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EXTREME EMISSION-LINE GALAXIES IN CANDELS: BROADBAND-SELECTED, STARBURSTING DWARF GALAXIES ATz> 1

Authors :
Steve Finkelstein
Kamson Lai
Knud Jahnke
David C. Koo
Yicheng Guo
K. S. Lee
Jonathan R. Trump
S. M. Faber
Adam G. Riess
Mark Dickinson
Guillermo Barro
Stijn Wuyts
Amber N. Straughn
J. A. Newman
A. van der Wel
Ben Weiner
Brett Salmon
Nimish P. Hathi
Claudia Scarlata
Duilia F. de Mello
Norman A. Grogin
D. D. Kocevski
H. W. Rix
M. L. N. Ashby
H. C. Ferguson
S. P. Willner
S. Rodney
Eric F. Bell
Anton M. Koekemoer
E. G. McGrath
Kuang-Han Huang
James Dunlop
Source :
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2011.

Abstract

We identify an abundant population of extreme emission line galaxies (EELGs) at redshift z~1.7 in the Cosmic Assembly Near-IR Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS) imaging from Hubble Space Telescope/Wide Field Camera 3 (HST/WFC3). 69 EELG candidates are selected by the large contribution of exceptionally bright emission lines to their near-infrared broad-band magnitudes. Supported by spectroscopic confirmation of strong [OIII] emission lines -- with rest-frame equivalent widths ~1000\AA -- in the four candidates that have HST/WFC3 grism observations, we conclude that these objects are galaxies with 10^8 Msol in stellar mass, undergoing an enormous starburst phase with M_*/(dM_*/dt) of only ~15 Myr. These bursts may cause outflows that are strong enough to produce cored dark matter profiles in low-mass galaxies. The individual star formation rates and the co-moving number density (3.7x10^-4 Mpc^-3) can produce in ~4 Gyr much of the stellar mass density that is presently contained in 10^8-10^9 Msol dwarf galaxies. Therefore, our observations provide a strong indication that many or even most of the stars in present-day dwarf galaxies formed in strong, short-lived bursts, mostly at z>1.<br />Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ; 10 pages; 6 figures; 1 table

Details

ISSN :
15384357 and 0004637X
Volume :
742
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d8f8a938589127674e41e1ac70735c2a