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Subaru
Adaptive Optics (AO) Rest-frame V-band Imaging of
Galaxies at z~3 :High Surface Density Disk-like Galaxies ?
Subaru User’s Meeting 20080130
Masayuki Akiyama (Subaru Telescope, NAOJ) Kouji Ohta (DoA, Kyoto Univ.)
Yosuke Minowa (Mitaka, NAOJ)
Naoto Kobayashi (IoA, Univ. of Tokyo)
Ikuru Iwata (OAO, NAOJ)
ApJS accepted, arXiv.0709.2714
Subaru
The morphology of galaxies at z~1 still follows Hubble sequence seen in the nearby universe. How about galaxies further away ?
Naive motivation
3col images of z=1 galaxies in GOODS
Subaru
Rest-frame optical morphology of galaxies reflects the stellar mass distribution of galaxies, and provides important information on the dynamical structure of galaxies.
Rest-frame optical morphology is important
Longer than 4000A break:
Distribution of red and long-lived stars = distribution of stellar mass
Shorter than 4000A break:
Distribution of young stars = distribution of star forming regions
K-band = 5600A @ z=3 Adaptive Optics
0.1-0.2” = 0.8-1.5kpc
Two spiral galaxies at z~1
Subaru
Our main targets are U-band dropout Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs)• Steidel et al. 2003 is the largest sample of spectroscopicaly-
confirmed z~3 galaxies selected by U-dropout Lyman Break method.
• Select a sample not affected by the redshift uncertainty with LBG
An radio galaxy (4C28.58 at z=2.891)
We also examined morphologies of serendipitously observed Distant Red Galaxies (DRGs) in our FoVs. DRG criterion of J-K>2.3 also selects red galaxies at similar redshifts to U-dropout LBGs.
Targets for Observations
Subaru
Observation: Subaru Telescope Intensive Program
Natural guide star AO system on Subaru telescope with IRCS. 154 hours of observation in total. 13 FoVs with 36 LBGs , 1 RadioG., and 7 DRGs are observed. Typical on-source effective integration is 5 hours. Typical PSF size at the target position is FWHM=0.2” (~1.5kpc@z=3)
Subaru 8.2m + AO36 system:
Low-order correction with low-noise Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor
= Good for extra-galactic studies !
Subaru
Observation: Subaru Telescope Intensive Program
AO Guide Star
PSF-reference (15”)FWHM=0.18”
PSF-reference(20”)FWHM=0.20”
LBG@z=3.088
LBG@z=3.261
An example of an FoV with 6.2h integration
Natural guide star AO system on Subaru telescope with IRCS. 154 hours of observation in total. 13 FoVs with 36 LBGs, 1 RadioG., and 7 DRGs are observed. Typical on-source effective integration is 5 hours. Typical PSF size at the target position is FWHM=0.2” (~1.5kpc@z=3)
Subaru
Images of LBGs in order of K-band magnitudes
36 LBGs are observed, 31 are detected 3.5”x3.5” ~ 30kpc x 30kpc
Kvega<21.5
Kvega<22.5
No detection
Subaru
Luminosity vs. J-K color of the LBGs
The observed sample covers a wide range of the rest-frame optical absolute magnitude (between Mv*-0.5 and Mv*+3.0)
The LBG-selected galaxies cover not only the less-massive bluer galaxies (U-V~-0.3) but also the massive redder galaxies (U-V~0.5) similar to DRGs.
Subaru
Offset between optical and K-band Images
Bright LBGs show significant offsets between K-band (rest-frame optical) and seeing-limited optical (rest-frame UV) images. This indicates optical and UV morphologies are different.
Subaru
One component Sersic profile fitting for bright (~Mv*) LBGs
36 LBGs are observed, 31 are detected
Kvega<21.5
Kvega<22.5
No detection
Subaru
Examples of Sersic profile fittings for LBGs with Kvega<21.5
LBGs are described better with n=1 Sersic profile (similar to disk galaxies, less concentrated; green) than n=4 Sersic profiles (similar to spheroidal galaxies, more concetrated; blue).
Subaru
Summary of Sersic fittings for Kvega<21.5 LBGs (+DRGs)
Most of the LBGs (+an RadioG +DRGs) are fitted well with Sersic profiles with n<2.
Subaru
Summary of Sersic fittings for Kvega<21.5 LBGs (+DRGs)
Results of “cloning” simulations show if there are large number of elliptical or bulge-dominated galaxies at z~3, they should be detected, and should be fitted well with large n-index.
Subaru
Concentration vs. Size distribution of Kvega<22.5 LBGs / DRGs
For fainter LBGs/DRGs, profile fittings with free n is not reliable, thus we compared their concentration with those of nearby galaxies. The distribution of LBGs/DRGs are more consistent with n<2 disk-like profile than with n>2 spheroidal-like profiles.
Subaru
Surface brightness & surface stellar mass density
If we assume that the LBGs/DRGs have disk-like morphology, V-band surface brightnesses inferred from the size-luminosity relation is 2.9mag, and 1.7mag brighter than z=0 and z=1 disk galaxies, respectively.
Surface stellar mass densities inferred from the size-stellar mass relation is 3-6 times larger than z=0-1 disk galaxies shown with thick solid line.
z=0-1 from Barden 2005
Subaru
Summary of the results
K-band peaks of bright red LBGs show offsets from the optical positions. Their inside stellar mass distributions are different from the distributions of star forming regions.
Radial profiles of LBGs (+RadioG. +DRGs) are relatively flat, and similar to disk-galaxies in the local universe.
Rest-frame optical surface brightnesses of the z=3 LBGs (DRGs) are brighter than z=0-1 disk galaxies. Surface stellar mass densities of massive LBGs are also larger than z=0-1 disk galaxies.
Subaru
Naive speculation: placing the z~3 galaxies in the growth paths of galaxies
Basically, gas-poor dissipation-less merging produce concentrated structure similar to elliptical galaxies. So in order to maintain the disk-like structure of the galaxies, gas-rich merging process can be a key (e.g., Springel & Hernquist 2005).
Subaru
New era of high-z morphology study with Laser Guide stars
Current sample is not sufficient statistically, especially for bright (<Mv*) galaxies …
In order to confirm the disk-like morphology of z~3 galaxies, the distribution of ellipticities is a next important observable.
Most of the bright (Mv*) z~3 LBGs in Steidel et al. (2003) with Natural Guide stars are observed in this program, thus in order to extend the sample of bright LBGs, we need AO observation with Laser Guide star. • Gemini / Altair / NIRI observation is in the S07B ques of the
current semester, BUT ONLY 7 hours out of 16 hours (A)+8 hours(B), NOT SO CONVINCING EVEN FOR Rank A !!
Stellar dynamics is also important, but difficult.
Subaru
Strong spatial clustering of LBGs indicates that they reside in massive halos and are progenitors of massive galaxies (=elliptical or bulge-dominated galaxies) in the local universe (e.g. Giavalisco & Dickinson 2001).
The apparent sizes of the LBGs in the rest-frame UV-band are similar to the sizes of the spheroids in the local universe (e.g. Steidel et al. 1996).
Therefore, LBGs are thought to be closely related to the formation of the spheroidal (elliptical or bulge) component of galaxies.
Why LBGs to understand formation and evolution of galaxy bulges ?
Subaru
Why Study Rest-frame Optical Morphologies of z~3 Galaxies
Longer than 4000A break:
Distribution of red and long-lived stars = distribution of stellar mass
Shorter than 4000A break:
Distribution of young stars = distribution of star forming regions
K-band Adaptive Optics
0.1-0.2” = 0.8-1.5kpc
HST/NICMOS H-band Observations are not sufficient ! H-band observation only covers up to 4000A in the rest-frame, and star-forming regions can dominate the morphology.
HST/NICMOS sample is limited to a small number of objects in Hubble Deep Field and does not have bright (~Mv*) galaxies at z~3. The physical properties of LBGs clearly depends on the luminosity (more luminous LBGs have redder color, have stronger clustering, have weaker Lya emission, and so on), thus it is still important to observe a sample covering wide luminosity range.
Subaru
“Cloning” z=3 galaxies with GOODS Data
Compare the K-band morphologies of z=3 LBGs with z=0.4-0.6 galaxies in the GOODSN region. K-band@z=3 corresponds to I,z- band @ z=0.4-0.6.
Covered volume @z=0.4-0.6 by GOODSN is comparable to that @z=3 by IRCS/AO LBGs.
2PLE case