RIDEN pilot survey: broad-band selection of candidate quasars with extended Lyman-α nebulae using CLAUDS-HSC-SSP-DUNES2 joint data
Abstract
The Vera C. Rubin Observatory will conduct the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST), delivering deep, multi-band (ugrizy) imaging data across 18,000 square degrees over the next decade. Before this ultra-wide-field survey, we constructed a broad-band Lyα imaging toward 483 SDSS/BOSS quasars at z= 1.9-3.0, using deep, wide-field ultraviolet to near-infrared (u-to-K) data from the Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Survey (HSC-SSP), the CFHT Large Area U-band Deep Survey (CLAUDS), the Deep UKIRT Near-Infrared Steward Survey (DUNES2), and additional public data covering 13 square degrees. Our broad-band selection allowed us to select 24 candidate quasar nebulae that exhibit u or g band excess over 50-170 kpc, some of which exhibit asymmetrical extended features similar to those seen in previously discovered giant nebulae. We then investigated whether the Lyα morphology of quasar nebulae differs between two redshift intervals, z= 1.9-2.3 and z= 2.3-3.0, and examined environmental dependence based on a control sample. Comparison results show no significant difference in asymmetry within Lyα nebulae between the two redshift intervals. Furthermore, we found no systematic differences in overdensities around the complete quasar samples, quasars with large Lyα nebulae, and control samples, while the most extended nebula appears to be located in the high-density region. Further verification analyses are required since the current dataset lacks spectroscopic confirmation for both quasar nebulae and their surrounding neighbours. Nevertheless, the results demonstrate the great potential of the Rubin LSST to discover giant Lyα nebulae on an unprecedented scale.
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