Title: Quasars and Galaxies at the Highest Redshifts
1Quasars and Galaxies at the Highest Redshifts
- Richard McMahon
- Institute of Astronomy
- University of Cambridge, UK
Crafoord Symposium, Stockholm, Sep 2005
2Some Background Information
- Main motivation is that objects at high redshift
are young due to the light travel time. e.g. we
can see objects that existed in the Universe
before the Earth formed. - Quasars are the most luminous members of the
Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) family. - MBlt -23 AGN light exceeds energy from host
galaxy stellar light. - Quasars are intrinsically luminous bright beacons
that are easier to observe that normal galaxies
like the Milky Way. Also illuminate intervening
material. i.e. IGM - Energy source is accretion of matter onto a
super-massive black hole (107 to 109 Msol ) - Rees, 1984, ARAA, 22, 471, Black Hole Models
for Active Galactic Nuclei - Recent observations have shown that most massive
galaxies in the local Universe host super-massive
black holes. The BH mass is correlated with the
stellar bulge mass implies that the formation and
evolution of BH and the stellar component in
galaxies related (Magorrian et al, 1998
Ferrarese Merrit, 2000 Gebhardt etal, 2000) - Rees, 1989, RvMA, 2, 1, Is There a Massive Black
Hole in Every Galaxy? - Radiative feedback from quasars may play a major
role in formation and evolution of galaxies.
3Look Back Time
Redshift Look back Time (Gyr) Age of Universe
0 0.0 13.5 Gyr
0.5 5.0 8.5
1.0 7.7 5.7 Gyr
3.0 11.4 2.1 Gyr
6.0 12.5 915 Myr
8.0 12.8 630 Myr
10 13.0 460Myr
30 13.4 97 Myr
100 13.45 16 Myr
1000 13.46 0.42 Myr
?matter, ??, H0 0.3, 0.7, 70
Formation of Solar System 5 Billion year ago
(5Gyr)
4Highest Redshift History
Quasars
Galaxies
5Highest Redshift History
Gunn
Quasars
Galaxies
6The Observational Challenges in surveys for
surveys for high redshift objects
- Experimentally difficult because
- Distant objects are very faint.
- Rest frame UV radiation is red-shifted to regions
of observed sky spectrum where night-time sky is
bright. - Foreground objects are much more numerous so the
experimental selection technique has to be very
efficient. - May be undetectable, in a reasonable amount of
time using current technology i.e. may need to
wait or develop the technological solution.
7Basic observational principles in optical surveys
for higher redshift quasars and galaxies
- UV drop-out due to
- Intrinsic or Intervening Neutral Hyrogen Lyman
limit at 912Ã…. - Intervening Lyman-a forest (?lt1216Ã…)
- Emission line searches based on
Lyman-?(?rest1216Ã…) emission from ionized
Hydrogen.
83C273 and z3.62 comparison
Evolution of HI 3C273 spectrum from HST/FOC
z0 z3.6 QSO HIRES/Keck spectrum from M. Rauch
9z4 Model Quasar SDSS filter set
10Multi-colour Selection and discovery of zgt4
Quasars (pre-SDSS)
Only two wavebands are needed. In practice this
results in some(50) contamination by M-stars
Cambridge-APM Surveys See Storrie-Lombardi,
Irwin, McMahon and Hook, 2001. n49 zgt4
quasars 15, 000 deg2
11Lyman-? (?rest1216Ã…)
Quasars at z ? 5
C,N,O,Si .
Lyman-? Forest
z 4.90, Schneider, Schmidt, Gunn, 1991, AJ, 98,
1951
z 5.0, Fan with Guun, Lupton et al. 1999 (SDSS
collaboration)
12z5 quasar with SDSS filters
13z6 quasar with SDSS filter set
14SDSS Surveys for zgt5 Quasars
Fan, et al.
- Color selection of i-drop out quasars
- At zgt5.5, Lya enters z-band ? quasars have red
i-z colour - Technical Challenges
- Rarest objects
- One z6 quasar every 500 deg2
- Key contaminant elimination
- Major contaminants are L and T type Brown Dwarfs
? additional IR photometry
15zgt5.7 quasars
Fan, Narayanan, Lutpon, Strauss et al.
- Separating z6 quasars and Brown Dwarfs
- Follow-up IR photometry
- quasar z-J 1
- L to T dwarf stars
- z-J gt 2
Zgt5.7 quasar
16SDSS compilation zgt5.7 quasars
17Edited Quasar compilation (pre-SDSS)
18Quasar compilation (now with SDSS)
?
DR3QSO 50, 000 quasars
19Higher Redshift Quasar Surveys
- Need to work in Infra-Red
- Different detector technology
- Sky brightness problem
- Two relevant projects
- UK Infra Red Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS)
- WFCAM on UKIRT
- Survey started in May 2005
- Pipeline Data processing centre(CambridgeEdinburg
h) - VISTA (will be an ESO telescope) (Surveys will
start in early 2007?)
20The Night Sky Problem
Broad band sky gets brighter as you go to redder
wavelengths
Waveband Central Wavelength (Angstroms) Dark Sky Brightness Redshift Lyman-? (1216Ã…)
B 4400 22.1 2.6
V 5500 21.3 3.5
R 6000 20.4 3.9
I 7500 19.0 5.2
Z 8900 18.0 6.4
Y 10,300 17.0 7.5
J 12,500 16.0 9.3
H 16,500 14.0 12.6
K 22,000 13.0 16.3
21z6 quasar (SDSS filter set)
22z7 quasar (SDSS filter set)
23z8 quasar (SDSS filter set)
24z6 quasar (SDSS filter set WFCAM)
25z7 UKIDSS/VISTA Filters
26z8 UKIDSS/VISTA Filters
27z9 UKIDSS/VISTA Filters
28z10 UKIDSS/VISTA Filters
29UK Infra Red Telescope (UKIRT) Wide Field Camera
(WFCAM)
- 3.6m telescope
- Mauna Kea, Hawaii
- 4x2048x2048 Hawaii II arrays
- 0.4 arcsec pixels
- 0.21 sq. degs / exposure
- Not contiguous
- Filters
- Z,Y,J,H,K,H2-S(1),Br-g
30UKIRT Wide Field Cameraon Telescope Simulator
WFCAM cryostat
31UKIDSS overview5 elements of UKIDSS(5-7 year
duration)
Sub-Survey Bands Limit (K) Area deg2 nights
Large Area Survey LAS YJHK 18.4 4000 262
Deep Extragalactic Survey DXS JK 21.0 35 118
Ultra Deep Survey UDS JHK 23.0 0.77 296
Galactic Plane Survey GPS JHK 19.0 1800 186
Galactic Clusters Survey GCS JHK 18.7 1600 84
32UKIDSS Science goals
Cool Universe - Y brown dwarfs Obscured
Universe - Galactic plane - reddened
AGN, starbursts, EROs High-redshift Universe -
4000A break zgt1 high redshift galaxy clusters
- Quasars at zgt6.5
33Current Status of WFCAMUKIDSS
- Instrument started commissioning on-sky phase in
Nov, 2004 - Science Verification started in April 2005
- UKIDSS Survey started in May, 2005
- Instrument taken off telecope in June, 2005
- As planned
- Survey restarted end of Aug, 2005
- Should have 100deg2 of data by end of 2005
34Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for
Astronomy
- 4-m wide field survey telescope at European
Southern Observatory (ESO) , Paranal near the VLT
site. - Initially Infra Red camera only. (i.e. an IR
SDSS) - 75 time for large surveys. (e.g. Southern
SDSS) - UK project (consortium of 18 Universities funded
in 1999) - Principal Investigator Jim Emerson (QMUL,
London) - Now part of UK ESO late joining fee.
- Will become ESO facility on completion of
construction and commissioning in late 2006.
35The Heart of VISTA the IR focal plane
- 16 IR arrays, each 2048 x 2048 sparse filled
mosaic - 0.60 deg2 covered by detectors
- 0.34 arcsec/pix.
- 6 consecutive offset pointings give a
continuous region - 1.5deg by 1.0deg i.e. 1.5deg2
- every pixel covered by 2 pointings.
36Comparison of IR camera field sizes
Moon!
37Dome May 05
38Summer 2005
39- Design Reference Programme (epoch 2001 400
clear nights) - used for Project Planning
- ESO Survey Call for Proposal is being planned
- Z filter now included
Survey name           Area (deg2) Y J H Ks Clear nights (ex overheads)
(Vega, 5s) (Vega, 5s) (Vega, 5s) (Vega, 5s)
Very deep 15 23.8 22.5 22.0 55
Deep 100 22.8 21.5 21.0 57
Wide (high-gal lat) 3000 22.0 21.2 20.0 19.5 100
Galactic Plane Magellanic Clouds 1500 21.5 20.5 19.5 19.0 45
Sky Atlas 20000 20.2 18.2 150
40Highest Redshift Galaxies
41Searches for higher redshift quasars and galaxies
- UV drop-out technique survey technique due to
- Intrinsic or Intervening Lyman limit 912Ã….
- Intervening Lyman-a forest (?lt1216Ã…)
- Emission line searches based on Lyman-? emission
from ionized Hydrogen.
42Highest Redshift History
Quasars
Galaxies
43High Redshift Lyman-? emission lines
surveysAstrophysical principles for Success
- Partridge and Peebles, 1967, Are Young Galaxies
visible? - Minimum Flux limit
- Previous surveysin the early 1990s were based on
the simple paradigm of a monolithic collapse. - expected star formation rates of 50-500 Msol yr-1
- i.e. the SCUBA/FIR Population?
- Assume SFR detection limits more appropriate to a
slowly forming disc or sub-galactic units in a
halo - i.e. 1-3 Msol yr-1
- 1.0-2.0 ? 10-17erg s-1 cm-2 at z4
- Minimum Volume
- search a comoving volume within which you expect
to find the progenitors of around 10 L galaxies.
(.i.e. Milky Way mass) - Local density 1.40.2 ? 10-2 h50 Mpc-3 (e.g.
Loveday etal, 1992) - minimum is 1000 Mpc3
44Potential Narrow band filter locations
5.7 6.6 6.9
45z5.7 for Lyman-?
z6.6 for Lyman-?
46Basic experimental principle
- Basic principle is to survey regions where the
sky sky spectrum is darkest in between the
intense airglow. - Gaps in the OH airglow picket fence
- Lyman-alpha redshifts of gaps in
Optical-Silicon CCD regime - 7400 Ã… z5.3
- 8120 Ã… z5.7 used extensively
- 9200 Ã… z6.6 used extensively
- 9600 Ã… z6.9 no results yet
- CCDs have poor QE and sky relatively bright
47Summary of known spectroscopically confirmed
zgt6.0 galaxies
- Narrow Band Surveys
- zgt6.0 n13
- from Hu et al. 2002(1), Kodeira et al. 2003(2),
Rhoads et al 2004(1), Taniguchi et al. 2005(9) - z(max)6.6
- Other Surveys
- 2 other zgt6 emission line selected galaxies
- Kurk et al, 2004(1) Stern etal, 2005(1)
- Ellis etal, lensed search z7 candidate (no line
emission photo-z) - i-drops Nagao et al, 2004(1) Stanway etal,
2004(1) - Quasars SDSS n5 (6.0lt zlt6.5)
48?(observed Lyman-?)9190Ã… ?(rest
Lyman-?)1216Ã… Redshift6.558
Hu, etal, 2002
49z6.597 galaxy (Taniguchi et al, PASJ, 2005)
- Survey
- Subaru 8.2m
- Suprimecam 34 x 27 0.2/pixel
- 132Ã… filter centred at 9196Ã…
- Exposure time 54,000 secs (15hrs)
- Results
- 58 candidates
- 9 spectroscpoically confirmed with z6.6
9235Ang
redshift 6.597
zAB 26.49
i-z gt1.72
50Composite spectrum of z5.7 candidate galaxies
z0.6 unresolved and 4959 line
OIII4959
OIII(5007Ã…)
z1.2 note resolved doublet
OII(3727Ã…)
z5.7 note asymmetry
n18 galaxies
Lyman-?(1216Ã…)
Hu, Cowie, Capak, McMahon, Hayashino, Komiyama,
2004, AJ, 127, 563
51z5.7 Lyman-?(1216Ã…) emitters
Observed wavelength (Angstroms)
52z1.2 OII3727 doublet emitters
Observed wavelength (Angstroms)
53The Night Sky Problem
Broad band sky gets brighter as you go to redder
wavelengths
Waveband Central Wavelength (Angstroms) Dark Sky Brightness Redshift Lyman-? (1216Ã…)
B 4400 22.1 2.6
V 5500 21.3 3.5
R 6000 20.4 3.9
I 7500 19.0 5.2
Z 9000 18.0 6.4
J 12,500 16.0 9.3
H 16,500 14.0 12.6
K 21,000 13.0 16.3
54Narrow band searches in the near Infrared
- OH lines contribute 95 of sky background in
1.0-1.7?m range - i.e. 20 times the continuum emission.
- Filters need to have widths of 10Ã… or 0.1 to
avoid OH lines. - c.f. 100Ã… in the optical
- NB. Narrower band means you solve a smaller
redshift range i.e. volume so wide field is
needed. - Some of the technical issues
- Filter design and manufacture
- Field angle shift of central wavelength
- Out of band blocking
55Infrared OH Sky Observations Mahaira etal, 1993,
PASP
GOOD NEWS The 1.0 to 1.8 micron IR sky is very
dark between the OH lines which contain 95 of
broad band background.
THE NOT SO GOOD NEWS The narrowest gaps are
narrower than in the optical filter widths of
0.1 per cent are needed compared with 1 filters
in optical. THIS IS A TECHNICAL CHALLENGE WE
HAVE SOLVED see Ian Parrys talk
56DAZLE Dark Age Z Lyman Explorer McMahon, Parry,
Bland-Hawthorn(AAO), Horton et al
IR narrow band imager with OH discrimination at
R1000 i.e. 0.1 filter FOV 6.9 ? 6.9 arcmin 2048
Rockwell Hawaii-II 0.2/pixel Sensitivity 2.
10-18 erg cm-2 sec-1(5?), 10hrs on VLT i.e. 1
M? yr-1 at z8
Sky emission and absorption spectrum around 1.06
and 1.33 microns showing DAZLE filter pairs for
Lyman ? at z7.7, 9.9 other gaps are at 8.8, 9.2
57DAZLE Digital state
- 3D CAD drawing of DAZLE Final Design on VLT
UT3(Melipal) Visitor Focus Nasmyth Platform. - UT3 optical axis is 2.5m above the platform floor
- grey shading shows the DAZLE cold room(-40C)which
is 2.5m(l) x 1.75m(w) x 3m(h). - Blue Dewar at top contains the 2048 x 2048 pixel
IR detector
58Dazle in Cambridge Laboratory(Aug 2005)
Refridgeration Box
59Highest Redshift History
Quasars
Galaxies
60Quasar compilation (now with SDSS)
?
DR3QSO 50, 000 quasars
61Some Future ground based surveys for higher
redshift Galaxies and Quasars
- zgt7 galaxies
- Dark Ages Z Lyman-? Explorer (DAZLE) on the VLT
(to start Jan 2006) - zgt7 quasars
- UKIDSS UK Intra-Red Deep Sky Survey (started May
2005 5 year survey project) - UKIRT (Hawaii) WFCAM
- ESO members Public Access from late 2005)
Worldwide 18month - VISTA Surveys (to start early 2007)
62FINAL SLIDE