A Near-Infrared Search for Line Emission from Protogalaxies Using the W. M. Keck Telescope
Abstract
We present the first results from a near-infrared narrow-band search for primeval galaxies (PGs) using the Keck 10~m telescope. We have targeted our fields for three QSOs and one radio galaxy at redshifts z = 2.28 to 4.70. We selected narrow-band filters in the K-band centered on strong emision lines at the redshift of the targets. We reach limiting fluxes between 1.6× 10-17~erg~s-1~cm-2 and 1.0× 10-16~erg~s-1~cm-2, and cover a total area of 4~arcmin2. At the redshifts of interest, these flux limits correspond to typical restframe line luminosities of 1042 - 1043~erg~s-1, unobscured star formation rates of 1 - 100 M~yr-1, and a sampled comoving volume of several tens of Mpc3. We have found no candidate PGs at a 2σ confidence level. We demonstrate that for moderate dust absorption (AV 2m) in a simple dust-screen model, our preliminary survey puts a strong constraint on intrinsic PG luminosities during an intial burst of star formation. In the case of the QSOs, we have used PSF-subtraction to search for the presence of faint, extended line emission surrounding these radio-quiet AGNs. We find no evidence for extended emission down to 3.7 × 10-17~erg~s-1~cm-2. This imposes limits on the reprocessed fraction of the QSO continuum emission ranging between 0.02\% and 0.29\%; if beaming effects are not important, then this implies similarly small covering factors for clouds optically thick to the QSO continuum emission.
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