SIMBAD references

2018MNRAS.476.1726J - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 476, 1726-1740 (2018/May-2)

Mapping UV properties throughout the Cosmic Horseshoe: lessons from VLT-MUSE.

JAMES B.L., AUGER M., PETTINI M., STARK D.P., BELOKUROV V. and CARNIANI S.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present the first spatially resolved rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) study of the gravitationally lensed galaxy, the 'Cosmic Horseshoe' (J1148+1930) at z = 2.38. Our gravitational lens model shows that the system is made up of four star-forming regions, each ∼4-8 kpc2 in size, from which we extract four spatially exclusive regional spectra. We study the interstellar and wind absorption lines, along with C III] doublet emission lines, in each region to investigate any variation in emission/absorption line properties. The mapped C III] emission shows distinct kinematical structure, with velocity offsets of ∼±50 km s–1 between regions suggestive of a merging system, and a variation in equivalent width that indicates a change in ionization parameter and/or metallicity between the regions. Absorption line velocities reveal a range of outflow strengths, with gas outflowing in the range -200 <= v (km s–1) <= -50 relative to the systemic velocity of that region. Interestingly, the strongest gas outflow appears to emanate from the most diffuse star-forming region. The star formation rates remain relatively constant (∼8-16 M yr–1), mostly due to large uncertainties in reddening estimates. As such, the outflows appear to be 'global' rather than 'locally' sourced. We measure electron densities with a range of log (Ne) = 3.92-4.36 cm–3, and point out that such high densities may be common when measured using the C III] doublet due to its large critical density. Overall, our observations demonstrate that while it is possible to trace variations in large-scale gas kinematics, detecting inhomogeneities in physical gas properties and their effects on the outflowing gas may be more difficult. This study provides important lessons for the spatially resolved rest-frame UV studies expected with future observatories, such as James Webb Space Telescope.

Abstract Copyright: © 2018 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): gravitational lensing: strong - galaxies: evolution - galaxies: ISM - galaxies: star formation - ultraviolet: galaxies

Simbad objects: 5

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:2018MNRAS.476.1726J and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu