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Candidate z~8-9 Galaxies from WFC3 Imaging (1006.3545v2)

Published 17 Jun 2010 in astro-ph.CO

Abstract: We present a search for galaxies at 7.6<z<9.8 using the latest HST WFC3 near-infrared data, based on the Lyman-break technique. We search for galaxies which have large (Y-J) colours (the "Y-drops") on account of the Lyman-alpha forest absorption, and with (J-H) colours inconsistent with being low-redshift contaminants. We identify 24 candidates at redshift z~8-9 (15 are robust and a further 9 more marginal but consistent with being high redshift) over an area of ~50 square arcminutes. Previous searches for Y-drops with WFC3 have focussed only on the Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF), and our larger survey (involving two other nearby deep fields and a wider area survey) has trebelled the number of robust Y-drop candidates. For the first time, we have sufficient z~8-9 galaxies to fit both phi* and M* of the UV Schechter luminosity function. There is evidence for evolution in this luminosity function from z=6-7 to z=8-9, in the sense that there are fewer UV-bright galaxies at z~8-9, consistent with an evolution mainly in M*. The candidate z~8-9 galaxies we detect have insufficient ionizing flux to reionize the Universe, and it is probable that galaxies below our detection limit provide a significant UV contribution. The faint-end slope, alpha, is not well constrained. However, adopting a similiar faint-end slope to that determined at z=3-6 (alpha=-1.7) and a Salpeter initial mass function, then the ionizing photon budget still falls short if f_escape<0.5, even integrating down to M(UV)=-8. A steeper faint end slope or a low-metallicity population (or a top-heavy IMF) might still provide sufficient photons for star-forming galaxies to reionize the Universe, but confirmation of this might have to await the James Webb Space Telescope.

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