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Finding the first galaxies with a magnifying GLASS TOMMASO TREU (UCLA)
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Page 1: Finding the first galaxies with a magnifying GLASSdavide2.bo.astro.it/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/Treu_dec14.pdf · We know there are LBGs Schmidt et al. 2014b 23 22 21 20 19 18 17

Finding the first galaxies with a magnifying GLASS

TOMMASO TREU (UCLA)

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Outline •  When did cosmic re-ionization occur? Who did it?

•  Results from imaging

•  Results from spectroscopy

•  The importance of gravitational lensing

•  The Grism Lens Amplified Survey from Space (GLASS)

•  How about black holes? Measuring black holes masses at high-z with reverberation mapping

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Cosmic reionization

Whodunit? galaxies quasars

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We know there are LBGs

Schmidt et al. 2014b

�23 �22 �21 �20 �19 �18 �17Mabs UV

10�7

10�6

10�5

10�4

10�3

10�2Sc

hech

ter

LF

HUDF/ERS + BoRG13 5�

This Workz ⇠ 6 Bouwens et al. (2014)Bouwens et al. (2011)Bradley et al. (2012) > 5�

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And we will find more!

BORG cycle 22 approved; PI: Trenti

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Not clear if they are sufficient for reionization

Schmidt et al 2014b

Requires magnification with HST

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…but we have not been able to confirm them!

Treu et al. 2013

/Users/tt/papers/BORG-MOSFIRE/BORG/MOSFIREinference/sub2/f1.jpg

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…but we have not been able to confirm them!

Treu et al. 2013

/Users/tt/papers/BORG-MOSFIRE/BORG/MOSFIREinference/sub2/f1.jpg

No lya published so far beyond z=7.6 (Schenker+ 14) despite many attempts (e.g. Pentericci+14, Finkelstein+). Is the optical depth increasing dramatically consistent with the tail-end of reionization (Fontana+10; Treu+14)?

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Is decline in lya a smoking gun of reionization?

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A simple model. Smooth or patchy lya optical depth?

Tilvi et al. 2014

Bayesian inference from observations (Treu et al. 2012, 2013)

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Patchy!

Pentericci et al. 2014 (models by TT); See also Tilvi et al. 2014

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The importance of gravitational lensing

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Lensing magnification effects in “blank fields”

Mason et al. 2014; see also Wyithe et al. 2011

1’’

Strong and intermediate lensing

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Lensing magnification effects in “blank fields”

Mason et al. 2014; using pangloss by Collett et al. 2013

“Weak lensing” magnification for BORG fields

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The effect is small now…

Mason et al. 2014

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… but it will be important..

Mason+ 2014; LF from Schmidt+2014b and Bouwens+2014

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… to infer the bright end

Mason+14; LF from Schmidt+14b, Munoz+12

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Of course, lensing is the only way to probe the faint end

Schmidt et al 2014

Requires magnification with HST

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Key science drivers •  When did cosmic re-ionization occur? Who did it?

•  Observing Lya at z=5.5-13.0

•  How do gas and metals cycle in and out of galaxies? •  Spatially resolved metallicity of galaxies

•  How does environment affect galaxy evolution? •  Maps of star formation in cluster galaxies at z~0.5

•  How are luminous and dark matter distributed in clusters?

•  Cluster mass models

•  Supernovae cosmology •  Discovery of high-z magnified supernovae Ia

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The tool: HST grisms

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Wavelength coverage and observational strategy

•  Spectroscopy of 10 clusters, including HFF and CLASH •  140 orbits cycle 21 (PI Treu) glass.physics.ucsb.edu

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GLASS in context

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A long awaited discovery Supernova “Refsdal”

GLASS

Kelly, Rodney,Treu et al. 2014

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A long awaited discovery Supernova “Refsdal”

Sharon & Johnson 2014 Kelly, Rodney,Treu et al. 2014

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Key science drivers •  When did cosmic re-ionization occur? Who did it?

•  Observing Lya at z=5.5-13.0

•  How do gas and metals cycle in and out of galaxies? •  Spatially resolved metallicity of galaxies

•  How does environment affect galaxy evolution? •  Maps of star formation in cluster galaxies at z~0.5

•  How are luminous and dark matter distributed in clusters?

•  Cluster mass models

•  Supernovae cosmology •  Discovery of high-z magnified supernovae Ia

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Strengths

•  Spectrum of everything in the field of view

•  High sensitivity owing to lensing magnification

•  Excellent photometric redshift owing to HFF/CLASH photometry

•  Uninterrupted wavelength coverage, potentially able to detect weaker and redder nebular lines

•  Many l.o.s reduce cosmic variance and lya patchiness effects (c.f. Robertson et al. 2014)

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Confirmed lya in multiply imaged sources at z=6.1 and 6.4 (Boone+13, Balestra+13, Vanzella+14)

Schmidt+ 2014

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Key science drivers •  When did cosmic re-ionization occur? Who did it?

•  Observing Lya at z=5.5-13.0

•  How do gas and metals cycle in and out of galaxies? •  Spatially resolved metallicity of galaxies

•  How do environment affect galaxy evolution? •  Maps of star formation in cluster galaxies at z~0.5

•  How are luminous and dark matter distributed in clusters?

•  Cluster mass models

•  Supernovae cosmology •  Discovery of high-z magnified supernovae Ia

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Metallicity gradients as a test of feedback models

Jones+14 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0

Redshift

-0.3

-0.2

-0.1

0.0

0.1M

etal

licity

gra

dien

t (de

x/kp

c)

G13 enhanced feedbackG13 normal feedback

M03R10S12Y11J13

GLASS arc 4

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Metallicity gradients: resolution effects

Yuan+13

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Metallicity gradients: current state of affairs

Ü  Only a handful of measurement achieve sufficient resolution by combining AO resolution with lensing Ü  They seem to prefer steep gradients (hence normal

feedback)

Ü  Lower resolution measurement seem to point at shallower profiles Ü  Instrumental effect or evidence for enhanced feedback or

different modes of metal enrichment?

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Superb resolution, sensitivity and wavelength coverage

Jones+14

-1

0

1 arc 4.1

1.45

-1

0

1

arcs

econ

ds

arc 3.1

1.45

-1 0 1arcseconds

-1

0

1 arc 14.1

1.00 1.05 1.10wavelength (µm)

[O II] [Ne III]

1.20 1.25 1.30 1.35 1.40 1.45wavelength (µm)

Ha H` [O III]

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Metallicity maps and gradients

Jones+14

arc 4

log Y* [M* pc-2]

0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5

12+log O/H

7.0 8.1 9.2

arc 4

0 1 2 3 4 5radius (kpc)

7.0

7.5

8.0

8.5

9.0

12 +

log

O/H

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An intriguing result

Jones+14

2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0Redshift

-0.3

-0.2

-0.1

0.0

0.1

Met

allic

ity g

radi

ent (

dex/

kpc)

G13 enhanced feedbackG13 normal feedback

M03R10S12Y11J13

GLASS arc 4

•  The shallow gradients measured by GLASS are real

•  Consistent with enhanced feedback, or perhaps gas has been stirred by the interaction with the two companion galaxies?

•  Analysis of 20 systems in GLASS will provide the answer

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The faint end of the mass-metallicity relation

7.0 7.5 8.0 8.5 9.0 9.5 10.0log M*/MO •

1.0

0.8

0.6

0.4

0.2

0.0

log

[O II

I] /

[O II

]

7.47.6

7.8

8.0

8.2

8.4

12 +

log

O/H

GLASS, z=1.85H13, z=1.3-2.3B13, z=2.0-2.5

Jones+14 GLASS will measure it for 100s of objects down to 107 Msun!

Henry+14; WISP

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Summary •  Something very interesting is happening at z>8: •  The IGM is becoming neutral • Or galaxies are changing rapidly

•  We have not detected the sources of ionizing photons, but great progress will come with GLASS and the Frontier fields

•  The evolution of metallicity gradients is still very much an open question. GLASS will be a major step forward and test feedback and outflows models

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Coda:

what about quasars?

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Measuring black hole masses at z>0

•  Broad Hβ width measures the kinematics of the gas orbiting the black hole

•  Size from L •  Overall uncertainty

on BH mass ~0.4-0.5 dex

Treu et al. 2014

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Reverberation Mapping

Ring of gas with radius r Gas along line of sight to observer will appear to respond with no delay Gas that is furthest from observer will appear to have response delayed by 2r/c

Mean lag time is r/c

Blandford & McKee 1982

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Example of traditional results

– 52 –

Table 12. Rest-frame Broad Hβ Line-Width Measurements

Mean Spectrum Rms SpectrumObject σline FWHM σline FWHM

(km s−1) (km s−1) (km s−1) (km s−1)

Mrk 142 1116 ± 22 1462 ± 2 859 ± 102 1368 ± 379SBS1116+583A 1552 ± 36 3668 ± 186 1528 ± 184 3604 ± 1123Arp 151 2006 ± 24 3098 ± 69 1252 ± 46 2357 ± 142

Mrk 1310 1209 ± 42 2409 ± 24 755 ± 138 1602 ± 250Mrk 202 867 ± 40 1471 ± 18 659 ± 65 1354 ± 250

NGC4253 1088 ± 37 1609 ± 39 516 ± 218 834 ± 1260NGC4748 1009 ± 27 1947 ± 66 657 ± 91 1212 ± 173NGC5548 4266 ± 65 12771 ± 71 4270 ± 292 11177 ± 2266

NGC6814 1918 ± 36 3323 ± 7 1610 ± 108 3277 ± 297

Table 13. Virial Products and Derived Black Hole Masses

Object cτcentσ2line/G MBH

a

(106 M⊙) (106 M⊙)

Mrk 142 0.40+0.12−0.14 2.17+0.68

−0.75

SBS1116+583A 1.05+0.33−0.29 5.80+1.84

−1.58

Arp 151 1.22+0.16−0.22 6.72+0.89

−1.19

Mrk1310 0.41+0.12−0.13 2.24+0.68

−0.69

Mrk202 0.26+0.15−0.10 1.42+0.83

−0.56

NGC4253 0.32+0.21−0.20 1.76+1.15

−1.11

NGC4748 0.47+0.16−0.21 2.57+0.90

−1.14

NGC5548 14.9+3.4−4.9 82+19

−27

NGC6814 3.36+0.54−0.56 18.5+3.0

−3.1

aAssuming f = 5.5.

Bentz et al. 2009

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A new approach: Geometric and dynamical models

Pancoast, Brewer & Treu, 2011, 2014

!"

#

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Geometric and dynamical models: Application to Arp 151

Brewer, Treu, Pancoast et al 2011

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Pancoast et al. 2014b

MBH to 0.15-0.3 dex precision!!

Inferences about MBH and BLR structure

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Reverberation mapping •  At z~0, several objects have been studied with

sufficient quality (LAMP08/11 and Peterson Group)

•  At z>0, very hard with traditional telescopes (e.g. Woo et al. 2007). Large program under way with LCOGT robotic telescopes (PI: Horne).

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The end

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Credits •  K.Schmidt (UCSB) •  R.Barone (Melbourne) •  M.Bradac (UCD) •  L.Bradley (STScI) •  G.Brammer (STScI) •  B.Brewer (Auckland) •  T.Collett (IoA) •  M.Dijkstra (UoO) •  A.Dressler (OCIW) •  A.Fontana (Roma) •  R.Gavazzi (IAP) •  A.Henry (NASA) •  A.Hoag (UCD) •  T.Jones (UCSB)

•  P.Kelly (UCB) •  K.Huang (UCD) •  M.Malkan (UCLA) •  P.Marshall (Stanford) •  C.Mason (UCSB) •  A.Pancoast (UCSB) •  L.Pentericci (Roma) •  B.Poggianti (Padova) •  M.Stiavelli (STScI) •  M.Trenti (IoA) •  A.vdLinden (Stanford/Dark) •  B.Vulcani (IPMU) •  X.Wang (UCSB) •  S.Wyithe (Melbourne)

borg.physics.ucsb.edu, glass.physics.ucsb.edu


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