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Post Info TOPIC: USS 1558-003


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RE: USS 1558-003
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Discovery of an Ancient Celestial City Undergoing Rapid Growth: A Young Protocluster of Active Star-Forming Galaxies

A team of astronomers has discovered an ancient protocluster of galaxies in the midst of a vigorous process of formation. It is the densest and most active protocluster ever identified at so great a distance, 11 billion light years away from Earth. This is a region where the progenitors of present-day clusters of elliptical galaxies were just forming and undergoing rapid growth. The swift construction of this young protocluster helps us to understand the early growth of clusters and the effects of a dense environment on the formation and evolution of galaxies.
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Title: A Starbursting Proto-cluster in Making Associated with a Radio Galaxy at z = 2.53 Discovered by H/alpha Imaging
Authors: Masao Hayashi, Tadayuki Kodama, Ken-ichi Tadaki, Yusei Koyama, and Ichi Tanaka

We report a discovery of a proto-cluster in vigorous assembly and hosting strong star forming activities, associated to a radio galaxy USS 1558-003 at z=2.53, as traced by a wide-field narrow-band H/alpha imaging with MOIRCS on Subaru Telescope. We find 68 H/alpha emitters with dust-uncorrected SFRs down to 8.6 solar masses yr^-1. Their spatial distribution indicates that there are three prominent clumps of H/alpha emitters, one surrounding the radio galaxy and another located at ~1.5 Mpc away to the south-west, and the other located in between the two. These contiguous three systems are very likely to merge together in the near future and may grow to a single more massive cluster at later times. Whilst most H/alpha emitters reside in the "blue cloud" on the colour-magnitude diagram, some emitters have very red colours with J - Ks > 1.38(AB). Interestingly, such red H/alpha emitters are located towards the faint end of the red sequence, and they tend to be located in the high density clumps. We do not see any statistically significant difference in the distributions of individual star formation rates or stellar masses of the H/alpha emitters between the dense clumps and the other regions, suggesting that this is one of the notable sites where the progenitors of massive galaxies in the present-day clusters were in their vigorous formation phase. Finally, we find that H/alpha emission of the radio galaxy is fairly extended spatially over ~ 4.5". However it is not as widespread as its Ly/alpha halo, meaning that the Ly/alpha emission is indeed severely extended by resonant scattering.

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