The most luminous Hα emitters at z~0.8-2.23 from HiZELS: evolution of AGN and star-forming galaxies
Abstract
We use new near-infrared spectroscopic observations to investigate the nature and evolution of the most luminous Hα (Ha) emitters at z~0.8-2.23, which evolve strongly in number density over this period, and compare them to more typical Ha emitters. We study 59 luminous Ha emitters with LHα>LHα*, roughly equally split per redshift slice at z~0.8, 1.47 and 2.23 from the HiZELS and CF-HiZELS surveys. We find that, overall, 308% are AGN (8030% of these AGN are broad-line AGN, BL-AGN), and we find little to no evolution in the AGN fraction with redshift, within the errors. However, the AGN fraction increases strongly with Ha luminosity and correlates best with LHα/LHα*(z). While LHα<L Hα*(z) Ha emitters are largely dominated by star-forming galaxies (>80%), the most luminous Ha emitters (LHα>10LHα*(z)) at any cosmic time are essentially all BL-AGN. Using our AGN-decontaminated sample of luminous star-forming galaxies, and integrating down to a fixed Ha luminosity, we find a factor of ~1300x evolution in the star formation rate density from z=0 to z=2.23. This is much stronger than the evolution from typical Ha star-forming galaxies and in line with the evolution seen for constant luminosity cuts used to select "Ultra-Luminous" Infrared Galaxies and/or sub-millimetre galaxies. By taking into account the evolution in the typical Ha luminosity, we show that the most strongly star-forming Ha-selected galaxies at any epoch (LHα>L*Hα(z)) contribute the same fractional amount of ~15% to the total star-formation rate density, at least up to z=2.23.
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