Discovery of a giant and luminous Lya+CIV+HeII nebula at z=3.326 with extreme emission line ratios

Marques-Chaves, R. and Pérez-Fournon, I. and Villar-Martín, M. and Gavazzi, R. and Riechers, D. and Rigopoulou, D. and Wardlow, J. and Cabrera-Lavers, A. and Clements, D. L. and Colina, L. and Cooray, A. and Farrah, D. and Ivison, R. J. and Jiménez-Ángel, C. and Martínez-Navajas, P. and Nayyeri, H. and Oliver, S. and Omont, A. and Scott, D. and Shu, Y. (2019) Discovery of a giant and luminous Lya+CIV+HeII nebula at z=3.326 with extreme emission line ratios. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 629. ISSN 1432-0746

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Abstract

We present the discovery of HLock01-LAB, a luminous and large Lya nebula at z=3.326. Medium-band imaging and long-slit spectroscopic observations with the Gran Telescopio Canarias reveal extended emission in the Lya 1215Å, CIV1550Å, and HeII 1640Ålines over ~100kpc, and a total luminosity L(Lya)=(6.4+/-0.1)x10^44 erg s^-1. HLock01-LAB presents an elongated morphology aligned with two faint radio sources contained within the central ~8kpc of the nebula. The radio structures are consistent to be faint radio jets or lobes of a central galaxy, whose spectrum shows nebular emission characteristic of a type-II active galactic nucleus (AGN). The continuum emission of the AGN at short wavelengths is, however, likely dominated by stellar emission of the host galaxy, for which we derive a stellar mass M* = 2.3x10^11 Msun. The detection of extended emission in CIV and CIII] indicates that the gas within the nebula is not primordial. Feedback may have enriched the halo at at least 50 kpc from the nuclear region. Using rest-frame UV emission-line diagnostics, we find that the gas in the nebula is likely heated by the AGN. Nevertheless, at the center of the nebula we find extreme emission line ratios of Lya/CIV~60 and Lya/HeII~80, one of the highest values measured to date, and well above the standard values of photoionization models (Lya/HeII~30 for case B photoionization). Our data suggest that jet-induced shocks are likely responsible for the increase of the electron temperature and, thus, the observed Lya enhancement in the center of the nebula. This scenario is further supported by the presence of radio structures and perturbed kinematics in this region. The large Lya luminosity in HLock01-LAB is likely due to a combination of AGN photoionization and jet-induced shocks, highlighting the diversity of sources of energy powering Lya nebulae. [abridged]

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1900/1912
Subjects:
?? GALAXIES: FORMATIONGALAXIES: HIGH-REDSHIFTISM: GENERALASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICSSPACE AND PLANETARY SCIENCE ??
ID Code:
136507
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
04 Sep 2019 09:00
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
15 Sep 2023 04:30