On the nature and physical conditions of the luminous Lya emitter CR7 and its rest-frame UV components
Abstract
We present new HST/WFC3 observations and re-analyse VLT data to unveil the continuum, variability and rest-frame UV lines of the multiple UV clumps of the most luminous Lyα emitter at z=6.6, CR7. Our re-reduced, flux calibrated X-SHOOTER spectra of CR7 reveal a HeII emission line in observations obtained along the major axis of Lyman-alpha (Lya) emission with the best seeing conditions. HeII is spatially offset by +0.8'' from the peak of Lya emission, and it is found towards clump B. Our WFC3 grism spectra detects the UV continuum of CR7's clump A, yielding a power law with β=-2.5+0.6-0.7 and MUV=-21.87+0.25-0.20. No significant variability is found for any of the UV clumps on their own, but there is tentative (~2.2σ) brightening of CR7 in F110W as a whole from 2012 to 2017. HST grism data fail to robustly detect rest-frame UV lines in any of the clumps, implying fluxes <2x10-17 erg s-1 cm-2 (3 σ). We perform CLOUDY modelling to constrain the metallicity and the ionising nature of CR7. CR7 seems to be actively forming stars without any clear AGN activity in clump A, consistent with a metallicity of ~0.05-0.2 Z. Component C or an inter-clump component between B and C may host a high ionisation source. Our results highlight the need for spatially resolved information to study the formation and assembly of early galaxies.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.