Wilman, Gerssen, Bower, Morris, Bacon, de Zeeuw & Davies (Nature, 14 July 2005)

VolView rendering

Page 12: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

Ly- distribution

1.0 arcsec = 7.6 kpc

Page 13: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

Line profiles

• Emission lines ~ 1000 km/s wide

• Emission peaks shift by a few 100 km/s

• Absorption minima differ by at most a few tens of km/s

• Ly alpha is resonant scattered, naturally double peaked

• Yet, absorption by neutral gas is a more straighforward explanation

Page 14: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

Model cartoon

Page 15: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

SSA22b results

• Assuming shock velocities of several 100 km/s

• Shell travels ~100 kpc in a few 108yr• Shell can cool to ~104 K in this time

– Implied by the Voigt profile b parameter– Required to be in photoionization equilibrium

• Implied shell mass of 1011 M

• Kinetic energy of the shell ~1058 erg• About 1060 erg available (IMF)• Superwind model provides a consistent, and

energetically feasible description

Page 16: IFU observations of the high-z Universe
Page 17: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

Comparison with SSA22a

• SSA22a– Kinematical structure more irregular– Luminous sub-mm source

• Suggests that a similar outflow may have just begun

• Probe a wider range of galaxies:– SCUBA galaxy (observed last year)– Radio galaxy (observed one last week)– LBG (a few hours last week)

Page 18: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

SINFONI observations of SSA22b

Foerster Schreiber et al.

Constrain the stellar properties

Link them to the superwind

Scheduled for P77 (B)

Page 19: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

Serendipitous emitters

• The correlation of Ly-alpha emitters with the distribution of intergalactic gas provides another route to observationally constrain feedback

• Based on Adelberger et al (2003) who find that the mean transmission increases close to a QSO – This result is derived from 3 Ly- sources only

Page 20: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

Mean IGM transmission

Adelberger et al. 2003

Adelberger et al. 2005

z ~ 3 z ~ 2.5

Page 21: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

Advantage of IFUs

• IFUs cover a smaller FOV then narrow band imaging, but– IFUs are better matched to Ly-alpha line width

– Do not require spectroscopic follow-up

– Directly probe the volume around a central QSO

• Thus, IFUs should be more efficient than narrow band surveys

Page 22: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

IFU observations

• Search the data cube for emitters• Use the QSO spectrum to measure the gas distribution

– Likely require the UVES spectra • Available:

– One SAURON data cube– 2 of 4 VIMOS IFU data cubes

SAURON example: HB89 +1738+350

Page 23: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

VIMOS 'QSO2'

z = 3.92, Texp = 9 hoursLR mode

Page 24: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

Search by eye for candidatesNeed to identify/apply an automated procedure

Page 25: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

Detection algorithms

• Matched kernel search– Many false detections

• IDL algorithm (van Breukelen & Jarvis 2005)

• FLEX: X-ray based technique (Braito et al. 2005)

• ELISE-3D: sextractor based (Foucaud 2005)

Page 26: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

van Breukelen & Jarvis (MNRAS 2005)

• Similar data set:

– Radio galaxy at z = 2.9

– same instrumental set up

– similar exposure time

• Yet, they find more (14) and brighter Ly- emitters– Using an automated source

finder

Page 27: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

In progress

• A direct comparison with the van Breukelen results

– Obtained their data from ESO archive

– And reduced and analyzed it with our procedures

• Preliminary results are in reasonably good agreement– ‘Our’ data appears somwhat more noisy

– Find their emitters and their new type-II quasar (Jarvis et al 2005)

Page 28: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

Preliminary results

• Number density of Ly alpha emitters agrees with model predictions (fortuitous)– The VIMOS fields contain 5 - 14 emitters

– Models (Deliou 2005) predict 9 in a similar volume

• IFUs are sensitive to at least a few 10E-18 erg/s/cm2

Page 29: IFU observations of the high-z Universe

Summary

• IFUs provide a uniquely powerful way to study the haloes around high redshift proto-galaxies

• Volumetric data are an efficient way to search for Ly-alpha galaxies– An alternative method to constrain feedback

• IFUs are a very valuable new tool to study the formation and evolution of galaxies