Spectroscopy of i-Dropout Galaxies with an NB921-Band Depression in the Subaru Deep Field

Abstract

We report new spectroscopy of two star-forming galaxies with strong Lyalpha emission at z=6.03 and z=6.04 in the Subaru Deep Field. These two objects are originally selected as i'-dropouts (i'-z' > 1.5) showing an interesting photometric property, the ``NB921 depression''. The NB921-band (centered at 9196A) magnitude is significantly depressed with respect to the z'-band magnitude. The optical spectra of these two objects exhibit asymmetric emission-lines at lambdaobs ~ 8540A and ~ 8560A, suggesting that these objects are Lyalpha emitters at z~6. The rest-frame equivalent widths of the Lyalpha emission of the two objects are 94A and 236A; the latter one is the Lyalpha emitter with the largest Lyalpha equivalent width at z > 6 ever spectroscopically confirmed. The spectroscopically measured Lyalpha fluxes of these two objects are consistent with the interpretation that the NB921 depression is caused by the contribution of the strong Lyalpha emission to the z'-band flux. Most of the NB921-depressed i'-dropout objects are thought to be strong Lyalpha emitters at 6.0 < z < 6.5; Galactic L and T dwarfs and NB921-dropout galaxies at z > 6.6 do not dominate the NB921-depressed i'-dropout sample. Thus the NB921-depression method is very useful for finding high-z Lyalpha emitters with a large Lyalpha equivalent width over a large redshift range, 6.0 < z < 6.5. Although the broadband-selected sample at z ~ 3 contains only a small fraction of objects with a Lyalpha equivalent width larger than 100A, the i'-dropout sample of the Subaru Deep Field contains a much larger fraction of such strong Lyalpha emitters. This may imply a strong evolution of the Lyalpha equivalent width from z > 6 to z ~ 3.

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