4.7 Article

The mysterious absence of neutral hydrogen within 1 Mpc of a luminous quasar at redshift 2.168

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 353, Issue 1, Pages 301-309

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2004.08068.x

Keywords

galaxies : high-redshift; intergalactic medium; quasars : absorption lines; quasars : individual : PKS 0424-131; diffuse radiation

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The intense ultraviolet (UV) radiation from a highly luminous quasi-stellar object (QSO) should excite fluorescent Lyman alpha (Lyalpha) emission from any nearby neutral hydrogen clouds. We present a very deep narrow-band search for such emission near the z = 2.168 quasar PKS 0424-131, obtained with the Taurus Tunable Filter on the Anglo-Australian Telescope. By working in the UV, at high spectral resolution and by using charge shuffling, we have been able to reach surface brightness limits as faint as 4.7 x 10(-1)9 erg cm(-2) s(-1) arcsec(-2). No fluorescent Lyalpha emission is seen, whereas QSO absorption-line statistics suggest that we should have seen greater than or similar to 6 clouds, unless the clouds are larger than similar to100 kpc in size. Furthermore, we do not even see the normal population of Lyalpha-emitting galaxies found by other surveys at this redshift. This is very different from observations of high-redshift radio galaxies, which seem to be surrounded by clusters of Lyalpha emitters. We tentatively conclude that there is a deficit of neutral hydrogen close to this quasar, perhaps owing to the photoevaporation of nearby dwarf galaxies.

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