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Metals & Star Formation at High Redshift

Metals & Star Formation at High Redshift. Len Cowie STScI March 2006. Metals & Star formation at z=6 & (re)ionization. We know the intergalactic gas is ionized at z= 6. We now know that there are substantial amounts of metals in the intergalactic/galactic gas at z=6. NEW!

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Metals & Star Formation at High Redshift

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  1. Metals & Star Formation at High Redshift Len Cowie STScI March 2006

  2. Metals & Star formation at z=6 &(re)ionization • We know the intergalactic gas is ionized at z= 6. • We now know that there are substantial amounts of metals in the intergalactic/galactic gas at z=6. NEW! • What are the sources that did this? • Are the various star formation rates that we have consistent? • Do we have enough light to understand the ionizationand metals?

  3. Metals in the IGM --- Questions • Can we see metals at high redshift? YES !! • How does the early Universe evolve into the low redshift universe? • How does the overall star formation history relate to the history of IGM metal enhancement? Are they consistent? NO for break measurements!!

  4. Metals in the IGM • How can we measure the ultra-high z star formation? • Most direct – measure the metal content of the universe at high redshift. High-z metals come from high-z sources and provide an integrated measure of the preceding star formation. • (Always going to be a lower limit since we will miss some of the metals, ionization corrections, etc….)

  5. Early very massive stars , Pop III? Small galaxies at z = 6 - ?? Superwinds at z > 2-3 ? How do metals get into the IGM ? Now we can measure metals to z = 6 OR OR

  6. How do we measure metals at ultra-high z? Apart from the neutral hydrogen of the Lyman forest, we have only a very limited number of absorption lines that we can detect in the intergalactic gas : • Most of the information on the lowest density component comes from CIV with limited ionization information from the SiIV and CII lines outside the forest and other lines that lie in the forest (e.g. SiIII, CIII) and some information on the hotter gas from OVI … but OVI lies in the Lyman forest. • For the higher density gas most of the low redshift information comes from DLA metallicity measurements. However, at high z the forest saturates and we can no longer find the DLAs. We CAN still measure OI, CII and SiII.

  7. We can make CIV measurements out to just beyond z = 5 There is a CIV forest at z=4-5 (Songaila 2005) e.g., BR 2237-0607 R=67000 z = 4.55 R = 18.3 160 min exposure

  8. Statistical methods --- POD technique We would like to make a more objective analysis than the Voigt profile fitting provides & also achieve the maximumsensitivity the data can provide Best way to do this is by correlating features in the spectra --- the so-called pixel optical depth techniques, or “POD”s Original POD : HI optical depth traced using the Lyman series was cross-correlated with the CIV absorption line optical depths (Cowie &Songaila 1998). This method has been refined and used with great success by Schaye, Aguirre and collaborators (Schaye et al 2003 …) But : it is not well suited to high redshift as the L alpha forest begins to blanket….

  9. SuperPOD (“SuperposedPixelOpticalDepths”) The optimal approach to this problem is to use the doublet structure of the CIV and SiIV absorption lines. Analysis of the absorption in this way lets us take maximum advantage of the spectra and, since it avoids the subjectivity of Voigt profile fitting, can be subject to analysis of incompleteness and bias. Use only the doublet information Find all positions in the optical depth vs wavelength plot where the ratio of the optical depths in the two members of the doublet approximately satisfies the 2:1 condition (Songaila 2005)

  10. <z> = 2.2 <z> = 3.9 <z> = 2.8 N(CIV) = 1012 - 1015 <z> = 4.5 N(CIV) = 1013 - 1014 W (CIV) from distributions SuperPOD method – column density distributions & omega

  11. Average W (C IV) Average W (Si IV) Omega (ION) from optical depths No Voigt profile fitting! Gives 0.5 dex increase in sensitivity: Turns a 10m telescope into a 20-30 m telescope!!

  12. Status of CIV evolution: Essentially the current situation is that, within the variation in the CIV/HI ratio, we see CIV in the IGM to the column density limits that we can detect it to and to the redshift of z =5 that we can measure to using optical spectrographs. The distribution functions and total density are remarkably invariant!

  13. Metal production from SFR in LBGs at z = 2 Adelberger 2005 Metal production at z > 5 Metal production at z > 10 IGM metallicity at z = 2 Schaye et al IGM metallicity at z = 4-5 Star formation history & metal enhancement Flat SFR normalized to z=2

  14. Already … somewhat of a problem! How do we produce that many metals before z=5? Though this is a rather crude calculation. But it gets worse….

  15. Going beyond z = 5 … At z > 5 we lose the CIV and then the SiIV from the optical window. We can still measure lower ionization lines (OI, CII and SiII) since these are at shorter wavelengths (around1300A). These lines are primarily found in the high column density neutral H systems at low redshifts but they may also start to be found in the more diffuse gas at ultra high z if the ionization parameter starts to drop. SO: HOW TO FIND THESE LINES ??

  16. Absorption systems exist at z ~ 6 … … but we cant measure the corresponding HI DLA-type systems at high redshift

  17. z = 6.0097 z = 6.1293 z = 6.1968 z = 6.2555 Star formation history & metal enhancement OI lines at high resolution. HIRES observations R ~ 60,000 (G. Becker et al. 2006)

  18. Beyond about z = 5 it becomes hard to distinguish neutral regions from the blended forest :

  19. How do we find the z = 6 DLA-like metal systems? • Use analogous technique to SuperPOD for C IV: • Search for systems which show a correlated signal in the OI, CII and SiII absorption lines. • Select systems with optical depth above 0.1 in CII and OI. • We can’t measure individual metallicity in this way but we can measure the evolution of the universal density of metals.

  20. Star formation history & metal enhancement OI lines at moderate resolution. ESI observations R ~ 6,500 (Songaila and Cowie 2006) Low redshift examples

  21. How do we find the z = 6 DLA-like metal systems? • At z < 5 there is a one-to-one correspondence between systems chosen this way and the DLAs. • There are no strong low-ionization metal systems that do not have an associated DLA or vice-versa.

  22. OI, CII system Black Lyman alpha Black Lyman alpha, beta, gamma

  23. No OI, CII and no strong HI clouds (MORE COMMON!)

  24. At high redshifts we do see dark regions in the Hydrogen with no corresponding metal lines….

  25. transmitted flux Songaila 2004 These are real leaks in the transmission White et al. 2004 Heavy smoothing by damping wings means there can only be a limited neutral region Recovery in the spectrum of SDSS 1148+5251

  26. Star formation history & metal enhancement

  27. The sparseness of the low ionization metal lines means we need to observe a large sample of quasars to average properly. We obtained deep (~6hr) exposures of 29 quasars (12 above Z=5) with ESI on KeckII.

  28. Star formation history & metal enhancement Wolfe et al. 2005 Rao et al. 2006 Becker et al. 2006 Songaila 2005 Songaila and Cowie 2006

  29. Star formation history & metal enhancement: star formation history from color breaks. Integrated total star formation Compilation from Hu and Cowie 2006

  30. The actual drop is still uncertain but evidence suggests a decline in star formation density by a factor of between 4 and 6 between z=3 and z=6, assuming no large change in the luminosity function. • BUT there are major caveats: • Cosmic variance is expected to be 50% for a field the size of the UDF: could the UDF just be very underdense? • Is there a lot of contamination in the low end LF? (This goes the other way…) • There is some evidence for a change in the LF (more faint galaxies)… i.e are we measuring most of the stars?

  31. Star formation history & metal enhancement Wolfe et al. 2005 Rao et al. 2006 Songaila 2005 Becker et al. 2006 Songaila 2006

  32. Are other determinations consistent? Lyman Break Surveys Lyman alpha Emitter Surveys Gamma ray bursts • Pick out sources with bright UV • continuum emission. • Small fields!!! • Only identifies sources with high equivalent widths in Lyman alpha line!!! • Wider fields. Measure rate of massive star formation without reference to the host galaxy. Very wide field.

  33. Ly a searches with narrow-band filters or direct spectroscopic techniques (Hu et al 2002, Taniguchi et al. 2004 , Ellis et al 2004, Hu et al. 2004, Malhotra & Rhoads… etc.) can provide large homogeneous samples of galaxies at these redshifts which probe fainter in the luminosity function than the color break selected galaxies. CAVEAT : Only a fraction of the color-selected objects have Ly a emission --- perhaps 20% at z = 3 (Steidel et al.)

  34. Redshift distribution of spectroscopically identified objects in Hawaii fields: 92 objects 24 objects (Hu et al. 2006)

  35. Comparison of stacked colors ofz = 5.7 emitters with z = 5.7 quasar

  36. Composite line profiles of z=6.5 emitters compared with SDSS 1148+5251

  37. Instrument resolution EW(5.7)=56A EW(6.5)=50A FWHM(5.7) =1.1A FWHM(6.5)= 0.8A Composite line profiles at 5.7 and 6.5 (Virtually identical!)

  38. Does this mean conditions are the same in the IGM at z = 5.7 and z = 6.5? • Maybe not (Madau, Haiman, Loeb, Gnedin, etc….) : • More luminous objects may self shield themselves by ionizing the gas around them. • Even for lower luminosity objects: • Clustered or neighboring objects may also ionize the region around the object. • Preferred (low density) lines of sight may be ionized and we may have strong selection bias in our object sample.

  39. UV continuum luminosity function of Lya -selected objects Bouwens et al. Z=6 Steidel et al. Z=3,4 L alpha Selected z-=5.7

  40. Emitters are highly structured into filaments at all redshifts. (Hu et al. 2005) Z=6.5 Z=5.7

  41. Gamma ray bursts

  42. Gamma-ray bursts provide a totally different approach: • Assume rate of GRBs as a function of redshift is proportional to the star formation rate … (Madau, Lamb & Reichart, Bromm & Loeb, etc.) • Advantages : Highly complete and direct observations of the massive stars. Not biased against small galaxies or subject to cosmic variance. • Big question : We have to assume that the selection of GRBs from massive stars is invariant as a function of redshift. • Alternate method : just locate the host galaxies with the GRBs and then use these to measure the star formation history. May be very powerful.

  43. GRB 050904: Proof of concept • 4' position from Swift • Optical observations at 3h didn't see anything • Bright NIR afterglow • MAGNUM observations at 12h • Flat spectrum over JHK, no detection in RI • z=6.29 from Subaru

  44. GRB normalization is arbitrary Inferred from SWIFT GRBS Color selected

  45. Conclusions • All of the star formation diagnostics are broadly consistent in that they show fairly flat or modestly declining star formation rates to the high redshifts. • The other techniques may prefer somewhat flatter evolution than the color selection which would be consistent if there is a steep luminosity function rise to faint magnitudes. • We absolutely need a flatter star formation history to understand the high redshift metals. • From an ionization point of view the flatter the SFR evolution with redshift, the easier it is to understand the ionization history. • GRBs are a really promising alternative approach to the SFR evolution.

  46. z=3.4 Ly a LF Z=5.7 Ly a LF (Approx 1 solar mass per year: no extinction case B)

  47. Z=3.4 Ly a LF Z=6.6 Ly a LF Z=5.7 Ly a LF (Approx 1 solar mass per year: no extinction case B) Ly a luminosity function

  48. OPTICAL, 20cm DATA ALL SCUBA (1+z)^0.8 (1+z)^2 SCUBA ABOVE 6 mJy Star formation history Wilson et al. 2002 and Barger, Cowie and Richards 2000

  49. Z= 5.7 Ly a emitters in SSA 22 & HDF SSA 22 HDF

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